Hello,Just started playing piano 8 weeks ago. I am presently taking lessons. How important is practicing with the metronome? My teacher said it is important but not to rely on it too much as you want to internalize the metronome.Any advice or thoughts regarding this?Thanks.
I personally think it's much more important to learn to count than practicing with the metronome. Metronome is helpful at times when you want to check that you are playing something correctly. I also use it sometimes to force me to practice really slowly. For a beginner I don't think how the metronome is any benefit at the piano. The teacher can check and address for any problems with rhythm.
The problem with a metronome is that it will give you timing, but not rhythm. It will also separate that timing from the music, rather than integrating it into it - you will be playing along to a timing, not playing with that timing. Timing and rhythm are not the same thing, and what you need to develop is rhythm. Counting helps, but so does doing other activities, like walking, with a sense of rhythm - walk along like a waltz, or tap it out, or a march, or a funeral march, or whatever.
I dont disagree with you except that you present timing like a bad thing ? The metronome gives you timing ---- that is bad ? And if the "metronome" separates the timing from the music, then someone does not understand the timing. A metronome just sitting there clicking should not cause timing to be separate. But I think I remember posts where we discussed the best way to throw a metronome out the window...
A metronome, for example, fails to distinguish 6 quavers in 6/8 time from 6 quavers in 3/4 time. If you play without that distinction, you might as well not bother.
Well, actually ... there are metronomes out there that *can* make this distinction, by producing a different sound for heavy versus light beats.
I'm sure outin is a far more accomplished pianist than I am.
I was reading that using a metronome supposedly helps to learnhow to play the piano and that is why I bought one...I only tried it once but realized that it made me play like "painting by numbers"...... it instantly took all the life out of my piano playing, it left no time for a little thinking pause in the right placesand the piano was instantly not breathing anymore...As a result I have not touched the metronome every since.One good point about giving the metronome a try is,to be able and notice instantly if a pianist uses it...
The benefit of the metronome is not found by playing along with it like so many think. The benefit is by practicing any measure or section very precise albeit un-musical. As you know precision and control of that precision makes you play better. Sometimes we have to focus on certain elements of playing such as precision and control during practice and that is where a metronome can be a great help as a tool, not as a magical rhythm maker. Being able to count while you play an accomplished piece is very important, but that is knowing the music flow, or pulse. One day you may be asked to play for 32 bars. Metronome wont help at all then ! You still have to count
I don't get the role of the metronome in what you're talking about. What purpose is it playing?BTW, I think having to count while you're playing an accomplished piece means it's not accomplished.
when I am learning a piece of music sometimes there may be an area of the music which I just cant seem to grab. By using a metronome it helps me with certain difficult sections because of the control aspect of having to practice precisely to the metronome.
I don't really see the benefits of learning to play duets with a metronome
I personally think it's much more important to learn to count than practicing with the metronome.
The great value of a metronome is beat accuracy. Counting alone does not help to check/test that precision.
So the difficulty you have relates to the "when to play a note with respect to the others" aspect? The "when notes fall in the bar" aspect?I can see a metronome could be used for that in some instances. So could counting.What am I still missing?
But learning to count includes learning beat accuracy. Counting is no use if not accurate. I don't think metronome is needed to learn that.
Counting never kept me from MINUSCULE slow-downs and speed-ups BETWEEN the beats (some would call that rubato, but it is actually a lack of control), mainly depending on the technical convenience of what I had to play. I remember I had to do quite a lot of metronome practice with subdividing ticks before I was able to function confidently in ensemble playing.
How do you manage to coordinate ritardendi and accelerandi in your ensemble playing so they are smooth and effective? How do you cope with swung rhythms?
I don't see how my ritardendi and accelerandi will convey anything artistic if they are actually the result of my lack of mastery over the material stuff.
Nor will they if they are out of sync with the rest of the ensemble. How do you ensure they are not?
That's like dancing. Either you have a feel for it, or you don't. If you don't, NOTHING will help, and you will keep stepping on your partner's toes.
That "feel for it" is a sense of rhythm, and can be learnt, or rather retrieved and improved - we all start with one.
Counting never kept me from MINUSCULE slow-downs and speed-ups BETWEEN the beats (some would call that "rubato", but it is actually a lack of control), mainly depending on the technical convenience of what I had to play. I remember I had to do quite a lot of metronome practice with subdividing ticks before I was able to function confidently in ensemble playing.
What I have noticed is that many people who cannot keep an accurate beat are not willing to concentrate on counting, tapping or other exercises that would help them employ their inner sense of pulse. If they did I think they would get much faster results than with metronome practice.
I am not sure it is a matter of willing only. Doing exercises forced upon you "for your own good" can be quite confronting, paralyzing even, especially in the presence of others.
I couldn't agree more. I have never been good at following other people's instructions. I rather make my own exercises and do them on my own time in my own way. So I guess I was referring to willingness to take the time to analyse what's needed and do all that work oneself rather than willingness to just follow orders
Analyzing everything yourself, though, may very well be a waste of valuable time. Personally, I also find it very tiring, sometimes even depressing. Some things cannot be grasped unless you have the right perspective of looking at them. This usually develops by simply doing (chicken-egg dilemma). One could say that it doesn't even make sense to read a book about subject X unless you have gone through all of the experiences described in that book.More important is a safe environment and a teacher who can step down to the level of being your friend who casually shows you how to approach this or that. You then simply imitate and nature does the rest.