i felt that way once, albiet not as harshly as you. all i can say is dont give up. push through it. perhaps, you should read some tips from changs book on piano practice (if you havnt already) as a beginner i found alot of help.https://www.pianofundamentals.com/book/en/chapter_1
frank, you know me... You can see from my earlier posts that I am familiar with Dr. Chang's book, and bernhard's "method". I believed they were right, though it shoudn't be a matter of belief, as bernhard would say. I don't know what to do or who to trust now. An alternative would be nice, but I'm still doubtful.
Am depressed again. I just can't take it anymore! I had been stuck with lame piano teachers for a year now. I have no more trust in my teachers, all they tell me is to practice more, and that's it.No one's telling me how to practice more efficiently, and it hurts that they're implying I'm lazy. Plus my classmates think I'm more intelligent and talented than I really am because I'm quite the critic. I don't understand it at all. Am really frustrated now and can't go back to the piano. I feel cheated. I have invested my time learning practice methods, and searching this forum... all for nothing...
Okay, you're still kvetching about this same issue with no answers.You say you're progressing on the guitar at a greater rate than the piano.
Look. Here are the facts: you're clearly intelligent. You've got a wicked sense of humor. You do tons of "navel-gazing" (i.e. thinking).
You say you're quite the "critic." Well, there's a career for you! And the good news about being a critic is that you don't have to have the least bit of talent as a performer. Just hone your writing skills, study music history and performance practice history, oodles of repertoire and you've got the background. A music degree wouldn't hurt, but it's not required.
Thanks, cmg. I know I'll be back at the piano in a while.Still don't think I can teach, though.*shudders at the thought of students picking up my bad habits**shudders more at the thought of students not learning anything from me*I don't know which is worse. *faints*
[Offers smelling salts to the fainting damsel.]
Teaching piano at a masters level in my opinion is much harder than playing piano at a masters level. So you certainly are not making your job easier by saying you don't want to be a virtuoso pianists but the best teacher.As a great teacher you must always hold this close to your mind when dealing with students: "One cannot change the direction of the wind, however we can adjust our sails." Some people are at the moment stuck in considering music in a certain way, like you find yourself more into memory work than sight reading. You cannot force yourself into the other direction immediately, you must slowly adjust yourself. A good teacher can sense small adjustments to their students which encourage them to look at their music in a different way. So a good question for you to ask your teachers is how can you adjust the way you are learning your music. Unfortunately most teachers have a scatter gun approach to their teaching and can only give you general guides, you might as well be taught over the telephone with these teachers, I wouldn't waste my money though.
Scatter gun approach it may be, but how come it works for othersand not for me?
..I can't even tell if it's possible for me to be a teacher. Who'd want to take lessons from someone who takes months to learn a simple piece? It's not very encouraging, is it?
So though I understand "slowly adjusting your sails" in a way, and it is an answer good enough for me as a student... It's not good enough for me as a future teacher.
That is the only reason I compare myself with other students. Frankly, though they're more advanced, I prefer my own tone. But I know most people don't care about that.
Maybe you're being a bit hard on yourself
You can say to students, "I know it seems hard right now, because I have felt that way in my own journey, but one day this will click and you will find yourself doing things you never thought you could and this will seem easy."
BTW tone is just as important as anything else! I'm trying to improve my overall sound and I've gotta say it's not a piece of cake. Takes very close listening skills. In fact I'm disappointed that I've managed to practice so long without noticing these defects
...lostin, more than anyone, you sound like the dean in our school. I have nothing more to say, I'm sorry x10.
think of this... this year is my sixth year learning piano, and I can only play canon in d, NO JOKINg..... think of that..
I don't know if that's a good thing or not.
I know it doesn't help a lot in the current frustration, however, as a future teacher, your struggle is of great benefit. People find it hard to teach adaptively what they have not experienced. In a normal studio group, you will have a few who pick things up quickly and you'll be secretly jealous how easy it is for them. However, you will have many more who make slower progress, who come across walls and obstacles to climb over, who need to find new sources of courage and endurance. You will have so much more to offer - you will have found some ways that work for different situations and will know some of the traps to help students avoid. You can say to students, "I know it seems hard right now, because I have felt that way in my own journey, but one day this will click and you will find yourself doing things you never thought you could and this will seem easy." You will be able to say it with sincerity, not as a weak offering of words in the hope that your student is still there next lesson. Be creative in your approach, try new things, be gentle to your self emotionally and physically but build your strength every day. Sometimes you can sit in one place for a while, and then something falls into place, or someone says something in a way that helps you understand what you thought you already did and now realise something new - if that makes sense. You will have "aha" moments - and those will give you a spurt - and you will be glad that you persevered.
