Thoughtful comments from everyone, great work!
Generally when under a dead line, you would work only on the material that is to be learnt/mastered within a specific time period and I do not recommend extending practice time to accomplish both the deadline and your favorite material.
Of course a deadline must be constructed to suit your lifestyle. I certainly think that extending practice time to accomplish your work faster is in fact a good thing if you can fit that into your life. Many people simply cannot give more time and that is ok.
You do not necessarily have to give more time but instead work in a more structured manner ensuring that you take notice of what you are actually accomplishing. Some people simply play through and might focus on small parts but if you asked them exactly what they need to complete it can be a little hazy for them to explain.
I agree that playing through whole piece is essential as well, especially at a solid tempo. However, that does not always come easily and when there are breaks in phrasing and clarity, which cause confusion and results in poor, unprofessional sound.
Yep that is when it is important to use tools to allow you to play through a piece with some degree of clarity. Many people slow down the tempo, but of course simplifying the music is not limited to just that.
How to approach a piece is one of the central things I am being taught presently. It is the opposite of what you wrote. First there is an overview to get a gist of what the piece is about, and find sections. The most difficult is worked on first, and that is done in layers. The first layer is notes, fingering which is also easy movement. The second layer is timing, and the third starts going into dynamics and expression. Of course your level and skills play a role too.
I don't think what I am saying is the opposite of how people normally study their music. What I am interested in is how you put this study into a timeline. Often with art if you do not make this a part of your work you can often spend too much time with the material. Some teachers expect students to play this perfectly before moving on, many people are like this when they learn peices, it must be to their satisfaction before they move on. This is a security blanket I have found, where it might be better just to move on once you can play something near acceptable and understand how to improve it. Often in time it will naturally improve itself the more you simply play through a piece (not practice small sections). Of course I do not suggest that you remove studying small parts but put this study into a timeline also so that you do not waste too much time looking at the leaf and forgetting about the tree and forest so to speak.
Learning the "raw material" of a piece reasonably up to tempo and in a more or less acceptable artistic fashion is done in the first or first two sessions and I stick to that task until it is accomplished. As Neuhaus says: If you want to boil water in a kettle to have a cup of tea, you heat the kettle until the water boils and you do that RIGHT NOW because you're thirsty. If I can't do that, I just put the piece aside as "temporarily impossible". Calling it "difficult" and work longer on it to get that "raw material" ready would be self-deception.
This is what I am talking about, the "raw material" learning the fingering, the notes and the basic technique to play the piece comfortably. To express the music with mastery takes time, once a piece is very very well known then you can say it is mastered. There are many pieces I know which I have played for over 20 years and I consider them really well known and truly mastered, but at the same time I can learn pieces in short time and play them at concert standard very fast because I can draw from past experiences. Of course if getting the raw material is evasive this will make mastering the piece very difficult.
Creating the artistic end result, though, may take years and years of slow practice for some pieces. Therefore, "deadlines' are NOT really part of my philosophy.
Certainly it takes many years to craft something that is totally effortless and expresses near to exactly what you want. But is this necessary? There are plenty of pieces I have played in concert that I only learned months before the event, but now of course I have played them for many many years.
Music grows and changes with you, we do not have to bring it to the utmost pinnacle of our ability and our expressive dreams all the time. So long we maintain contact with it, it will develop, improve and become our own. This process of course cannot be rushed, but you can certainly work harder to make it faster, you can certainly learn other pieces which help you master these. I can look back to when I was a child playing certain pieces which took me months to master, but now I can do it in one sitting, simply sight read and play with all the expression I want. It is instantly at the top class level that I want it to be. Of course I could memorize and remove the sheets but that would take time, there is no need for this all the time.
As performers we need to play not when we are ready but when the music is ready. To me there is a big difference. If we wait for ourselves to be ready this might take forever especially if you are a perfectionist and almost all serious musical students are perfectionists. So we must perform when the music is ready, that mean that it can be expressed effectively to others and does indeed reflect you as a performer. Timelines for me force us to abandon when WE think we are ready and forces us simply to allow the music to determine when we are ready or not.
I think that pushing for deadlines is inherently harmful, - always. Healthy discipline, though, using the max of your capabilities is always good. The problem is not to confuse those two.
Maybe you could elaborate why you think it is harmful I'd like to read about that.
Creating a timeline actually encourages discipline because if you miss out on practice sessions or practice lazily or ineffectively you might waste time and reduce your discipline. When I have a concert to work for I practice so damn hard because I am petrified to present something of bad quality to the public. Thus my timetable becomes a factor pushing me and urging me to do my best because there is no ifs or buts, the time is short and I have to beat it.
