Just a quick consideration and I'd like your opinions
I think the majority of teachers teach the piano the wrong way
Not only wrong because it makes harder to play to understand technique in its context but also wrong because it create individuals who can play very hard pieces robotically but lack any musicality and skill in improvization.
I think the approach of considering piano just a tool where you play what you decipher is wrong. It's embarassing how so many pianists don't understand the music they play at all but robotically follow the sheet music and if you remove the sheet music they are lost
I think and have experienced myself that when the piano as an instrument and the piece you can play at the piano and the playing of the piano itself is considered withing an "harmony context" then not only music makes more sense, but playing becomes easier
and it easier to make it sound good
What I mean is that usually piano teaching is approached in this way
1) The teacher tells the student that each key produces a note and that for some time is better to focus on the black keys
2) The teacher tells the student that you play the piano with two hands but for some time is better to focus on the right hand
3) The teacher tells the studet that there are two cleffs but that for some time is better to focus on the treble cleff
4) The teacher has the student playing little melodies for the right hand
5) The teacher has the student learning the treble cleff as second nature
6) The reacher tells after a lot of time that it's time to learn the bass cleff and it's like to play the treble cleff but you must think two notes below of the note you see
7) The teacher tells the student it's time to add the left hand
8.) The teacher has the student playing A RIGHT HAND MELODIES to which LEFT HAND NOTES are added
9) The teacher tells the students there are notes that go beyond the cleff lines and you have to add little lines
10) The teacher has the student playing always more complicated pieces that are just a RAMIFICATION of the same concept of having a right hand melody and a left hand added notes
It seems banal but these short instrunction and approach at the piano lay the foundation for a musical disaster.
This approach leads to a sort of "disorientation in the keayboard" which make subconscious to consider the keyboard as the central part and make it hard to incorporate big movements and jumps
This approach leads to very hard sightreading and many year of frustration and hand watching
This approach leads to poor coordination between the two hands and make it impossible to grasp the coordination, it is simply memorized by the muscles repetition after repetition
And worst of all this approach leads to "unawareness of the piano"
It produces people who are sitting at an instrument they don't know, they don't undestand just following mindlessly the instructions seen on a paper
It leads to poor musicality, unability to improve, unability to understand why the music we're playing is in that way and how it should sound
What I mean by "thinking harmonically about the piano" is laying very few basic harmonical and musical foundation that becoming inconscious would make a lot easier to learn technique, feeling orientated in the piano, sightread, improvize, playing musically and understanding why music is like that
As much as laying the simple wrong foundation can cause disasters, laying the right foundations at the very beginning would, I'm sure, bringing huge benefits we cannot even imagine
(if your teacher was so good to teach from the very beginning about the piano harmonically then you're lucky, believe ... this is not the usual approach)
The simple foundations are these:
1) The basics of music are in the voice; voice is the most natural and better example we have
2) There are several pitches in the kind of voice we have and the extention of these pitches creates the "parts"
3) Music (except from single melodies) is comprised of these parts playing notes that are in harmony one with each other because there's a relationship based on the overtones
4) When we have four parts playing a C, E, G, C we have a chord
5) The keyboard is a rapresentation of the voices pitches and the parts in harmony. The lower you're in the keaybord the lower voices/parts you're playing, the higher you're in the keyboard the higher voices/parts you're playing
6) The foundation of a four part piece for voices is the bass
7) It's not about treble cleff or bass cleff (this nonsense should be ignored) it's about starting from the harmonic foundation and going up from there. Cleffs are just a synbolic practical labelling of the parts/voices of the piano we're playing but they don't explain anything at all.
8.) it goes by itself that any kind of sightreading and any kind of first-practice at the piano should always begin with the bass, the foundation of the whole piece
9) it's not about playing right hand and adding the left hand when ready, it's about learning the piece by reconstructing it the way it was composed understanding how each note is actually the one line melody of one voice/part
10) The bass is the foundation of musical playing and good technique not the high voice/right hand melody. Every pianist should first of all become second nature with the bass, with how the notes are the bass are creating the whole nature of the mood, attitude, musicality of the piece, the kind of intensity and force it should played being a bass
11) The orchestra is just a chorus of different pitches voices where the voices are substituted by instrument. Again, every pianist should focus on this specular rapresentative link between the chorus, the orchetra and the piano starting from understand the nature of the bass. This will make what we play so senseful that any kind of technique needed to play the piece will not be "awkard" as in trying to do something that you know you should do because it's written so .. but you really don't understand it, but will come naturally ...
It may seem like an exaggeration but I DO believe that approaching the piano from a "learning right hand melody and add the left hand" point is a disaster and that approaching the piano from a "learning the specular link between the chorus, the piano and the orchestra and focusing on understanding, mastering, making second nature the bass foundation of the song and adding the left hand voices to the already ingrained structures" is a god-send for piano students that are having and hard time
If you think about it, the typical ridicolous and stupid approach to piano learning (especially with young children) makes as sense as building an house starting from the roof, while the harmonic approach does makes sense as buiding an house from the foundation, from the concrete laid basement of the building
When I joined a choir I was given every day different sheet music with the four parts and I have just to study mine (I'm a tenor) But beginning to see music from this point of view, to see the notes in the parts moving and the foundation of the bass I suddenly realized how I had to think the same about my piano playing. When I did not only the piece I'm practicing makes musically sense but a lot of problems I was having just disappeared and I not longer feel so little in front of a big giant piano and of playing at the extreme of the keyboard as stretching. I consider the piano the miniature of the choir I play with and I feel a sense of coordination and a sense of directon and orientation I've never felt before
Suddenly I know what I play, why I play, why what I'm playing is written like that, and I think of the piano as a whole, and me and the piano as a whole and this is making playing and sightreding so damn easier, not only that but improvization too
I hope piano beginners are reading this as I do believe this is the most important thing they will ever need to know about their piano piano playing
For the others: what's your opinion?