I once had a student who was more concerned with telling me things at great length than actually being taught something new. I sincerely wondered why they actually came for the lesson.
A mind very capable of thinking on its own, (such as your own) - looking much more for an experienced sounding board than direct instruction?
the slower you go the more mental focus you can give to both the sound you generate and the physical sensation of doing so.
marik (I think) asserted that the slower the better, provided the musical idea could be followed.
I am struggling to polish pieces and was delighted to see this topic in a new thread. PLEASE, someone, return to the original topic and offer your opinion of what speed works best for you and explain.
My "why" implied two parts.One is, as the OP asked, how we determine what is slow enough. We want to play slow enough for a specific purpose, but for most of us, not slower. I apologize for misreading marik's post as "slower is better," by the way; it was not a deliberate misread. The other is what we do differently when we play slower. I think that merely playing slowly is necessary but not sufficient, as the mathematicians say. It is easy to think there is something magic about the speed, but if the speed is not used to focus on something that can't be done faster, then there is likely no benefit at all.
One thing to add: if you actually teach, you know a student needs to work on one thing at a time. That affects the speed you need.
[...]what we do differently when we play slower. I think that merely playing slowly is necessary but not sufficient, as the mathematicians say. It is easy to think there is something magic about the speed, but if the speed is not used to focus on something that can't be done faster, then there is likely no benefit at all.
if you are a teacher, based on what you stated earlier, are you sincerely saying that you only allow students to do so at either the exact final speed, three quarters of it, or half/quarter speed?
I do not understand how it is possible to have derived that meaning out of what I said.
OH MY FU&"/#("% GOD! WE GET IT! YOU HAVE DIFFERENT OPINIONS!Since it's more likely that we world will explode than that either of you would change your mind, why can't you just stop acting like 12-year olds and accept it?! MOVE ON ONCE IN YOUR GOD DAMN LIFE!Fu&king H%LL!
In this case, it seems that a single individual has different opinions. I'm just asking what his opinion actually is. Is such fury productive in any way?
Is asking him productive in any way?
you just summed up the internet.
Strange as this may sound, slow practice is mainly a tool for pianists who already know their pieces inside out and are already able to fulfil ALL requirements for those pieces.When playing virtuoso pieces at speed too often, the image in the brain of both sounds and movements gets blurred, even if you know the piece very well. The fingers become "lazy" and they lose speed for articulation, even if the pianist is able to maintain the tempo of the piece and will most likely even go faster than required but with a loss of brilliance, with a loss of valuable articulation, timing, control, etc. In other words: Fast playing makes the fingers slower. Slow practice makes them faster. That's probably a tough one to grasp for mathematicians.
Lol. Regardless of what was said in this thread, and regardless of who I agree with, I commend you for making me laugh; you just summed up the internet.
Personally, I like the Rachmaninov example, the slower the better. Gradually building up the speed until you can accurately, fluently and comfortably (appropriate fingering?) play all of the piece, or at least that section, at the same speed, gradually schieving the required tempo.
Without meaning to be argumentative, Rachmaninov didn't do it that way.He could play it accurately, fluently, and comfortably BEFORE slowing it down to perfect nuances (nuances that probably only he could hear.) His purpose in slow play was considerably different than that of most of us here.
Without meaning to be argumentative, Rachmaninov didn't do it that way.
For what it may or may not be worth, I was rereading parts of Ruth Slenczynska's Music at your Fingertips just recently, and she claims that she learned the method of incremental speed buildup using the metronome from Rachmaninoff, from whom she took lessons as a child.
There's absolute nothing wrong with accompanying church music, but you cannot possibly hope to understand the differing requirements for advanced classical pianism unless you are involved in it. What works for your specific area is very different to what works in the grand scheme of things. You can't possibly expect to understand requirements outside of your field unless you are going outside of it at an advanced level. It's about as relevant as a busker who plays 3 chords telling classical pianists that they don't need to learn scales but just need three chords in c. I'm not a snob about different styles, but you simply cannot take the demands of more technically straightforward forms and apply them to advanced classical pianism.
