Some Tips On Practising
This is not brain
surgery!
First of all, bear in mind that piano study isn't brain surgery. Your patient
isn't going to die if you make an error. In fact, you can make as many errors as
you like: they are gone instantaneously and you can try it again as many times
as you wish. Be gentle with yourself. Piano study is not supposed to cause
stress; it's supposed to release it!
Don't plan to walk on water
Don't expect to play perfectly. It very rarely happens, even to concert artists
and recording stars who devote their entire lives to the study of piano
performance! Even when you know a piece well, you'll drop at least 5% of the
notes. Don't sweat it! Do the best you can and enjoy!
Divide your time
Divide your practice session into parts. I suggest something like 20% of your
time on technique, 60% on literature, and the last 20% on fun. Don't forget the
fun! That's why you're taking lessons, right?!
Set practice goals
As mentioned in another article on efficient practice, your practice sessions
should have a goal. A small goal. If your goal is too large or too unfocused,
you won't reach it. "To improve" or "to play this movement better" are examples
of such goals. "To fix measures 17-20" is a reasonable goal and one you can
reach. When you set goals which are unobtainable in one practice session, you
leave the piano feeling depressed and angry. Avoid this by making your goals
small enough that you can reach them easily.
Is it chance or control?
I ask my students to continually ask themselves: is it chance or control? "Was
it just good luck that I played that correctly or could I do it again whenever I
want to?" Only the student knows the answer. Deep down inside, he cannot lie to
himself!
Go for control!
This is especially pertinent when a student is trying to speed up a piece he has
moderately well-learned. If he always aims at control, speed will develop
naturally.
Build bridges
Identify the exact place you are having a break-down and work systematically to
fix it. Here is a technique I ask my students to use; I call it bridge-building.
The breakdown can be isolated to the elision between two notes. This is where
you need to build your bridge. First check the fingering; write in what is
missing, after making sure you aren't breaking any of the basic rules of
fingering. Now play between the two notes that are the problem spot, making sure
your fingering is perfect each time. Once you have that mastered, add a note on
either side of the problem. Next, go one note before and one note beyond.
Continue to accrete in this fashion until you have the entire phrase learned.
Another technique to use in the bridge-building stage is rhythms.
Now the tough part: putting it back in place.
This is tough because you now have to reduce your speed! Yes, when you put it
back into context, you have to play more slowly than you can actually do the
problem section. Play the phrase before the problem phrase and the phrase after
it. Practice starting at different places in the preceding phrase; don't become
wed to only one starting place. After you are comfortable--is it chance or
control?--add the phrases before and after, and so on until the problem phrase
is back in the fabric of the piece.
Pick the three worst places
When hunting for a place that needs work, I often tell my students to play
through the piece one time and note the problem spots. *Small* problem spots!
They are then to select the three worst ones and focus on those for the day's
practice. If they don't get to all of them, fine; the other one or two will
certainly be waiting there tomorrow!
Don't Eat Chocolate bars!
Ready for another analogy? Playing moderately-well-learned material to the
exclusion of working on harder material is like eating Hershey bars. It feels
good while you do it, but the effects can be harmful. Your problem is a lack of
self-discipline. If you play only the parts you know well, you never get better
on the parts you know less well. Then the known parts are even more fun to play
and the unknown parts more painful. Train yourself to focus on the more
difficult sections. Yeah, I know it's hard.
Play at a practice tempo
There's a big difference between a practice tempo and a performance tempo! And
there's a gigantic temptation to select the latter during home practice,
especially when playing a section you know pretty well or one that you've just
conquered! Beware!
Playing at performance tempo before you can control the piece completely is
counter- productive. You end up slopping through the music just to keep the
speed up.
A practice tempo--engrave this on your forehead!--is the speed at which you can
control the weakest section. It is a comfortable speed, not a frantic one. True,
the sections you know better probably will be boring at this speed. This is why
you need to focus on the less-well- known sections! Please--I beg you!--do not
do this: start at the speed you can play the first part, slowing down when you
come to the hard sections and speeding up at the easier parts. You do yourself
great harm. You eat Hershey bars *and* you kid yourself that the piece is
better-prepared than it really is.
Where to Start a Piece
The way pianists learn is typically the first section first. When they are
fairly accomplished, they dive into the second section. The first section is
still a lot more satisfying to play, however, so the second section is never
learned as well as the first. The third section--save us!--is a disaster! The
pianist "practices" by playing through the first section first and enjoying it,
easing through the second section, perhaps taking second and third shots at
trouble spots, and barely getting through the last section. Does this sound like
you?
If so, I advise you to start to learn a new piece someplace other than the
opening section. How about the middle section? Or the end? Composers typically
pull out all the stops at the end of the piece; it's harder than the beginning
because it's coming to a grand finale. Which leads us to...
The Lewis Down-Hill Method
This practice strategy says that you learn the most difficult portion of the
piece first. Then the rest is down hill. If you can't pick the most difficult
section of a new piece, ask your teacher's advice. Caution: The Down-Hill Method
takes guts! Once you try it and are successful, however, I think you'll be sold
on the idea. It makes learning a new piece so much quicker!
Restarts
Kids do this all the time: if there's a mistake in measure 8, they start again
at the beginning. This is quite ineffective.
Another version: when a mistake is made, the pianist backs up just before the
mistake a tries it again.
Don't!
If necessary, throw your hands over your head to break yourself of this habit.
This reminds me of a colleague from my college days. It was her senior recital,
and she made an error. Instead of playing on, she did just what she had done in
the practice room: she went back and took another shot at it. Everyone in the
audience--music majors and professors, for the most part--knew exactly why she
did that: it was exactly the way she had practiced! Short-circuit this impulse
to start over or you'll surely practice in the restart!
Practice Dessert
After you've learned all sections of the piece pretty well, try this technique.
Work on the worst spot (or three worst spots), and then reward yourself with a
single play-through of the whole piece *but at a tempo in which you can
completely control the hardest section.*
Why practice?
To learn your music well enough that you can play it to your satisfaction
whenever you please!
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