Bernhard wrote in the above mentioned thread:This is not unreasonable: with the right approach any one can master 20 pieces in a year (that’s less than two pieces a month), and will give you 3 - 4 hours of uninterrupted playing: enough for 3 or 4 recitals!
p.p.s. Have you actually read CCs book?
I hope I am taking this incredibly out of context and maybe your talking about 2-part invention level
Bernhard's method is good. Chang should stick with physics.
It is clear, therefore, that my book is just a beginning. There will certainly be a lot more improvements that will be added in the future.
But, I have to seriously take issue with the concept of "mastering 20 pieces in a year." Even pieces on the level of the Chopin preludes and waltzes, some material like Schumann's Album for the Young, Bach 2 and 3 part inventions etc.. Not even advanced virtuosic repertory, but certainly those type works as well. Any repertory really, but even easier stuff. 2 pieces a month?? Maybe I am completely missing something here.. Maybe, just maybe, if I had a daily half hour lesson with Bernhard, along with my daily 2-3 hours of individual practice and really followed these methods to the letter, I could in fact come close to memorizing 20 pieces in a year. Maybe.. But master? If the definition of master is strictly "be able to play the notes with no score or flubs" then, well, perhaps. But the one thing I'm finding that isn't mentioned
the thing which in my mind is more important than any of this, is the issue of musicality and expression. I had the Bach 2pt Invention in C memorized and playable hands together with no flubs in just a couple weeks. But with my teacher, week after week, month after month we put enormous thought and effort still into this one piece. Into the notes? No. The fingering? No. Memorization? No. Harmonic analysis? No, I can work that stuff on my own time to whatever level of detail I should care to take it. On what then? On articulation and expression. The potentially endless depth of detail for the performance of this piece to the most subtle details of how to articulate the phrases from one to the other is where the focus, the "study" lies.
For me at least, memorizing the piece and having all the notes in my head and under my fingers, playable, for the most part w/o any flubs and doing harmonic analysis etc., is, and always has been, the easiest part of learning repertory. When that "homework" is done though, is a piece "mastered"? Of course not. That's when the real study begins.
With my teacher, we deal with expression and performance. Dynamics, articulation, INTENT. Bringing the piece alive through the subtle details that only come once the stuff that Chang and Bernhard describe is out of the way. This study takes a LOT LONGER than half a month for any given piece because maturity can't be rushed. As another example, I learned Chopins Waltz in Aminor (op. posth) over a year ago and do still work on it at times. Pretty simple piece.. Of course I have it memorized, to the smallest detail, but each time I decide to play it, it's the details of expression that grow and mature. I wouldn't call any piece I "know" mastered even though in the past I have gone for a few months w/o thinking about that Chopin Waltz but could still sit down on command at a family holiday with cold hands and play it without flubs.
And what then is more important, developing a massive repertory of pieces that one "can execute" or, more slowly, building a repertory of pieces that one can really bring alive and inject a sense of their own being into?
Am I making any sense? I would love to hear some recordings of these students who are mastering two pieces a month. Sure the notes might be there, but how beautiful does it sound? I had all the notes of the Bach invention there after 2 weeks. My parents thought it was lovely when I played it for them, and in fact it may just have been. After months of study and work on the details that aren't on the score, now the piece is starting to sound closer to what I might call "mastered".
it seems that in a sense, if the end goal is simply to accumulate a body of memorized notes, it is entirely missing the point?
Bernhard's method is good.
Chang should stick with physics.
20 pieces a year is bulls**t.
2 pieces a month is NOT realistic.
That's a piece every two weeks. I didn't read much so I might be speaking out of context of what I read, however if someone can learn a piece to performance level in two weeks that is just ridiculous. For example in Chopin... Does that mean you could learn all the ballades AND scherzi in 4 months? That would mean you could learn Chopin's scherzi, ballades, and 16 of his etudes thats over HALF in one year. That's absolutely ridiculous.
Bernhard is very knowlegible about life, like where to get the cheapest bananas on sale.
Anyway, I do agree that the interpretation side will never end. And in that sense, "mastery" can "never" be achieved.. Which is why I am confused by the notion of "mastering" 20 pieces per year. What would be the point? Surely they wouldn't be beautiful or otherwise "worthwhile" performances of those pieces (of course that is a blanket and entirely subjective statement, purely for illustrative purposes).
