Dear all,
There are frequent threads, with good reason, posted by people who suffer serious nerves and find it difficult to control them during performance even when the repertoire has been well practiced.
I have made this thread because I too suffer from nerves and have not had a good performance for a fair few years... until recently. A lot of the replies in the nerves threads are very good and include great ideas, but when i seem to read those posts, i never really hear anything postive experiences or people describing a sudden breakthrough (please forgive me if i did miss something).
My experience happened for me end of first year recital exam. To give a brief background, i played the piano from an early age and i was exposed to lots of competitions and performances in front of people, so i was very used to performing. i stopped playing when i was about 14 and i had stopped performing about 3 years before this. i came back to the piano, taking it seriously when i was about 17 and i am now 20. i have suffered serious issues with performance ever since i started again.
this time things changed. first of all, going to conservatoire was a big step in gaining some confidence and learning to play in front of friends, fellow piano students, teachers, in performance classes and in exposed practice rooms. at first, i was not even able to play decently in front of friends, but that soon changed. however, i still performed quite badly in performance classes and other performances.
towards the final recital i was getting increasingly worried. my exam repertoire was the following:
rachmaninov etude op33 gminor
Brahms op116 nos 3 and 4
ravel - ondine
I had performed the ondine two times previously in performance classes (each time the nerves got the better of me), like wise with the brahms capriccio. i even found it difficult settle my nerves when playing the intermezzo on it's own in performance classes (though it wasnt so trivial because it isnt a technically difficult piece).
in the last two weeks i played my programme to friends in the concert hall and various big rooms 2 or 3 times. one was quite successful.
what helped was the advice of my alexander technique teacher. the advice that she gave was a bit different to what people have said in posts here (although those pieces of advice have still been good).
she first asked me to explain what happens when i play that goes so wrong. I explained that even before i start, my finers go blue and stiff and as result my whole body feels tense and uneasy and this all happens even if it isnt a cold room. because i am quite thin and i have thin fingers, i generally get cold quite easily. she explained that nerves attacks people in different ways, but generally picks on your weak points, but at the same time it is all psychological.
her first bit of advice was to place my fingers on the piano and momentarily concentrate on each finger, one at a time, and let your brain recognize that they are present and working (sounds daft, but is actually quite important).
so i went off and had a performance later that week, and it still didnt go very well.
her next piece of advice was a bit more alexanderish and focusing in posture and allowing the neck to go back to align with the spine.
she also talked about more spiritual things like connecting with the music, but the important thing she mentioned was to try and experience something positive whilst playing.
i found this a bit difficult, because the pieces i was playing werent necessarily happy, but i gave it a shot. i played in front of some people in an informal recital (the one of the 3 that went well). i started with the brahms intermezzo to give myself a chance to get going, and i found that making a small cheesy smile to myself and just feeling happiness and a desire to be more happy helped me relax so much. i was still playing mistakes and not as well as in a practice room, but i decided in the moment just to accept that and carry on enjoying making music.
the same thing happened during the exam recital, only this time i was able to soak my hands in warm water in a bathroom very close to the exam room (something which i have never really had the opportunity to do).
I came in and the room was very cold. this wasnt actually my nerves playing up (although i was still quite nervous), because i found out that the heating had broken in this particular room and it my exam was quite early in the morning.
once i started playing (i started with the rach etude) with a positive mind. to my surprise, i felt a glow of heat in side my body and an instant sense of calm, yet a buzzing feeling, from the first note that i played. i smiled to myself several times during the performance and i felt a 100% sense of enjoyment, thrill and connection with the music.
in the end, i received a 1st for my recital and a very nice report.
the reason why i am posting this experience, is because i feel that there is more to being prepared for a recital than just eating bananas and doing press ups or drinking coffee etc , although those things are good to do (except the coffee idea which i am totally against). i also want people to know that there is a solution and that it does take time. for me, it took years. for some it may be less and others more, i dont really know for sure.
thanks for taking the time to read and i hope it helps. i would like to encourage people who have had similar or other experiences to share them with everyone.
Gruff