To think that some people can play piano better without a teacher...
....He can't teach me piano, unfortunately... And I hate him for that. I messaged him today, "You can teach me if you wanted to... But you don't... I want a teacher not a reference. I have plenty of those."I know I don't mean to say I hate him. I'm sorry.
Am depressed again. I just can't take it anymore! I had been stuck with lame piano teachers for a year now. I have no more trust in my teachers, all they tell me is to practice more, and that's it... I don't understand why I can't put in so much time, if that is the problem. I reach the point of diminishing returns after only an hour, sometimes an hour and a half. Either my head hurts, or my back, and errors after errors are made.No one's telling me how to practice more efficiently, and it hurts that they're implying I'm lazy. Plus my classmates think I'm more intelligent and talented than I really am because I'm quite the critic. I have a classmate who has perfect pitch and is working on inventions and Chopin Waltz in C#m. And another who just started this March, he's playing Chopin Minute Waltz. I just don't understand why I can't progress as much. AT LEAST let me progress in piano as much as my guitar! Guitar has been slow and steady for me, and I have many performable pieces. On piano I have only 3 minuets.I don't understand it at all. Everyone else is sight reading pieces HT until they get it right, using intuitive methods... And yet I'm falling behind. I don't exactly want to be a virtuoso, but the best piano teacher. But apparently the methods I use are lame. Practicing HS, segmental practice, memorizing pieces... Tell me, is this wrong?? But honestly, I can't practice any other way... I had been doing this from the start, because I had trouble sight-reading. It takes too long to learn a piece by sight reading, so I memorize it. So at this rate, I already cut my learning time in half, and yet I'm still behind!!Am really frustrated now and can't go back to the piano. I feel cheated. I have invested my time learning practice methods, and searching this forum... all for nothing...
Few of them will make good teachers. I had lessons, but to quite a large extent I'm a 'natural' and I wouldn't have a CLUE how to teach, certainly not a beginner.Anyway, I can't honestly say I feel your pain, because that would be kinda pretentious, but I do feel very sympathetic towards your plight. My 2 cents is to pick up some completely new repertoire, something that's not technically demanding, e.g. Für Elise or MacDowell's 'To a Wild Rose' and make it as beautiful as you can.
Well I am sorry if you think I was trying to teach you anything I don't think you will get a complete solution to your problem answered here though. In the end you have to pick yourself up and move on. I feel that demoralizing yourself by comparing yourself with other students will not help you much, so that is an important issue to deal with. Also finding the real reason behind why you are playing the piano, what joy are you drawing from it? Would you play the piano if no one in the world existed but yourself?
Then you'd say, "Those who can't do teach." This is insulting really. I have deep respect for teachers because teaching is one of the most difficult underrated jobs. Teachers need more respect.And it's not all about whether you have it or not. Do you think those people in conservatory are there simply because they're talented? I'm sure they're there because of hard work and that hard work probably took 5 or 10 years if not more.Please respect the piano. It is difficult. I myself am having lots of trouble with it. But I'm not giving it up simply because my progress is slower than that of others
It sounds as if you have mainly a problem with reading. I would recommend to work this out first. Memorize all the places of the notes on the staff up to the third ledger line and relate them to the keys. You have to see the related keys in your mind when you're reading. Then work on the coordination of the hands. Don't only work on little minuets, take sonatinas or easy sonatas. To get the hands coordinated takes quite an amount of time. I remember that it took me like two years when I started. Bach inventions are excellent material for this. And try to play some more "modern" stuff like Bartók's 10 little pieces.
I disagree. My first guitar teacher was mainly self-taught, he did talk to a lot of conservatory-trained students/ teachers only to find that we was at a higher level of playing, teaching and could explain things better. I would call him a natural, but he started late also- at 15 years old. Not anyone could do as he did, but being self-taught truly has its advantages. The only disadvantages to his method are:lack of organizationfocus on memory/ interpretation as opposed to sight-readingtherefore it takes too long to finish a single pieceFUR ELISE?? *dies*
I VERY RARELY play for myself, maybe just to let off steam, or as part of practice.
I do sight reading on my own now, I started on my old books (grades 0-1), it's a lot easier now since all the pieces are familiar to me. It feels more like short-term memorizing though. I don't know if that's true sight reading.
momopi, I appreciate the no-nonsense post. Really.