Chang,I find your 5-10 hours in 5-10 years MUCH more realistic than 100 pieces in a year.
PS: I am not Bernhard -- he is just my role model.
You wouldn't, by any chance, have anything to do with Auger electron spectroscopy or transmission electron microscopy, would you?
That's me! Have we met before?
I love analogies and poetry (the poetry sometimes)How about this one Bernie?Learning and mastering a piece is like aging a red or white wine. It takes patience and "endurance" by the wine manufacturer as well as the fermentation process to produce some of the worlds most richest wines.How it tastes on your pallet? Oh so delicious.
I'm just wondering by your judgment of how well I seem to be learning a piece (I know I'm excluding a lot of variables here but anyways) I’ve been working on the Rachmaninoff Prelude Nr 5 Op 23 for almost 6 months now and I seem to be able to work around it and play at about MM = 60 – 70. I’m still working on the 2nd page as it’s terribly difficult to get all the chords in the right progression. Please note that the last repertoire I managed to learn for an exam was Beethoven’s Sonata Op 49 Nr 1 – youth’s sonata. So that’s a pretty big jump. So umm how fast (or slow) am I progressing?
Good lord, Bernhard, I'm starting to get the impression that you are a machine. :p
You type huge posts at a time, and you've answered the same questions at least 3 times, yet you continue to inform us all. Thanks for that.
I still don't understand how I can learn my six pieces in 5 months, never mind about 3 months. I don't necessarily know exactly how to practice what, aside from the few bars for 20 minutes. I made a post in another thread that you detailed learning Satie's Gymnopedie. I pointed out that you were contradicting yourself about a point (or I was just confused). It'd be cool if you checked it out.
Piano learning rate is what Physicists call non-linear. The more you learn, the faster you learn, and the more you memorize, the faster you memorize, and the faster you memorize, the better you memorize.
I made a post in another thread that you detailed learning Satie's Gymnopedie. I pointed out that you were contradicting yourself about a point (or I was just confused). It'd be cool if you checked it out.
Sorry it took me a while to find this thread because this forum is not well organized and takes time to surf around.In my book, my intention is to convey the idea that from finish to recital, you use (ideally, as a goal) 10% of time to "get the notes under your fingers" and 90% to music mastery. My book is intended mostly for the first 10% and a slight excursion into the remaining 90%, which I do not deal with to any great extent -- that is where a good teacher is necessary, difficult to write in a book, I don't have the experience or material, and is not the main thrust of my book. Although I do emphasize musicality and talk about it in general terms in my book, the detailed music lessons must be learned with each specific lesson piece. See my post about learning musicality from the great composers.
Success! we manage to thoroughly confuse you! There are too many questions there and they are far too general. I don't know even where to begin. I may try to answer some of it next weekend when I will have more time.In the meantime, have a look here for the warmup question:https://www.pianoforum.net/cgi-bin/yabb/YaBB.cgi?board=perf;action=display;num=1079396473;start=7Best wishes, Bernhard
These days if you are not confused it is probably because you are not thinking clearly.
After almost a year of reading, searching, scanning posts in this forum, I found this thread to be the best.
Chang: My book is intended mostly for the first 10% and a slight excursion into the remaining 90%, which I do not deal with to any great extent -- that is where a good teacher is necessary, difficult to write in a book, I don't have the experience or material, and is not the main thrust of my book.
Chang: Your post is a good one, since people need some kind of benchmark to say what is "mastered", but more importantly how to acquire a repertoire and what that repertoire might look like (how much is performable on demand?).
Chang: It will take an "average student", with a good teacher, about 1 year to learn a piece at his level to performance level. It will take 2-3 months to get all the technical stuff down (this is larger than the objective of 10%= 1.2 months, but most students try to reach above their level). This "technical stuff" is what my book is all about. It will then take another 6-7 months of "musicality" study to get it up to level of 1st auditions (let's say this is a piano competition). One year after starting, they are ready for finals.
Chang: I am amazed at the wide range of subjects that Bernhard is familiar with
Chang: by the way, our daughters averaged about 45 min practice/day, 6 d/wk. If they had 2-3 hrs/d, they could conceivably more than double their production of 4-8 pieces/yr.
