Yes, excellent answers above.
Mix and match is definitely the way to go.
Also there are different learnings to obtain from different stages of a piece. Learning the piece to a playable stage will teach you many interesting things, but if you want to bring the piece to a greater level of perfection, the knowledge you gained simply from bringing it to a playable stage may not be enough. This is a common trait in certain students. They can easily bring the piece to a stage where the piece is “recognizable”, but then no matter how much they practice it, it never really goes beyond that point, it never really flowers. Typically they leave the piece and move on to a new piece. The reason for that is that their practise usually consists of simply doing more of what they were already doing, when they need to do something different.
As an extreme example, consider the situation of student A, who is obsessed with finger dexterity, and who believes that to master a piece is a question of sitting at the piano and “working out” his fingers for hours on end. He may become quite good and flashy at it, and yet something will be missing. Usually such “piano athletes” have an intense dislike for theory and analysis, (“why can´t I just follow my intuition?”) believing that musicality is something one is born with, will happen by itself, or has to so solely with emotions and should not be acquired by directed effort.. Yet analysis may well be the missing link, showing the student the architecture and structure of the piece (both apparent and hidden) so that he now knows where he needs to call the attention of his audience and the means thereof.
Alternatively you can have student B who is a musicological type and can analyze a piece to infinitesimal detail, and is able to visualize a grand architecture the will bring the piece musically together, but never bothers to go to the piano and actually practise the best movements that will fulfill his vision. More analyzing will do little to improve the situation with student B, just like more practice at the piano will do little to improve the situation of student A. They need to learn new ways to tackle the piece to bring it further.
Then you have two different situations: learning a piece and perfecting it. This is the equivalent of competitive sports where first you must learn your sport – for instance if you are a Olympic gymnast you need to learn the individual movements of your routine and then the routine must become second nature. This is the learning bit. But if you now want to enter the Olympics and get gold, you must train in a completely different way from the way you used when learning the movements and the routine. Your goal now is to optimise your performance of the already known routine, and the basic procedure is to pay excruciating attention to the smallest details. This is such a effort laden phase, that it may well explain why so few people get to Olympic level.
Steve:
The question is, would ironing out minor kinks be as beneficial to someone in my position as learning a new piece, or two?
Yes, I believe so. As I said, you may find out that in order to iron out those minor kinks, may demand different practice strategies form the ones you used when learning the piece. Just doing what you have done when learning it may not result in any improvement (this is actually my definition of correct practice: if you are practicing correctly you always experience improvement, and the more appropriate the practice procedure, the faster the improvement).
So besides the obvious achievement of having a piece perfected, you will also learn a lot about different practice procedures and which ones work best in different passages / pieces (e.g. dotted rhythms work wonders in certain situations but are totally useless and a waste of time in others).
Having said that, I do not belong to the “Brocoli school” of piano pedagogy (Eat it, because it is good for you), so I would never tackle a piece I hate / am indifferent to just because I believe it may be “good” for me, which leads me to:
Steve:
I was hoping to do some Beethoven movements soon (like Sonata No1, Mvt 1), and I was thinking that I should really spend quite a bit of time on this, as it is a performance piece and all.
So I guess I could be working on a few performance pieces, while continuing to learn many study pieces.
I believe in learning only what I love at the moment (“but I hate Bach! And everyone says Bach is good for me!” – Don´t worry, if you hate it, leave it alone. You will find out that as you progress through the pieces you love, your tastes will change. Most pianists come to Bach later in life, and then the love is so strong as to exclude everything else. Alternatively you may never love a composer´s work. So what? There is so much piano repertory
that we do not have the time to waste on pieces we dislike. Thinking about your death and how much little time one has left in this planet is a most sobering thought).
This means that if you only select pieces that you love dearly, there should never be the need to half-learn a piece and then discard it. By making sure that every piece you learn is a piece that you would love to have in your repertory will make sure that you go to the end with that piece, and do not regard it as something you do for now but that you may discard later.
So there should be no division between “study” pieces and “performance” pieces. Make your performance pieces your study pieces, and never study a piece you have no desire to perform (either for yourself or for the public)
Best wishes,
Bernhard.
PS: Beautiful analogy, m1469.