3) Er, if I love to play Rach 2, how the hell am I going to convince my teacher?? Seriously, though. None of my favorite pieces are within my level.
5) You're right. Make that 3 minuets and one sonatina movement (finally finished it ). Other than that, am not exaggerating. But I should stop feeling sorry for myself now.
6) There are only a few high-level pieces I really want to play. Otherwise, I'd love to teach.
Yes, I understand it sounds rash that I decided to become a piano teacher. Though I started piano only a year ago, I wanted to be a teacher practically all my life. My only other option is to teach music.
I am sorry. However there are bad teachers and good teachers. They are not all good.
If it's 5-10 years, it is not just a matter of hard work, but time. Being able to give that amount of time is a blessing in itself. Some people do not have that.I am saying that talent is a bigger factor than even I expected.
And there are some that see no progress in say, 1 year and then quit.
SONATAS??
Frankly, my piano teacher isn't teaching me any techniques. It's just me picking up from my guitar lessons, asking around and other sources.
He is the best teacher in the school. He is very special to me. He can't teach me piano, unfortunately... And I hate him for that. I messaged him today, "You can teach me if you wanted to... But you don't... I want a teacher not a reference. I have plenty of those."
Sir lostin, er... I DID mean to say I hate him. But I don't hate you. You can't do anything about it, but he could have.
I'm confused again.
like i said before, sorry, I'm not particularly nice.
Don't compare piano to guitar.Fur elise won't kill you, don't die.
when you practice sight-reading, you practice with pieces you've never played.i tried sight reading sonata pathetique (movt2) before even though i'm still intermediate level. of course, it was super slow (slower than snail's pace) with mistakes and my playing lacked dynamics. but i felt proud. you have to be open to the fact that every time you learn a new piece, you'll be making lots of mistakes again.
teach something else. you are being very disrespectful to people who love music. Do not underestimate the arts.
Even a grade school student would know that.common sense
my teacher neither taught me techniques. just showed them occasionally. don't expect teachers to save your ass. teachers can only do so much. you gotta help yourself. grow up kiddo.
it's make me sad....
I feel like this is just leading quickly me to the place I didn't want to go: NOWHERE! Just going in circles. I did say there was a rant ahead. What was supposed to be letting off steam is making me even more confused. nils, please just delete this thread or something.
take a break from thinking about piano n do something entirely unrelated for about one week or two. u need it
db..., I love piano and I really want to study at con... But I'm 15 now, and I can't play really well after all... Maybe tds right, u should take a rest... a while...
...... .. I dun want to try fashion design..... I want to study music!!
...one year? o_O 4 performable pieces is quite an achievement in my opinion. Apparently, something must have gone slightly ok for you to have 4 pieces under your belt.
4 short, entry-level pieces. Like Minuet in G. Sliiiiiiightly okay, yes. A lot of people ask me if I play this piece or that, and I say- i can't, I can only play this- and they're like- WHAT?? You've been studying for a year!
4) stop comparing yourself to others. it's stupid. of course, people are different. you started late, went to a science high school(yeah yeah I've read it all in my thread https://www.pianostreet.com/smf/index.php/topic,30910.0.html)5) stop feeling sorry for yourself, I'm sure you're doing much better than your think you do. you're just exaggerating your problems
...one year? o_O4 performable pieces is quite an achievement in my opinion. Apparently, something must have gone slightly ok for you to have 4 pieces under your belt.
Well I'm older than you; maybe it's too late for me... I don't know...
Too late? I don't know when you started but I started when I was nearly 19 back in 2006. I taught myself for a year and then just recently got a teacher at college for about half a semester. As long as you want something bad enough and strive for it you'll eventually achieve your goal. I've been killing myself for the past 2 years actually. Practicing 4-5 hours everyday. I even did an 8 hr day once. never again... I did all this because I kind of wanted the degree that my college had so I had to get good enough to audition into the applied piano class. Sure there are people WAY better than me at the school but I don't really care, as long as I can play songs that I like. I can't even play Bach's minuet in G to tell you the truth I actually picked up piano because I heard an anime song and wanted to play it on piano. I'm starting my third year of piano and currently learning Bach's 13th invention... I actually have videos of myself playing on youtube if you want to compare yourself to me (not in a bad way.) Message me if you want the link. BTW none of my videos are classical songs since I don't really like listening to or playing classical music... Good luck practicing!