Spatula: Bernhard is very knowlegible about life, like where to get the cheapest bananas on sale.
Chang: This is demonstrated routinely in international music competitions in which contestants are given music they had never seen or heard before and asked to perform in couple weeks. Apparently most contestants succeed, and the judgement is not on whether they mastered it, but on the musical presentation because "mastery" is apparently a given
Yes, you are missing a few things.
First, I have described in another post three different levels a student can be in regards to a piece. (learned.... mastered... Omniscience...
(If music was a martial art, this would be the "black belt" level. It is also the level where you finally are ready to start really learning the piece).
Someone who got to the level where they can play the Chopin etudes should be able to master (in the sense above) the easier preludes (no. 4, no. 7, no. 20) in about twenty minutes.
No piece is ever mastered in the sense you describe.
In fact it is one of the beauties of the really superlative repertory that a lifetime will not be enough to explore all of its possibilities
So although superficially the methods of practice I use and suggest people to try, would seem to address mostly technique, I actually strongly pressure my students to start working on musicality as soon as the passage they are working on is large enough to allow it - that is, I do not believe that you should learn all the right notes at the right time and only then start working on musicality - quite the contrary, from the very beginning we should have a musical concept that guides one’s practice.
We spend a lot of time working on the score, listening to CDs of several pianists and getting thoroughly acquainted with the piece before practising it, in short, I believe in delaying the actual practice at the piano until you have some sort of musical concept (even though you may change it later).
I agree with you. However in my experience, the majority of students (at least the majority of my students) difficulty does not lie in the musical aspect, but in exactly those areas that you find easy: memorising (not such a big problem there); sight-reading (a major problem); motor co-ordination (major problem), truly understanding harmony and what "meaning of music" actually means (again the problem is not understanding but simply knowing all the chords and their voicings and different functions). So, to me a piece is indeed "mastered" once all that homework has been done. And of course you are completely right, this is where the real work begins.
But you would perhaps be surprised how difficult it is to get to this stage of "homework done" for the majority of students
Then as far as I am concerned you have mastered the waltz (you may even be at the omniscient stage!).
Now once you spend one (or two) years exploring all the angles of the first inventions and you proceed to learn the second, do you think it is going to take as long? I doubt very much. And when you move to the WTC again it will take a fraction of the time it would have taken had your teacher not spent so much time on the first invention.
Yet, the same Kirkpatrick also wrote that anyone who had thoroughly mastered all aspects of five or six of Scarlatti’s sonatas would find that the remaining ones would come easily
When I say that anyone can learn two pieces a month, I do not mean by that all the possible aspects of a piece. I mean that the piece is at a stage where you can perform it with confidence: all the right notes in the right times, everything memorised, and a reasonable interpretation.
Andras Schiff recently issued a new CD of the Goldberg variations since he was dissatisfied with his previous CD of them issued some 20 years earlier (if I’m not mistaken).
So I see no contradiction in my claim and yours. What I am saying is that one should try to learn a piece in the least amount of time using the most efficient methods, so that one can start playing it and exploring its musicality as soon as possible.
Both are equally important. Especially in the beginning you want to have as much repertory as you can manage for several reasons: 1. I do not believe in technical exercises. I teach technique from pieces. This means that in order to tackle a diverse number of technical problems you need a diversity of repertory.
2. Beginners and intermediates would never survive the boredom of working on a single piece for one year. Most beginners and intermediates have not yet developed the necessary understanding required for this sort of intensive work. All they want is to play something different from what they did last week (this is really a cultural problem - it stems from a society that encourages limitless consumption and who demands new things all the time).
3. It motivates the student if he is able to play several pieces, instead of just one. If he performs for friends and family, it relieves the boredom of the friends and family who otherwise would have to listen to the same piece over and over again.
Yes, you are making perfect sense. However your arguments refer to a more advanced student.
Also, if you had all the notes of the 2 voice invention after 2 weeks, you are doing very well. The typical student having one lesson per week and not practising in between lessons could well spend one year to learn (badly) just a few bars of the same invention.
You are talking from your perspective: a talented student who practises hard (perhaps too hard).
