This idea just came to me while practicing. I thought I'd share it.The intensity of the neural signal depends on two factors: 1. rate of neural signals and 2. the number of neurons involved in signalingIf repetition of neural communication leads to stronger connections, then increasing the rate of signaling and increasing the number of neurons involved in that signaling should increase the rate of learning.How to accomplish this:1. play fast, ignoring any attempt to make music2. play loud, also ignoring music-makingThe anecdotal evidence for this may include fast and loud pieces that are faster learned than slow and soft ones.
Hahahaha you also end up with a crapload of bad habits. I don't recommend this. It's better to learn it properly once then half learn it and then have to fix it later.
For some reason I find playing firmer helps establish memory but I don't agree much with the rest.
This also works since a firm touch requires continuous signals beyond an initial impulse.
This is an incorrect assumption. A bad habit is a result of poor technique. There is nothing about playing fast and loud that leads to bad habits if you already know how to play fast and loud.
Sorry, but this makes no sense. It would only make more if it said "if you already knowhow to play the specific passage fast and loud"- which obviously you don't if you haven't yet practised it. Are you implying that there's a general "fast and loud" technique and that anyone who has it can never do any wrong in a passage that is both fast and loud, no matter how little preparation? Who do you know that plays Rachmaninoff's 3rd piano concerto fast and loud at the first visit, without any bad habits? No such ability exists in anybody. Making an inherently flawed (ir)rational construct is not going to change the fact that starting fast and loud is the worst thing you can do, if you want to learn it properly. Your logic does not hold up and neither does this work in practise.
I can agree with the firm touch theory to get a piece or a passage into your hands. I can't agree with just full steam ahead fast and hard playing accomplishing much of anything, especially from the get go of a new piece. Again, as I stated in my other post, certainly not for me at least.
You're not learning how to play the piano with the mentioned strategies; you're learning the piece. These are two different aspects.The confusing seems to be using pieces as piano learning tools. I am simply suggesting that if you already can play the piano, you can use these strategies to increase the rate of learning a new piece.
If the pianist is accomplished, the concerto should not be a problem to read through since it's just different notes in different orders. But what I am saying is that to memorize it, it may be faster to play fast, play loud.I am providing a neurological explanation about how the brain works. To deny that it doesn't work this way is purposeful ignorance.Anyone who wants to test this idea out can choose two similar pieces. Learn one the way you would normally learn it. Learn the other the way I have prescribed. If the theory is valid, then the fast/loud practice should be the one memorized first.
I am providing a neurological explanation about how the brain works. To deny that it doesn't work this way is purposeful ignorance.
Anyone who wants to test this idea out can choose two similar pieces. Learn one the way you would normally learn it. Learn the other the way I have prescribed. If the theory is valid, then the fast/loud practice should be the one memorized first.
You really don't understand how science works do you. You don't make a theory by ignoring basic common sense. It's like saying objects in motion don't stay in motion because when you throw a ball it doesn't go in a straight line.
It's important to note that making music is NOT the initial goal. The initial goal is to memorize the piece first and when the notes are in place the ultimate the goal will be to make music. This would then require music-making practice. You aren't doing everything perfectly all at once. I think even in your experience that music-making practice usually happens after the notes have been learned, not before.
Maybe. I don't know the science but I know it's very effective.
In the DVD, Marc-Andre Hamelin: No Limits, there is a portion of the interview where he explains that he learns pieces best by applying really firm pressure into the keys. He is shown forcing all of his weight into the key bed. At first, I thought this was a bad thing since no one (at least not the super good ones [hint, hint: Hamelin]) actually plays the piano that way. But he explains that this is the fastest way he gets it into the fingers.While the argument "If it's good enough for Hamelin, it's good enough for me" isn't very convincing, maybe Hamelin and you are right.From my knowledge of neuroscience, both of you are right.
Hey guys.. i dont really understand this. So its better if you, for example, play the Hanon exercises as fast and loud as possible? What about the injuries you could get that way?
Speed is an important factor in learning due to the constraints of working memory. If two related stimuli are spaced too far apart, you may completely fail to make the connection. It's like listening to a professor babble on and on about something for 15 minutes when he could have said it in 3 sentences. Even though all the necessary information was given in those 15 minutes, the information was spaced too far apart to be easily processed and connected.
