should I go higher?
Are you seriously asking if you should spend 5 to 6 hours PER DAY on piano? Nobody is going to tell you to spend 1/4 of your life practicing an instrument. When it gets to significant percentages of your lifetime, the call is yours.
Sorry, did the OP say he/she was at a university? I must have missed that.
Until not a long time ago I have been practicing just like that, without a plan. A little bit of this, a little bit of that and now I actually find myself not playing any of my pieces as good as they deserve. Thus I am starting to structure my practice more and think in terms of progressing with little steps. No more playing through whole pieces (which is fun) but does not bring much towards perfecting them. Concentrating on parts of pieces, details, practicing and mastering them and then moving on to the next part.
The fact is, sometimes 5 minutes is enough to solve a problem and sometimes it takes an hour. So my practice starts with evaluation of how much time I have and what would be the most productive way to use it. It also depends on my mental state. I feel it's always most productive to work on things that one feels most interested in learning at the moment instead of trying to force oneself to concentrate on something else. But maybe it's just me, I am not good at concentrating on routines by will. But I am very good at concentrating on a problem at hand until it's solved.
. If I have only 15 minutes, it makes no sense to start going through a routine. I pick a passages or two and work on the details. On a weekend when I may have hours to spend I can work differently, even do scales and exercises.
That is what I am missing and should actually start doing. When I only have 15 minutes (or even 30 minutes!) I do not go to the piano because I think it is anyway not enough time to do anything! Now, when I read your post I see how ridiculous it actually is and how much time I do not use as I could. I am weird as it comes to practicing because once I sit at the piano I can do it for hours. I sometimes plan to split it, say in 2 sessions, but it never works. I will just practice in one chunk as long as I can.
I am weird as it comes to practicing because once I sit at the piano I can do it for hours. I sometimes plan to split it, say in 2 sessions, but it never works. I will just practice in one chunk as long as I can.
But there are not only two options, either very structured practice plan or ineffcicient practice and "just playing through".
I think improvisation is certainly a great exercise for your brain and hands. I wonder how much harder it is to improvise than to perform a piece?
...but you have that backwards.. it's FAR easier to improvise than to perform.. there's no pressure --- the audience has no melodic expectations because they can't anticipate what you are going to play. There are no wrong notes. well there are--but they really don't remember them...lol If the rhythm and form are solid -- and you look and sound like you know what you are doing... the audience will love it.classical pianists tend to imagine scores upon scores of notated music when they listen to a 7 minute jazz improv piano solo--that's why it's perceived by to be so hard.. it's really
I'm inclined to agree, just sort of ramble about, making sense of course, but totally free. Start with a theme, expand upon it, even change keys, then bring it all back to the original. However, as easy as that all goes, if it were to be scored out and then someone else sat down to the 7 minutes of work you just did ? It may not go so easy for them. I know that for myself I use up a lot of keyboard real estate doing this ( not jazz, more new age/classical in nature). It comes so easy but in a score, with it's many nuances listed, octaves used, beat changes, syncopation etc. maybe not so easy after all. You do need to have reached at least a certain level of knowledge to even have a go at it and a sense of rhythm and harmony too. No harmony, no melody , it's a big flop !! I know of a composer who hosts piano solo radio. He gets floods of submissions, he says the deal breaker is usually a lack of melody in these would be solo hits. They may have everything else but no melody. And these largely are of an improv nature.Just sayin.
you are absolutely right... in it's beginning stages of development and in the hands of an inexperienced pianist... the improvisations tend to lack any kind of melody or harmonic progression... and just to make it worse there's often no rhythm either... it's awful.. painful actually. In my humble opinion, of course.
Since all of you here practice for about 2 - 3 hours, I wonder what does your practice consist of? I am self-taught right now, and would like to be 'technically' strong one day, beside just being to able to play a piece of music.
Chopin for 15 minutes.Then Chopin for 1/2 hour.Then Chopin for 1/2 hour.Then Chopin for 1 hour. Then any new Chopin piece I want to try for about 15 minutes.Then Chopin exercises.
Fixed that for you Pencil