I don't understand this, how can you learn a piece in tempo and accurately hit all the notes with dynamics, etc. From every teacher I've spoken with they tell me, "The key to playing up to speed is to begin slowly"
-Renato
If you look through Anda's other posts you will come to the conclusion that he is an advanced (probably professional) pianist.
So for him this is a feasible approach.
However I believe the teachers you have spoken to are wrong. Because this is a common misconception I decided to tackle it. Brace yourself.
Yes, a lot of people get intrigued by the statement: “play fast before you play slowly”. It is just one of the many instances in which the correct way to approach piano practice/learning flies in the face of common sense.
It is also why one should get a good teacher who knows about this stuff. It can save one so much time that is unbelievable. Unfortunately you can find even experienced teachers sometimes clinging to common sense notions. So I guess it will depend on your luck. I myself however believe that if you are ready the right teacher will appear. So busy yourself by getting ready.
But I disgress.
First of all, let us understand why you should learn/practise a piece in tempo before tackling it at slow speed (yes, you will need to work on it slowly as well).
In its simplest terms playing the piano is a pattern of movements and co-ordination of these movements. You learn movements and co-ordinate them by carefully repeating them over and over until they become subconscious. This means that what you repeat (good or bad) you learn.
The human brain is amazing in its capacicity to learn things. Learning something is never ever a problem. The problem is that once you learn something you can count on it being there pretty much forever.
So if through your bad practise you learn bad things, you will not be able to unlearn them. This means that now your subconscious is filled with all sorts of variants of what you should do, all competing to be done.
Wilhelm Kempf was once asked: “How come you never play a wrong note?” he answered “I only practise the correct ones” Easier said than done. So how can you only practise the correct notes/movements? Exactly the same way that porcupines make love: carefully, very carefully. This as we will see in a moment does not necessarily means slowly.
If you start learning a piece by having no idea whatsoever how it goes, and decide to discover the piece in the process of playing it, and does that by playing it slowly, you will be doing plenty of wrong movements, inappropriate fingerings and so on, that will be ingrained into your subconscious forever. And you will do it because
at a slow speed you will be able to get away with it . If you were to play the piece at proper tempo straight away, you would immediately see which movements would be appropriate, and which fingerings would work the best. And once you figured out the correct movement pattern/fingering, then and only then you should practise the piece slowly but doing slowly exactly the same movements you figured out when first exploring the piece at full speed. That is you never ever practise a piece slowly. You always practise a piece in slow motion: that is you play slowly exactly as you would play fast, just slowly.
But what if you are a complete beginner with no experience whatsoever? How can you possibly play that new piece fast straightaway? That’s where a teacher that is knowledgeable about these things will be of infinite help: S/he will tell you how to move until you can figure out by yourself. S/he will watch over you like a hawk so that you do not learn the wrong things.
What if all you have is 30 minutes weekly lesson with a teacher that either does not know this stuff ort does not have the patience to go through all this (admittedly boring) stuff? Then I am afraid it might take you a lot of time to learn the piano and to play it properly.
There are some people in this world who have a natural way to go about the piano, so that they do the correct things intuitively, without ever having to be taught this stuff. They are the dream students of piano teachers (not me though). They are called talented and get away with almost no practice and still play beautifully. They are actually the great pianists of all times.
But what about the rest of us? Do we have to slave away for twelve hours everyday at the piano for less than satisfactory results? I don’t think so. What we have to do is to discover the precise set of co-ordinates these super talented people use and work the same way they do. But we cannot do that if we are stuck in conventional wisdom about practice and piano methods.
Again I am disgressing.
Ok so to finally answer your question. Which is (it is good to remind myself):
“how can you learn a piece in tempo and accurately hit all the notes with dynamics, etc. From every teacher I've spoken with they tell me, "The key to playing up to speed is to begin slowly"
1. If you are a superb sight-reader and the piece presents no technical difficulties you have not encountered before this should not be a problem. You will not accurately hit all the correct notes (although I have seen people who could do very near to that), but you will be able to figure out the movement patterns, so that you can then work on the piece slowly. But this option is opened only to experienced pianists – which the guys you quoted as working a piece this way clearly are. What if you are an inexperienced beginner? Then read on.
