Does anyone actually physically play that though? In my, admittedly limited, experience, it's all synthesised or short loop recorded.
so long as you can handle LOUD
I was forced to re-examine some of my prejudices.
Interesting, though. I've actually dabbled a bit with techno and have only ever done the synth thing or used recordings.
..It can be made much more intellectual that it appears
Just what a largely chemically enhanced audience will appreciate at 4 in the morning.
Maybe I'm a simpleton but I just slow it down until I'm not making mistakes. Why so much emphasis on bpm when learning a piece? Someone in this thread says that if you cannot play piece at half tempo, it is too advanced for you. Not sure I agree with that assertion.
..tim, playing with a metronome does not imply the ability to play in a band.
And this is especially evident in student pianists who can play fine with a metronome but who when placed with some other musicians kind of go off in their own world completely oblivious to how out of time they are.
To which music is chained to die.
Perhaps so, but a click track is the norm in session playing, and there is a lot of money to be made that way.
Absolutely true. It can be a step on the way though, as it can require listening to and coordinating with external time. Like any exercise, it can be done wrong. The inability to play with a metronome very often does imply inability to play in a band - except for those so oblivious they never realize the rest of the band has given up and is just following them. (They wonder why they don't get called back.)
The snooty string players
Haha, again? Given the generally hard time viola players are given by their colleagues, are there any snooty ones?
Actually, i've found the violists to be egocentrical but easy to get along with.
When you pracitise slow. How slow do you do it?
Why? What does he (she) say about practising slow?
The dense wombat
Where do you get all these pictures?! Or do you compose them?
And like them, i can bite and bulldoze, too.
If you would read ALL the posts i've had with her, you would probably intuit what i think of her.
Look who's judging. certainly doesn't need anyone to defend her. She stood up to all that controversy against her regarding that competition a while ago singlehandedly. And i have to say she wasn't swayed one bit by it all.
As slow as I can follow music idea and correlate it with technical execution.Best, M
Why?
? Why the why? What could possibly cause bemusement about the idea of going slowly enough to achieve good physical control and good phrasing.
going slowly enough to achieve good physical control and good phrasing
get the notes right
marik (I think) asserted that the slower the better, provided the musical idea could be followed. I want to know his opinion on why. Why is quarter speed better than half, why is tenth speed even better, why would 100th speed be even more so? What if we played one note an hour? My reasoning is that the way an exercise should be performed should be determined by the intent. How slow we decide to go should be related to what EXACTLY we are trying to learn from slowing down. If it is just to play slowly enough to get the notes right, which is one perfectly valid reason for playing slowly, then "slower the better" is wrong. If the notes are right at MM=80, MM=60 is wasting time. But for some other purpose MM=60 might be way too fast.
the slower the better
So N doesn't know why either.Well, that makes two of us.Perhaps marik will enlighten us. Er, one of us at least, I promise to read it carefully. I can't speak for N. Well, I can guess, but it might be rude.
the slower you go the more mental focus you can give to both the sound you generate and the physical sensation of doing so. There is a more detailed thought process in action at 1/4 speed compared to 1/2.. its not just slower, the brain is going full pelt. The slower the better because it means more detail, on a number of levels.But marik is also telling us not to go so slow that we lose sense of the musical intention. So for that purpose 1/10th speed may infact not be better, that may be too slow depending on the exact context.
actually I don't see how he ignored it.. he said that is what he meant by "getting the notes right" - as in he was attributing more to that statement than just hitting a given key at a given time.the doubt is more likely in that if he hasnt studied at the super advanced level he has not been forced to develop an understanding of the extreme level of sensitivity required to have control over that repertoire.. where slower than slow practice has such a positive effect both on the discovery front and the developing a strong physical/musical memory front.
maybe the piece is in 8/4 and largely consists of breves.EDIT:seriously though, such physical sensitivity is perhaps more often developed gradually as it becomes necessary, along with the developing musical sensitivity.. and is for most people (those without the most exceptional teachers) forced on to them as they push to figure out how to play more advanced material... then transferred back into easier material.I don't think its fair to argue with someone who disagrees that such detail has a purpose, for they have perhaps simply not found the purpose in the music.. one might do better to highlight what won't be possible musically unless full attention to detail is given, and highlight the exact detail that needs some focus in that context.. which can of course often be quite difficult to convey in the first place... "why do I need to practice in such detail? I'm happy with just getting the right notes its sounds fine.."
I don't think its fair to argue with someone who disagrees that such detail has a purpose, for they have perhaps simply not found the purpose in the music..
I don't disagree at all that such detail has a purpose, even for the simpler music I play. While I have no great desire to play the really advanced repertoire, my goal is to play the simple stuff very very well. (It is somewhat surprising to me how often I hear people with astounding technique mangle the simple stuff. But I digress) I have been asking for some response to the theory that if slow is good, even slower is always better. This has largely been ducked by N, who appears not to know. For those of us who don't have infinite time, slow enough is the requirement. And possibly, just possibly, this relates to the OP's question. 80 BPM is the same as one note per hour - clearly used as an rhetorical example, and clearly interpreted literally only by one whose sole purpose here is contentiousness.
AJS- note how he ducked what we both expressed in our explanations and pretended none was given. the guy's a troll, pure and simple. Given that his questions are clearly attempts to heckle rather than attempts to learn, I'll finish on the same note- by stating that obviously our church pianist knows better than Rachmaninoff did on how to achieve the most from practise...
Even if that is the case... if you are going to assume that you are the more knowledgeable party, as a teacher your role is motivate the other party to learn, and pass through such barriers. Obviously you're not obliged to do that for free on a web-forum.. but you're approach to explanation, while in essence accurate is more attacking a closed mind which locks it up further, rather than opening a closed mind.And in reality, you are going to come up against real life students who are remain skeptical of advice if its not presented in a way that suits them personally.. even if it appears very obvious/logical to you.