When you study with a teacher it is the same as working on a deadline. The teacher will leave you with work to solve for the next lesson and you have to work towards that, it is like a timeline in itself although not breaking down the work in a detailed fashion all the time. Most students improve with a teacher because they are working on some kind of deadline, but the thing is most lessons teachers do not focus the students attention to the fact that there is a deadline, and perhaps does not even elaborate on the micro steps or the time management to achieve it.
If I don't have any type of deadline, I don't really work detailed, or concentrated. However, when I don't have a deadline, I do exactly like you suggested - play from beginning to end, without having time to focus on details. It's the same when the deadline is too soon.
I am sure you mean "However, when I DO have a deadline...."
Yes it is difficult to focus on details if the deadline is short that is where we need to have good judgement as to what is the most important aspects of the piece that needs to be effectively mastered. It is a scary situation to put yourself in and it took me a while to get used to it because I am an extreme perfectionist. I had to simply play to a good level but not my utmost best level, because my best level taxes too much time. As I get older my best level will become more apparent when playing pieces I have known for years or pieces which reflect actions I have much experience with. As an extreme example I was amazed when my own teacher would sightread piano concertos with super short notice for public performance (even though he had performed them before it still flabbergasted me!).
I really don't agree on the absent of details that you seem to suggest. Obviously, if one sits with a few bars for a week, there's something wrong. Though, I don't think it's too many details, but rather not focusing on what really should be done.
It might be a little confusing what I exactly mean by not focusing on small amounts of bars. Of course we need to do this but how much do we actually do this is important. I have found some students of mine can get overly focused on small parts and forget the larger picture. Where if they simply maintained the entire picture their detailed problems might indeed solve themselves. The entire picture for me is being able to play the piece in its entirety and also at an acceptable performance level. I find some students simply do not want to move on until they have completely mastered a passage or play it exactly how they want to, this to me is wasting time and at the end of your life you might have missed out on hundreds of works because of it. As a perfectionist this was the most difficult bridge to burn but once I did it it opened up my learning rate and sticking with it for some 15 years now I have found it was one of the greatest changes I ever made to my musical approach.
I usually learn the notes of a piece in a week or two, generally. After that, however, I don't put a deadline. I don't believe in pushing when the time of understanding of a piece may vary a lot.
I think this is a good way of working, get the notes and fingering out the way with a deadline. As highlighted by p2u if this stage is takes a long time you are fooling yourself into learning the piece in an effective manner.
I was also in the same boat as you believnig that I should not push the time it takes me to master a piece and make it my own. Of course with many years passing and constant contact with a piece you will improve upon it constantly, but when do you stop? When do you get to a level where you say it is ready to perform? When do you move on to other works?
One other issue I found is that if you play a piece over and over again for many many years it certainly loses its "freshness". This is a strange situation but over practicing and connection with a piece can make you actually play the piece worse compared to if you simply moved on and brought it up to scratch when required.
But what is bringing a piece up to scratch? What is enough? This is an important question, once you determine it then you can go about creating timelines for mastery. It is important for performing artists to have a good idea of this otherwise they will never complete their projects and never perform. We don't perform when we think we have all our pieces at our maximum best, but certainly we perform when we are proud of our effort and confident our audience will enjoy it. Personally I am NEVER happy with how I play something, even things I have played for many years, but that is the perfectionist in me and I have found it is not important, especially for my audience.
...You are actually not talking about amateurs and professionals here, though. You are talking about professional musicians and students. That's the first important thing.
I don't really understand what you mean or what the difference is.
The student is acquiring technical skills, and is generally in the process of learning on all fronts. As a student when I am working on a piece, it is not to be able to perform it, but to learn from it by working on it.
Many of my students who sit for exams have a deadline to work with and all my exam students I have a very detailed layout of their timeline. The majority of my exam students get the "A" marks because of this time pressure I put onto them to perform. A few students of mine also enter competitions and we follow the same strict routine. Some advanced students of mine who don't do exams or competitions however do not like to be given deadlines because they have no reason to work with it. There is no urgency in their work thus they can take all the time in the world to master something if that even interests them at all. The problem I find is that if you have no urgency in your work you simply will waste time. Humans are naturally lazy beings so it is often good to go against our nature in this respect, even if it goes against ever cell of our body!
I sometimes see teachers write about telling students to "practice 30 minutes/day" or "play these measures 10 times each day". I think that could lead to some poor habits. You watch the clock rather than working intelligently and with purpose. You count how many times you did something rather than looking how you're doing it. Is the real answer that of teaching students to work efficiently and intelligently?
This is a weak form of creating a deadline with very few little details. Like I said in my initial post I could not give a generalized form as to how to create deadlines because everyone is different and also I really do not want to write a thesis