Even when I was a child, because I could sit down and sightread something, the assumption was that I already had the fundamentals and there was no point covering them.
The one thing I can't do is the one thing that I've always learned was "practicing": i.e. taking individual difficult passages, breaking them down to bars or half-bars and repeating those 50-100 times at half or quarter speed. Sometimes with variations (e.g. playing everything staccato or legato, varying accents, dynamics, etc). I don't have the patience, and as a result those passages never improve.
I looked at your old posts and this was from a few years ago:In a way you probably have the same malaise now.You've kind of picked up routines that people write about, like a list, but that's not what it's about at all. The 50-100 times is totally off.
You start with a purpose, and ways to get there. Breaking a piece into sections (exp., dev., recap) helps you practise effectively. If the recap recycles the exp. then if you practise m. 50 - 60, you're also practising m. 650 - 660 - note what changes etc. You don't have to practise in any given order: you can plan what you practise first. You probably know this part.Practising difficult sections first is what I've been advised to do. So in your play-through, you mark what is difficult. Then: why is it difficult? What do you need to do to not make it difficult? Plan. It may be in stages. You do not solve it by playing 100X at slow speed.
So over few days, for the timing I practised tapping my hands, a couple of counting approaches; also worked on the hand motion, made sure fingering was consistent. Short focused bursts. 10 minutes on a specific problem, knowing how you will be working and why; then let go and do something else.
You may need to schedule yourself to make sure you practise every day, and just make sure you do it. But if results come in, that starts to be motivating.
You might want to take a look at this:https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=JUMdlbVJ8KQ
You have listed a number of activities associated with the study of music, all of them beneficial. However, practice at the instrument seems to be disheartening to you. A question to ask yourself is: what stimulus do all these other activities provide to you that practice does not?
Do you really repeat something 50-100 times?
Practice should never be boring, and if it is such, something needs to change. If you are not engaging with your practice material, you are likely not benefiting as much as you can from your practice session.
How does one develop the self-discipline to practice the piano daily....
what is effective practice?
I've never completed learning a piece
but I will use for an example Beethoven Op. 109, which I'm working on at the moment. I can approach studying the piece through a number of ways: listening to and analysing in detail recordings by Artur Schnabel, Edwin Fischer and Maria Tipo; reading the musicological literature on the sonata and its origins; studying the metronome markings Beethoven gave his other compositions in order to determine what tempi are appropriate for the sonata; memorising each movement, often by splitting them up into sections (e.g. individual variations in the last movement, or exposition/development/recapitulation in the first two movements); playing through the entire piece in order to ensure the large-scale phrasing is accurate. The one thing I can't do is the one thing that I've always learned was "practicing": i.e. taking individual difficult passages, breaking them down to bars or half-bars and repeating those 50-100 times at half or quarter speed. Sometimes with variations (e.g. playing everything staccato or legato, varying accents, dynamics, etc). I don't have the patience, and as a result those passages never improve. Is there another way to practice difficult passages that can hold the attention better? And if there isn't, how does one develop the ability to tolerate the boredom + psychological difficulty of continuing to do it for weeks or months even when one doesn't improve or gets worse?
When I teach people who have major difficulties with this I tell them to start somewhere else rather than piano. Start doing something every day that is not normally included in your routine. An exercise routine is a good idea as it will benefit your physical health and train your mental discipline.
There is no secret about it, enforce a time which you will practice the piano, ideally that is a daily effort but not everyone can manage that but you can build from somewhere. Start with a very small amount, even something ridiculous like 1 minute a day, you can easily build from there at least and determine some kind of increment that suits you.