2. Don’t work on the whole piece. Choose just a few bars. Sometimes you will have to go down to two notes. Anyone can manage two notes at top speed to figure out what fingering/movement works best. To do that you will have to sit down with the piece and analyse it. So don’t open the score in front of you and launch at it with gusto. Remember the porcupines making love! Proceed carefully.
Sit with the score away from the piano. Figure out patterns that are repeated,
imagine the movement/fingering you would need to do to accomplish each particular passage.
Simplify the piece by looking at the hands separately. If each hand plays more than one voice, separate the voices. Outline the piece – this means getting rid of every unessential note and looking at the bare skeleton of the piece (this means usually the melody and bass notes). If necessary rewrite the piece in all of these variants.
And while you are doing that listen to a CD of the piece. Only once you are satisfied you have figured out
exactly what to do with the, say, first two bars, go to the piano and play those first two bars (hands separate if necessary, voices separate if necessary, outlined if necessary) at the proper tempo (even faster if you can manage).
This is to ensure that like Kempf you only practice the correct notes/movements/fingerings.
Does the movement/fingering you imagined actually work? Then proceed to practise it slowly in order to ingrain it in your subconscious. It does not work? Try something else. Keep experimenting and investigating until you hit oh the precise movements/co-ordinations/fingerings that will allow you to play the passage at speed. By the way, at the advanced levels such movement/co-ordinations will be highly personal, since everyone is different.
3. In fact if you start slowly (oh, the misguided metronome approach: start slowly and go up a notch until you can play at the proper speed) you will soon hit a speed wall: A speed beyond which you cannot go no matter how much practice time you put into it.
This is largely due to the fact that you started slowly, with the wrong movements (at slow speed you could get away with wrong movements) and now that the speed has increased the movements cannot deliver the goods.
So all those daily two hours you spend painstakingly increasing the metronome speed for the whole of the week were basically a huge waste of time. And what is worse: you now have the wrong movement firmly ingrained in your subconscious. Nice isn’t it? So what is the answer?
Surprising as it may seem, the answer is to do exactly the opposite: Play a s fast as you can and then slow down! Then you will not find a speed wall because you jumped straight over it in the first place by starting at the other end of the speed spectrum!
Try a simple experiment. Using fingers 12345 play the notes CDEFG. Start slowly , lift well your fingers and articulate them clearly. Now try increasing the speed maintaining this (totally inappropriate) movement. You will hit a speed wall at a ridiculously slow speed.
Now play these five notes with the five fingers in the fastest way possible. The fastest you can play them is together. Yes, that’s right. Play these five notes as a
chord . Lift your arm, keep your fingers rigid but resilient and play away several times this five note chord.
Now
slow it down by rotating your forearm and slightly “wiggling” your fingers. This is the point where I have to issue my usual warning. This cannot be properly described in writing in any meaningful way. You will have to go and figure out. The best way is to find someone knowledgeable about this stuff (hopefully your teacher) and ask him/her to demonstrate it for you.
But the point is that by playing it as a chord first you have played it as fast as possible. And by slowing it down you are still playing it at an unbelievable speed. In five seconds you went from not knowing how to play the passage to playing it at much more than the required speed. Now keep slowing it down taking care to preserve the movement (forearm rotation, finger wiggling) that you discovered to be the appropriate one for this note sequence (different note sequences will require different movements, but now you have found out the method to go about it). In a couple of minutes you should have mastered this passage and ingrained it into your subconscious forever.
You see, slowing down is far easier the speeding up. So instead of two hours of painstaking metronome practice just to hit a speed wall and have to deal with the bad habits you learned, you have now 2 minutes practice that ingrained the correct habits.
Now move to the next passage and so on and so forth. In two hours you could pretty much have learnt your piece at full speed. How about that? And if you have a teacher that will show you the movements and break down the piece for you, than your learning will be even more accelerated. I have my beginner students with a repertory of 20 – 30 pieces of grades 1 – 3 at the end of three months.
So to recap everything:
To play at speed straightaway:
1. Play it in your mind first.
2. If you are a good sight-reader, go ahead and do it, but if you were you would not be asking the question. So:
3. Work in small sections.
4. Work in separate hands.
5. Outline.
6. Make your movements being right a priority: if they are right you should not only get the correct notes, but also the correct dynamic and so on.
Best wishes,
Bernhard.