Actually, many secrets of the classical pianist performance world have been revealed by a marvelous nineteenth century invention, the phonograph recording. If one wants to sound like a paid tyro, one listens to what they have done.
I don't think there is a limit for how slow to go except your patience.
For that purpose I don't think there is a limit for how slow to go except your patience.
Rachmaninov was a perfectionist, hence extremely slow practice. The story goes (maybe slightly apocryphal) that he was playing his own 3rd concerto in Carnegie Hall with Koussevitsky conducting.At the end of a fantastic performance Rachmaninov received a standing ovation that went on, and on and on. However, he did not come back to the stage. The conductor many minutes later found him sitting in his dressing room sobbing. "What is wrong", he said, "...they loved your new concerto and your performance of it?" Rachmaninov looked up and said sadly, "...but, I played a wrong note!..."
While there has been some discussion of why, and some discussion of how much, there has been no mention of how to play slowly. There are motions between notes that are continuous at tempo. At very slow speeds one has to choose between a number of options: move quickly and wait for the last moment before moving again; slow all aspects of the motion equally (won't really work, will it, as keys don't play when pressed slowly, but it could be approximated); exaggerated components of the motions (rotations, etc.).
Hm. Could you cite your source, please? I was told another story. Rachmaninov is quoted to have said on that occasion: "...but, I missed the point!" which sounds much more like him. This means that he dismissed his own performance as totally useless for MUSICAL reasons, not because of wrong notes.
In slow practice, EVERYTHING is fast except for the tempo of the piece ("fast motion, but slow sequence". (c)).
Actually, many secrets of the classical pianist performance world have been revealed by a marvelous nineteenth century invention, the phonograph recording. If one wants to sound like a paid tyro, one listens to what they have done. Case in point, Alfred Brendal, who wikipedia says was self taught. The WFMT FM classical radio service played one of his recordings last week. His method lead in many cases to pleasing result, although he was not the most publicized or recorded professional pianist of his day.
Doesn't that somewhat defeat the purpose of paying careful attention to the motion? (if of course that is your purpose)
I don't think it defeats that purpose, no. My assumptions are: - the movement(s) I have to make for articulation is/are already known.- everything in the music is already clear; the only thing I do is program my brain for top performance. - The brain (not only my brain, but everybody's brain) remembers a sequence of movements best when each separate element in that sequence is made very fast but in slow succession, slowly enough to be registered.Talking about myself, this means "firing" the finger really fast, releasing redundant tension instantly as soon as I feel the key bed, preparing the thumb as soon and as fast as possible in a scale without sounding its note yet, making preparatory movements across the keyboard really fast without playing the note (for example a new hand position in leaps), etc. These are elements one can pay careful attention to only when the tempo of the actual sounds is really slow.
Your tone in several of your posts comes across as extremely patronising actually. What are your credentials? In other words, is there any real basis for your opinions being supported by solid research?
You are typical of those here who indulge in personal attacks whenever they cannot address the issues.What I have raised on this thread is nothing new, if you have read any of the pedagogical literature. You could not possibly be asking for my credentials if you were actually aware of the discussions by the really respected teachers. You are regurgitating "school book" solutions that are now in serious question, blissfully unaware. (Abby Whiteside died 57 years ago, and you stil haven't heard of her. Are you a professional?) <plonk>
By the way, some specific and concrete examples from the piano repertoire that you have actually played or performed yourself (they are not necessarily the same thing! The presence of an audience is a massive new dimension!); relating to methodology of slow practice or any other aspects of practice technique for that matter, would be very helpful; and might just increase the validity of what you are trying to argue.
The guy's a church accompanist. he doesn't play any advanced repertoire. a perfectly reasonable pursuit in itself, but a shockingly unqualified position from which to start taking a preachy tone about the supposed myth of incremental speeding up. Anyone has the right to detail things from their own experience from a place of humility and with awareness of what they can and cannot do, but it's to the severe detriment of the forum when people with minimal qualification think they are in position to dismiss particular approaches outright, in fields where they have not the slightest experience of overcoming the demands.