* edit, July 14: v.2 of the guide posted:
https://www.pianostreet.com/smf/index.php/topic,19198.msg208872.html#msg208872 *
Greetings:I'm a long time reader and first time poster. First, thanks to everyone for posting quality content on these forums. I have discovered great new music here and have learned helpful practice techniques. Special thanks to Bernhard for being insightful and Stevie for being funny.
Introduction:I have taken piano seriously for the past two years. I have somewhat of an obsession with classical music, so I get rather excited over certain piano pieces, knowing that someday I will be playing them effortlessly. I particularly look forward to the day when I can play Chopin Ballades and much of the Prokofiev repertoire.
But like all eager musicians, I run into practice problems. In general, I practice horribly. I have a habit of playing over the parts of a piece I’m comfortable with instead of working on what Im uncomfortable with. I cannot polish a piece for the life of me. Once I got it "pretty good" I just start jamming away and having fun with the piece instead of focusing on how I can make it even better. I habitually practice with pedal. I find myself playing a piece at speeds Im not yet ready to play at. The list goes on.
Im in no way unique. Most piano students have less than perfect practicing habits. To remove a bad habit or learn a good one takes patience and time. Even smokers who quit cold turkey must endure several weeks of temptation. That feeling of resistance is simply the process of the habit going through a change. Once the temptation is gone, the smoker has successfully removed a bad habit. When teachers tell their students to practice pieces more slowly, the student must resist the temptation to practice fast. If she listens it might be only a few weeks or even days when the student can habitually practice at learning-efficient tempos.
The problem is that the student doesnt always listen. Usually the student isnt even aware of his or her bad habits. If he is, the list of them is so huge that it’s intimidating, and it wont be long until the student gives up and returns to the usual habits.
The Perfect Practice ExperimentHowever, I am going to try an experiment, what I call the perfect practice experiment. Here is the main statement of the experiment:
I am going to take one piece of music and practice it in the most effective and efficient way possible. I will be required to apply perfect practice to this piece of music, but to this piece of music only.
My usual, comfortable, "bad" habits may apply to any other pieces of music I’m playing at the time. I am allowed to return to my usual, comfortable, "bad" habits upon completing this perfect practice piece.
A few rules:
1. I must be deeply passionate about this piece. I must have every desire to play it with utter perfection
2. I only require myself to apply perfect practice technique to this piece of music only.
3. I will practice this piece until it’s perfect as far as my piano ability allows. I will let this piece take its own time and will not set any deadline for completion.
4. The piece will be at a reasonable difficulty level. Challenging pieces are preferred, but if it takes longer than two months to complete, the experiment might lose its effectiveness.
5. I will adhere to the perfect practice guide for each practice session. I understand that some habits take several months to manifest, but I will adhere to these habits as far as my current ability will allow.
6. Psychologically, I will
allow myself the freedom to use whatever natural habits I’d like when
not playing this piece. This includes pieces played after the experiment.
7. I will find in myself the energy, motivation, and focus to tackle this experiment. The energy required will be
more than what’s available for everyday practice.
This experiment is largely psychological. Let me explain: To tell a piano player to forever change his or her habits is meaningless. The piano player would love to have perfect practicing habits, but it’s just a long, arduous, unpleasant process.
It’s easier to tell the piano player to establish perfect practicing habits for one piece
only, for a piece that she is motivated to learn and has dreams of playing flawlessly. Applying perfect practice technique to just
one piece is a relatively easy commitment, and so the piano player will do so!
I have used this psychological effect with great success in other aspects of my life. When I was trying to change my diet I found myself in a constant struggle. I liked food too much, so I couldn’t resist eating and snacking more than I needed too. My diet was improving since I was becoming more health conscious, but it was still a struggle, and the change was happening at a
much slower rate than it could have been. What I did, then, was commit myself to one week of perfectly healthy eating. Just one week. I allowed myself to return to whatever habits I wanted to after that week. I established what I considered to be a perfect diet and I stood by that for the entire week. It wasn’t that hard. That one week changed my perspective, as I was finally given the opportunity to fully enjoy the benefits of a healthy diet. The struggle was severely lessened after that week and I found it easier to maintain a healthy diet.
The Goal of the Perfect Practice Experiment:1. To take a piece of music and learn it in the most efficient manner possible.
2. To develop good habits with the piece right from the beginning.
3. To use psychology as a means for ultimately better practicing habits for every piece played thereafter. You are only required to fully commit yourself to
one piece of music, but upon seeing the results, you will gladly apply similar habits to
all of your practicing.
4. To catch a glimpse of what excellent practice can yield.
5. Since you are required to use more energy, motivation, and focus on this piece than what’s normally available in everyday practice, you are also testing your limits.
My Experiment:I have chosen my experiment piece. It is Sun Flowers by Yu Shi Wang.
You can find a youtube video of Yundi Li performing the piece here:
You can find the sheet music here:
https://ca.geocities.com/cm_index/indexU-Z.html#WAs far as my ability, here’s a short list of pieces I have played:
Chopin – Nocturne op 62 no 2 in E
Chopin – Minute Waltz
Grieg – Nocturne (performed)
Grieg – Wedding Day (working on…)
Prokofiev – Montegues and Capulets (performed)
Prokofiev – Sonata 7 – III Precipitato (working on… >.< )
Paderewski – Minuet
Bowen, York – Prelude #1 in C (working on)
With that repertoire, I feel that the Sun Flowers piece will provide enough new challenges but will be manageable – a perfect candidate for this experiment. I also really like it for some reason.