That is a very loaded question which has a very complicated response which needs to be personalized according to your capabilities. Effective practice produces noticeable improvement. You can measure exactly how long something might take you to master rather than it being something that requires an unknown time of brute force repetitions. The most efficient way to work with pieces is to be able to sight read it multiple times and automatically much of it becomes memorized. This usually requires that you work with pieces that is lower than your maximum technical capabilities. Improving the synergy between reading/memorization skills is the way to expand your practice efficiency. Repetitions need to be mindful and always done in a controlled manner. That may require that you drop notes and slowly add them, or alter other parts of the music and slowly build towards the final product. It may use slower tempo controls, controlled pausing between particular patterns, writing out logical statements which allow you to understand a group of notes, observing small changes between groups, the technique found in the fingering and patterns in the fingering themselves, how to play slow but preserve fast movements, so on etc etc etc.
Efficient practice allows you to get through work without worry about the time spent. This is because you are constantly aware of improvement while you are practicing and this grabs your attention. It no longer is merely a mind numbing repeition over and over again hoping that eventually the procedure becomes easier, it may eventually work but it is just masochistic. There is also a danger that you are simply repeating in an incorrect manner so are simply lost in the techincal wilderness.
Learn smaller works, not completing something you begin is a very bad habit to fall into and needs to be squashed.
You are biting off more than you can chew. It is no wonder you feel so stressed out. Why are you submitting yourself to such large scale pieces?
There is no need for this and you really should invest your time in smaller scale projects. You need to have a list of completed works which you can control with some mastery, it is no good simply thinking everything you learn is "recreating the technique wheel" and a huge grind to complete. Build your skills and you will have the tools to cut through harder works much easier.
I suppose because I generally like pieces of music in their entirety, not bleeding chunks thereof.
No, but I've always heard that I should. (I usually get bored after 10 or 15 repetitions)
lol, I have a long abiding hatred of exercise and it would require very exceptional circumstances for me to do it in the first place. I'll try to come up with something easier though.
But I also do set pretty high expectations for myself. My experience has been that although I might memorise a piece or learn it to a certain level, eventually I get stuck somewhere that I don't see improvements from repetition... and give up.
The thing is I don't think of 109 as a "large scale piece" (it's about 20 minutes when I play it) and it only has four or five passages that are very difficult for me.
I mean, that is fair, but most of the shorter pieces I'd like to play are just as difficult or more so.....I can't think of a lot of genuinely easy pieces that are nonetheless musically interesting enough for me to want to learn them.
I mean, that is fair, but most of the shorter pieces I'd like to play are just as difficult or more so. For example I find more difficult passages in Ravel's Alborada del gracioso (duration 6-7 minutes) than I do in Beethoven's Op. 109, and expect to end up spending a lot more time working on it. I can't think of a lot of genuinely easy pieces that are nonetheless musically interesting enough for me to want to learn them. (The few I've considered: C Schumann Notturno op. 6 no. 2, F Chopin Mazurka op. 41 no. 1 [in c# minor], Scarlatti K 296 [though at 11-12 minutes, not that short], Janáček In the Mists [also not that short], Brahms Op. 117... basically all music on the slow and quiet side lol)
If you are using a similar mindset when it comes to practising, such may be part of the problem. Sometimes to improve and move to the next level, we have to put aside our personal philosophies and simply make an attempt to do something different. If it doesn't work you can always go back, but if it does work you have learned something. Meaning, when practising you need to make an effort to be engaged with your work. You need to put your grand vision of the music on the shelf so it does not distract you, and focus on the essential fundamental work that needs to be accomplished. Repetition does not do the work for you while you observe as a third party, rather, you do the work for yourself by being an active participant.
All the better to start an exercise regieme Doing something you might not like and forcing yourself to do it is good training, you may even find you can learn to enjoy something you didn't realize you could. A large part of discipline is doing something when you don't necessarily feel like it. Simply working with only subjects that motivate and excite you is not always so good, we don't always feel on a high and we can miss out on a lot by narrowing our perspective like that.
