For piano, i think your goal should be like 6 hours a day. Just make sure you arrange your learning repetoire effectivly and take your breaks
Wouldn't it be as much as you can?Even after you go brain dead, you can still do technical work and just review pieces so you know more literature.
You have played piano for at least 15years and you are a music major, you should have known by now what needed to master piece up to concert level. It sounds like you do not really want to practice. If playing piano is your life (the way you make money), do it like other normal people. Other people work 8 hours a day, and so should you.Everybody has different talent, some people can master many pieces in a few hours, but some just can't. You know your capacity so adjust your practice time accordingly.Or if you think that you do not have enough talent to master those pieces like the way concert pianists do, you may want to change your goal. Practice hard just to enter competition and then just become an expensive piano teacher after that. It is hard to be in the concert circuit if you cannot master many pieces in short time.Good luck.
I've been performing almost since I began playing.
i wish i'd been able to do the same, as i would've been a much more experienced performer by now. btw, what pieces did you perform back when you were young?
You need to make that difficult decision in your life!!If you are not that talented in playing piano, you'd better off learning something else so that you can bring meal for your family. Being a neighborhood piano teacher will not bring enough money. What is the chance of people who do not go to a famous music school can become a concert pianist? If you are not a concert pianists, the chance to be hired as professor in a university is very slim. In life, you have to be honest to yourself!Just for your information, people in Russia who go to school for talented kids learn not only playing piano. They learn Chemistry, Physic, Math etc. It is much tougher than what you study in your college. Therefore, if you cannot handle what you do at this moment, it is a strong indication that you do not have enough talent to survive as a concert pianist.
We are talking about how to achieve your concert pianist goal.In the normal circumantances, a concert pianist usually goes to a well known music school such as Julliard, Curtis and then prepare for a big concert career. One of the way of starting big career is to compete in a big piano compeition. Have you reached those miles stones so far? At 19 if you are destined to be a concert pianist, your piano education is closed to the end. Your technical ability should be closed to a professional pianist. If at this stage, you are still not reaching that level, you have to look in the mirror whether you are up to this challange or not. In addition, people who are really into playing piano, at least in the US, and preparing to be a REAL concert pianist do not learn Math, Physic etc any longer at 19. They just play piano all day long to prepare for big competition or concerts. Therefore, if you are still study those non pianists stuffs, it is a clear indication that you are not in the concert pianist league. Again, be very honest to yourself. You know who you are. Asking other people does not really help you. I just ask you to be HONEST. That it is.
I think that sounds like a good number. I saw a video on YouTube once, where part of it had this piano teacher from Juilliard that suggested aspiring concert pianists needed between 4-6 hours per day, but not over 6, as you'd see diminished returns after that. I think the video is here, but it is part III.I'm slowly increasing, though, like I said, because I don't want to get burned out, plus I have all summer to increase and get used to the extra hours.What did you mean, though, by "arranging your repertoire effectively"? Right now it's pretty much chosen, or at least nudged in the right direction, by my piano teacher at college, but I'm still curious what you mean here.
By arranging you're repertoire effectively, i mean you have to plan everything abit. I usually start the day with technical easy parts to get warm, then i play a serie of etudes, break, second main piece, support etude/break, main piece, supporting etude/break, first main piece, second main piece.Ofcourse i dont do it as strictly as above, but you shouldnt hammer on certain parts too long, you have to realise that your brains need time to addapt. And playing diversity makes it easier to play long.gyzzzmo
Watch your own playing closely and try to find out what your technical flaws are. Then go find a nice etude wich handles that flaw, that way you'll get a nice etude repetoire wich is actually usefull
You don't think I know how tough it is? I do. Why do you see the need to keep putting me down though, when you know nothing of my talent? What makes you think I have little or no talent? If you are going to keep insulting me, please quit replying to my posts.
I don't recollect if this has been mentioned yet -- but if you still have 3 years to go at university, make sure you're studying with the best, or at least best-known or best-connected, teacher. Then do exactly what he/she says. Certainly including whether you're practicing the right number of hours.
If you're serious about a career, don't make any decisions based on what you read on an Internet forum! Even though there are some very knowledgeable and talented people here. But you may have noticed that they don't necessarily agree with each other...
Those 3 hours theyre mentioning are 'AT LEAST' 3 hours. If you want to make a career of piano playing it should be at least 6 hours.Btw, if you're searching etudes to fill that first block of your day, a combination of Hanon's 'virtuoso pianist in 60 exercises' (part 2 and 3) and maybe some Liszt technical etudes would be a good option.gl, gyzzzmo
Ofcourse you relax in the weekend becausea) you need to relaxb) your brains need time to mature/fantasisec) you dont want to become like an azian pianist.
Lol, good point. But then, how much to do on the weekends? Say 2.5 hours per day? Or...I don't know.What do you mean by C?
If you want to do something fun on your saturday/sunday, go do it. Dont bother studying because 'you have to study'. With 'C' i ment that you shouldnt become some technicoholic. Too much pianoplaying isnt good either.
I see. But surely I should still practice some on the weekends. Even if I go out and try to have a social life those days, there are still some hours left in the day. Are you saying just do what I can those days and don't worry about it?
Just do what you want to do in the weekend, except for basketball or other finger injuring sports maybe :p
I’ve been playing the piano since five years old, and I am now 19 and major in piano performance at Duquesne University.I’m confused about how much I should practice, though. Three hours is a minimum requirement at the university, but I don’t feel like that’s enough. I’ve been doing around 4 hours lately, but I’m still not sure
It's not a matter of how much but of how.Efficient practice allows you to learn more in less time.And even if sometimes you feel like your hours weren't enough, increasing the time you spend practicing doesn't exponentially translate in more learned. Sometimes, because of three concepts called Central Nervous Fatigue, Information Overload and Post Practice Improvement the opposite is true; the more you insist on adding extra practice time in the hope the result you didn't like in the hope you'll learn more ... the more you might learn less l,and unlearn more.
Every time I think I have a grasp on what I need to do, I'm told something different that conflicts with my whole plan. So, then, how do I know how much is the right amount? I think it is both how and how much, so I want to balance those. I mean, even if you are the most efficient person in the world, only so many things can get done in a given amount of time.So, how do I avoid this horrible possibility of unlearning?So many different ideas, I don't know what to do.Well, I was happily about to practice as much as I could until that comment.Now I need clarification and advice.
So, do you think this is bad? Is it too much? Do you recommend any maximum time, or, how can one determine the proper amount of time?I don't want to do so much that it will be detrimental, but also don't want to do too little.I appreciate the suggestions.
It sounds like you're making pretty good use of your time. I agree with danny elfboy that you should narrow your focus when you're fixing a technical problem -- no use playing the same 4 measures over and over when the tricky part is in the third measure!
But I do think that you need to spend time working on the overall shape of the piece. This is the hard part for many students because it doesn't seem as concrete. But you need to decide things like, when this section gets repeated, do I do it louder or softer? When a phrase is echoed later on, do I give it the same shape as the first time? How am I going to manage rubato? Where do I add dims and crescs and rits and accels that aren't in the score? Where are the climaxes in the movement, and how do I build up to them? How long should I hold a fermata? None of these can be decided by practicing short passages in isolation.The important thing, of course, is not to waste time by playing through the whole piece the same way every time. You should always pay as much attention, or more, as you did when you were learning it, and always trying to solve a specific problem.