This is of course not the end goal. That is the first step on a very long journey, without which you will never arrive at your destination.
But how many pianists actually have a plan? How many sit down and decide what is it that they are going to learn for the next five years, and organise their learning on a daily basis, setting short, middle and long term goals?
Piano playing should be "free" and follow the pianist’s whims - and all the rubbish that comes with this package.
I met in my life many students (and teachers who approved of such idiocy) who would spend 3 or 4 hours in the morning just practising the C major scale (or some other scale) up and down the piano over four octaves. Some would even read the newspapers or watch TV while doing that.
Imagine that after one year of learning the piano all you could play was the Chopin Waltz in Am you mentioned before. I don’t know about you, but if I was a beginner I would feel pretty disheartened
Chang: Piano learning rate is what Physicists call non-linear. The more you learn, the faster you learn, and the more you memorize, the faster you memorize, and the faster you memorize, the better you memorize. As I wrote in my book, this is the mathematical basis for the myth of "talented" vs "ordinary" students.
It doesn't necessarily mean the IQ will increase, although the tendency is there; in fact the brain development in other areas (social, scientific) might be retarded.
Then, why no more Mozarts since Chopin? Blame it on Hanon and Czerny!
(skipping down to your other replies.. not sure if I even need to, I think my writing this has flipped the switch on for all the lightbulbs in my head that needed to be turned on by this thread, but what the heck..) No, blame it on TV, Playstation and parents who put DVD players in the back seats of their SUV's to further prevent their kids from exercising their brains in the first place. (sorry, rant)Ok, this post is plenty long.. Thank you!-Paul
Bernie and CC, do you guys actually know each other besides a distant internet or professional piano relationship (for example reading a book by CC and "knowing" him) through that?Or are you friends? piano practice buddies? the silent guy next door? bloody thristy rivals?Have you guys met face to face and shook hands and give the european cheek kiss? I don't know.<<<Good question! I was wondering my self. I first encountered Bernard a few weeks ago when I came on this forum, and was astounded to read his stuff, because unlike any other posts, there wasn't a single thing I could object to. I know nothing about him except what I read in these couple weeks here. He is only one of about 3 people I have met on the piano discussions who can't seem to say anything wrong, and has an answer to everything. Unbelievable. Why? Because it validates what I had been struggling to write correctly all these years. A large part of that validity comes from the fact that we had never communicated before. Unless I got it right, the chances of us both being wrong in exactly the same way is basically zero.
[continued from the previous post].3. Stephan Heller – Etude op. 45 no. 15 – Excellent for huge chords and skipping between them.Of course these pieces are just examples, there are thousands more out there. Your only limitation is how much repertory you know.When I said that one could easily learn 2 pieces a month I was probably underestimating. Look above: you could master 10 pieces in a month! (maybe even more). What are you still doing here? Go to the piano and try it out! Best wishes,Bernhard.
Bernhard, there is yet one more thing I must ask you in regards to mastering a piece.When you say "On day x, if you play the piece for the first time and it is mastered, then you no longer need to practice that piece again. You just need to play it regularly."What is mastered?Is it every single note correct? What if you play 2 or 3 times absolutely perfectly, but on the fourth run through, you make ONE slight, unnoticeable, slip-of-the-finger or lapse-in-memory error? What if you then continue and you play 5, 6, 7, 8 times absolutely perfectly, and maybe make another (different error for the same reasons) on the ninth try? Does this mean you have to take it apart and begin practising it again?Yesterday, this happened with the first page of my Bach prelude. I played it through once perfectly. Then I did it again. Then I did it once more, and a little slip of the finger caused a virtually inaudible error. I went at it again and two or three more times it was notally perfect. I broke it up again and practised it all in sessions again ANYWAY.The next day, I come to the piano, sit down, and the first run through I made some random mistake like the one listed above. I played through four or five more times perfectly, and then decided to break it up into the practice sessions AGAIN.Am I being unnecessarily obsessive?In my fugue, I have the last page or so learned quite well. It's "grape juice." However, today, as I was playing through the third or fourth time, suddenly many things were slipping my memory. I was forgetting quite a bit, and so I split it up into the respectable practice sessions and practised it as such again. Was this the correct thing to do?Thanks for your help,Adam