We aren't talking about learning how to play the piano which is what you're thinking. We're talking about the fastest way to memorize a new piece when you already know how to play. And don't play Hanon, it's bad for you.
The brain processes best when you give it clarity and time to observe- hence the use of movements that are pronounced enough to be vividly perceived and a slow tempo to absorb the sensations.
It might be useful to highlight this point in slightly different words... this is not just a case of "playing loud/heavy" - I personally use the process some of the time, and for me at least it works not just because its loud (and for that matter its not necessarily loud).
It's useful to differentiate between them.
Please provide an example of "common sense".
1. play fast, ignoring any attempt to make music2. play loud, also ignoring music-making
The analogy doesn't work, sorry. It's more like if you have to accurately memorise every word of a short speech by listening to someone else recite it at high speed and go on to deliver it at the same high speed yourself. It would be easier to memorise it by listening and practising it at a speed where you can easily process all the information and only then recite it faster- not to memorise it by listening to someone rattling through it at high speed and only practise it at high speeds.
Why are you not bothering to deal with the point I keep having to repeat? Your whole premise continues to be based on the assumption that you can play fast with the same level of precision as when you play slow, at the drop of a hat. You cannot found a premise on such a dubious assumption. This is not going to go anywhere if you're not even going to attempt to deal with the issues I have raised. Ignoring factors that conflict with your theory does not make them fail to be an issue. At the very least, you need to attempt to deal with them, by providing a specific reasoned response to these issues, or this is quite pointless.
1. Consistently making mistakes means you are learning mistakes2. Playing faster and louder without regard for the music will lead to mistakes3. Consistently doing so will lead to consistent mistakes.4. Mistakes are REALLY hard to unlearn.
This will shave off a lot of your stamina during practice sessions. Forcing practice when exhausted and the lactic acid burns is a bad idea IMO.
This analogy doesn't work, either. When we play fast for the purpose of increasing memorization, what we are doing is chunking larger pieces of information into a shorter time span. This is the reason why Chinese speakers memorize more numbers than English speakers who memorize more numbers than Farsi speakers; the time it takes to say the numbers is the limiting factor with Farsi being the slowest of the three mentioned languages. But back to playing, the speed forces the brain to process more information into a shorter amount of time. This is mental effort.
You are still confusing learning to play the piano as opposed to learning the music. It is assumed you already know how to play, thus the mechanics have already been learned and is a non-issue.
While the argument "If it's good enough for Hamelin, it's good enough for me" isn't very convincing, maybe Hamelin and you are right.
Convinces me! Anyway, it was my teacher who first pointed it out. I think you're on a great track - intensifying neural signals - but I'm still not keen on the fast thing. I don't think speed has much effect on memory in the short term. In fact, I'd say it's the opposite - memory isn't affected by the fast or slow of a piece much like an odometer.
Neurologically, memory is simply one neuron connected to another neuron. That's it.Learning is the process in which neurons connect. But there are billions of neurons and billions ^exponential possible connections.Speed is important to engage closely related neurons to connect and communicate using specific pathways. These pathways are determined by learning. By playing quickly certain segments, you essentially group pieces of information more closely making it easier to memorize that same sequence. Speed also makes it easier to practice (repeat) the same segment in a shorter amount of time so that slow pieces like the "Moonlight" sonata or a Nocturne are learned (memorized) much quicker. We are only concerned with learning the notes, not making music.
You consistently reply by making some reference to the bad technique of playing the piano. Then your last reply uses a golf analogy about swinging a club. Again, for the last time:
THIS IS NOT ABOUT PLAYING THE PIANO. IT IS ABOUT LEARNING THE MUSIC.
NO PIANIST HAS A MAGIC TECHNIQUE THAT ALLOWS THEM TO PLAY ALL DIFFICULT NEW REPERTOIRE FAST AND LOUD WITH FLAWLESS TECHNIQUE.
Disagree. Sight reading no, but after a few run-throughs I don't see why not. There are pianists with flawless technique ya know.
Find me a single pianist who can maintain it,
Liszt
You saw him practice?!
No, but Chopin did!