A piece I am working on now (Tchaikovsky's German Song) has an interesting (for me at least) rhythm with a dotted eighth and then a sixteenth in several phrases.
Your teacher method is a good one too, as long as you're consistent with the counting and applies the same method to all quarters not just the dotted ones:(G - Bb ) (G - dot - Bb ) (Bb - Bb )(one-two - three-four) (one-two - three - four) (one-two - three-four)in this way of course you're counting sixteenth notes and you can be more accurate in determining when exactly you should count the 16th Bb after the dotted G
Yes, I agree this method works at slow speeds. But do people really do this at fast tempos - there's just too many syllables per second!? Or is there a short cut (e.g. one-ah-two-ah or something similiar)? Or do you just count eighths and come in halfway for the sixteenth by enough practice?
The more general question I have since it is so new to me, does there come a point in a person's study where they don't count? Or is it more standard for a pianist/musician to always mentally count or foot tap in some way as they go through a piece?
Yes, I agree this method works at slow speeds. But do people really do this at fast tempos - there's just too many syllables per second!? Or is there a short cut (e.g. one-ah-two-ah or something similiar)? Or do you just count eighths and come in halfway for the sixteenth by enough practice?The more general question I have since it is so new to me, does there come a point in a person's study where they don't count? Or is it more standard for a pianist/musician to always mentally count or foot tap in some way as they go through a piece?
I can play the piece at speed with a metronome, but I cannot when I am trying to count without the metronome - mainly because I am pre-occupied by the insane counting.