I’m not a particularly fast learner when it comes to piano, so I’d say under normal conditions this piece would at least take me a month to “learn” (i.e. acceptable but far from mastered). I wonder how long it will take under experimental conditions.
About The Perfect Practice Guide:(I must confess that I use the word “perfect” because it sounds nice in the title. When I refer to perfect practice, “perfect” is a loose and relative term. “Perfect” might be better described as “in the best way I know possible given my current ability and knowledge.” Such perfection is real and obtainable.)
This is where I will need the most feedback. I need a structured plan that will be effective for this situation.
This Perfect Practice Guide is going to be short and very general. It will also be inherently geared toward my style of learning and my strengths and weaknesses. So if you want to perform a similar experiment, I suggest making your own personalized guide so that it is more effective for you.
The guide needs to be short enough so that each point can be thoroughly attended to throughout the experiment. That is,
each point needs to be closely followed during practice. A very complicated guide would be very difficult to implement during practice, so clear, simple, yet
effective points are prefered.
A good example is "Concentrate during every second of your practice." It may not be easy to follow, but it is clear and powerfully effective.
That example was very broad and general. Good, but we also want to develop a routine so that I and anyone else partaking in this experiment has a clear idea of what we
specifically should be doing at the bench. Here is a good example of what I mean:
"For the first few days of practice on a new piece, repeat one section four to eight times before beginning to practice the next. When two sections have been practiced in this way, they should be joined and given two to four repititions as a whole. Ultimately, all the sections should be fitted together in this way."
The Perfect Practice Guide:V 1.0
After doing a fair amount of reading, I found the type of general practicing fundamentals I’m aiming for.
Taken from:
https://www.pianostreet.com/smf/index.php/topic,3202.msg28909.html#msg289091. The first time you play through your piece, or any section of it, be fanatically careful not to make any mistakes either in the notes or in time values.
2. Subdivide the piece into short sections.
3. Occasionally begin your practice by beginning at the last section of the piece, then do the next to last section, and so on till you have reached the beginning.
4. For the first few days of practice on a new piece, repeat one section four to eight times before beginning to practice the next. When two sections have been practiced in this way, they should be joined and given two to four repititions as a whole. Ultimately, all the sections should be fitted together in this way.
5. Resist the temptation to go on playing faster and faster. If you have a metronome, use it for an "external discipline" to check yourself.
6. During practice, try to free your mind from any anxiety concerning the final results of your practice, either with regard to standards or deadlines.
7. Always try to approach the act of learning a new piece when your are as fresh as possible. I prefer the morning for my practice.
8. Always be on the watch for signs of staleness. This usually reveals itself though lack of interest in your peice or in the presence of more that the usual amount of inaccuracy. It is east to "turn on the fingers" and "tune off the mind."
9. In the earliest stages of learning anything new, the rate of foegetting is very rapid. Therefore, the maxim of "little and often" in early stages of learning is very important.
10. Do not practice if you feel annoyed, irritable, or upset about anything.
11. Get into the habit of trying to look upon yourself as an ordinary human being. This means that you neither set absurd and impossible stardards of work for yourself nor allow yourself to besatisfied with a standard which you know really could and ought to be better.
12. Think ten times and play once.
13. Count bars, not beats, if your playing is lacking in movement.
14. Always think the rhythm and meter before starting to play.
15. Trills should aim as regularity before speed.
16. Listen for resonance, not noise, in loud passages.
17. Do not work against time. If you have only one hour at your disposal, plan 45 minutes of practice and do the most with each minute. If you attempt to plan for the whole hour, you will have your eye on the clock, a nervous tension that may result in muscular tension, and much of your mental energy will be wasted. "Surround every action with a circle of non-hurry."
18. Perform always, even when sight-reading. Always express something, and never "just run though."
19. Mark the beat with your other hand.
20. Think a piece though without any playing, either will or without the music.
21. Remember - every pianistic problem has both its origin and solution in the music itself.
FANNY BLOOMFIELD-ZEISLER’S
TEN RULES FOR PRACTICE
1. Concentrate during every second of your practice.
2. Divide your practice time into periods of not more than two hours.
3. In commencing your practice, play over your piece once or twice before beginning to memorise. Then pick out the more difficult passages for special attention and reiteration.
4. Always practise slowly at first.
5. Do not attempt to practise your whole piece at first. Take a small section or even a phrase.
6. First memorise mentally the section you have selected for study.
7. Occasionally memorise backwards.
8. Remember that practice is simply a means of cultivating habits. If you play correctly from the start you will form good habits.
9. Always listen while you are playing.
10. Never attempt to play anything in public that you have just finished studying.
Final Thoughts:I am very eager to put a lot of energy, focus, and concentration into this one piece of music. I want to see the results of good practicing habits. This is sort of a way to take a glimpse of what piano is like when practice is done right. Hopefully, I will be able to use those habits in everyday practice, but I probably won’t have the energy to invest in every piece as much as I do this one. That’s part of the idea though—to test my limits. This is an experiment after all.

I intend to practice this piece for a normal amount of time each day, say, 60 minutes or so. I’m aiming for good, efficient practice. How long it takes me to actually learn the piece is irrelevant to the experiment.
If you would also like to partake in the experiment, feel free to post. Maybe you can post the piece you choose to work on and use this thread to provide updates (maybe even a recording at the end

)
Lastly, for feedback I’m mostly looking for ways to improve the practice guide. Since this forum contains such a wealth of information, simple links would do just fine. A little commentary on the piece I chose (Sun Flowers) would be helpful too!
Best,
Seely