A lot of questions/ conflicts about studying music have been in my head lately. Methinks I should make up me mind before summer's over, and start studying seriously ASAP.
1. I don't trust my teacher, and I don't trust myself either. Now how am I supposed to discipline myself to practice if my teacher can't?
I know loads here are self-taught, but I've been under a teacher since day one. Even when I started guitar, I was learning with a good teacher who was the one who inspired me to pursue music. I've always been lacking discipline and independence but now it's become a problem just to bring myself to practice. I'd tried out different things, been studying what was required of me and never did complete anything within the week. I don't feel any sort of progress with regards to learning pieces, it's more of the length of time X number of repetitions, than any method considered. It may be that I am an extremely slow learner, teacher agrees I'm slow but isn't giving me any tips or considerations except practice, practice, practice and divide your time.
How am I supposed to even motivate myself when I'm stuck with exercises and embarrassingly easy pieces, not feeling any sort of progress from last semester?
2. exercises vs repertory
I know this has been discussed before, with the conclusion that if you can't play it, you have to practice it. Do you agree? Well not all exercises are brainless, unmusical or unchallenging. If anything, I find the technical exercises harder than any piece I've learned. Scales and arpeggios pulled my grade down in the last exam, they were really bad. If I were to practice every scale and arpeggio, it would not only eat all of my practice time, but like all exercises in the Hanon book, it hurts my hands/ arms. I really want out of Hanon, but teacher insists I must push through and learn every exercise at least once. (Not to mention Czerny Op. 599 and First Lessons in Bach, which are at least - though short - pieces.)
There's something very unnatural about these exercises, they make me more tense and they're musically uninteresting. I want out, but every teacher and student I know insists that they are important, especially since I've been having difficulty with them. Something is very wrong here, like I have to bang my head against the wall until it breaks, is there an alternative? Is there a way to get over that wall without going through it? Any music school would require scales + arpeggios at least, so I have to find a way to learn them without killing myself.
3. memorization vs sight-reading
My main method is memory, with a little bit of reading. If the piece is meant to be performed, I aim to memorize it as soon as possible. It takes a lot of time still, more than a month a piece. My first sight reading is only up to grade 1 books. My struggle is mostly with coordinating eyes + 2 hands, I can read and play one-liners pretty well. Memorizing takes forever, but sight reading is impossible. Help with either would be much appreciated. Again, consider that practice time is limited, and I have to find a way to learn both without killing myself.
4. So much to do, so little time!
That pretty much sums it up! besides piano, I'm also studying bass guitar to play with a band. We plan to be good enough to play gigs, and earn a little extra income. Then my (hopefully) last year of integrated music course starting this June... subjects include:
- solfege
- theory
- history of music
- forms and analysis
- counterpoint
- orchestration
- composition
- pedagogy
- Major instrument: PIANO
Any tips for the music subjects would be much appreciated! Just looking at the course list is overwhelming. But also, exciting. I would love to get a head start.