You need to readjust your perspective I feel. Unless you are a highly experienced advanced pianist I don't think a 20 minute piece would be looked at as something that isn't large scale.Have a look at the smaller etudes from composers like Heller, Burlow, Cramer, Czerny. Think pieces which are no more than 3 pages long. You need to become interested in these if you want to develop your skills effectively. Simply learning pieces with hundreds of bars of music is not a good idea. Practicing sight reading should have you learning many very small pieces every month and they should be possible to play predominantly with mastery without much effort. So here also lies a source of smaller easier pieces you should be completing every day.
Short pieces that are easily within your ability would allow you to more directly address skill building. However, you seem to steer away from these. Tackle your challenges directly instead of trying to find a shortcut around them. Work on easy manageable music, even if you think it is below your level.
I've been alive for 29 years and have never developed the capability to do things that don't motivate and excite me.
That's fair. I think my "philosophy" of practice is derived from long experience of not understanding exactly what I'm doing wrong. e.g. theoretically, the Chopin etude in thirds can be mastered by practicing each bar in the various ways Cortot prescribes, but trying that didn't get me to a point where two fingers at a time could move as a unit, and I always feel uncertain as to whether that's even a skill someone can develop as opposed to just being born with. Similarly I don't understand why my fingers trip over each other whenever I try to play faster than semiquavers at a crotchet = 120 tempo, why learning a fingering at a slow tempo never translates to knowing it at a fast one.
- when practicing, try to focus on understanding the causes of problems, rather than simply identifying problems in the first place—perhaps diarisation will help with this
- look into shorter repertoire pieces that I can memorise in an hour or two, in order to be able to spend the bulk of my time focusing on technique & perfection
I'd add another piece of advice. Go easy on yourself. Discipline is not the problem.
I doubt anybody learns to play the piano well by gritting their teeth and forcing themselves to practice for hours everyday for years against their own inclinations. If you see somebody practicing a lot and consistently over the long term, you may think it takes a lot of discipline, but it doesn't.
I'd add another piece of advice. Go easy on yourself. Discipline is not the problem. I doubt anybody learns to play the piano well by gritting their teeth and forcing themselves to practice for hours everyday for years against their own inclinations.
If you see somebody practicing a lot and consistently over the long term, you may think it takes a lot of discipline, but it doesn't. What it means is that they basically like to practice and they do it enough that they've ingrained a habit of doing it, and that habit will carry them through the occasional period when they don't feel particularly motivated.
So if you very frequently feel uninterested in practicing, it's not more discipline you need. You just need to find ways to make practicing more enjoyable and engaging. I'd seriously suggest looking at some of those Josh Wright or Graham Fitch videos - they are full of creative approaches to practicing that may make it more interesting for you.
And of you find late Beethoven sonatas to be not particularly technically challenging, and Janacek's In the Mist (particularly the 2nd and 4th movements) to be pretty easy, then you are certainly already at a pretty high level.
Following that, work out a solution with your body. Don't spend all your practice session in your head space, you need to get out into your physical space. Again, you need give yourself permission to become vulnerable. Understanding the cause of the problem is only part of the workflow, what comes next is translating that knowledge into something your body can use when playing.
Focus on improvement not perfection. From what you have written, it seems that you are already somewhat of a perfectionist,
I think you should be choosing pieces that you can learn in several days worth of practice sessions. Don't try to devour an entire piece in a single practice session. You don't have to do it all in one sitting. If you leave a defined goal for the next day, you will also have something to look forward to practising the next day.
I would say in general "have goals." That focusing attention and it makes the practicing more effective. Also throw in some repetition though because staying in shape is needed too. You could vary some things to make it more interesting, like varying the repetition -- ex. same pattern, different keys, 30 times. It still benefits the piece but you're not hammering away on the same things over and over.Boredom? I haven't found a great solution for that. If attention isn't needed, I've done things like watch tv, read a book/newspaper, etc. There is some amount of attention you can force on things, but it's finite. Taking breaks can help but it's still wearing down willpower. In terms of progress, some things are like scaling a mountain. It's straight up. Progress is that slow or it's pretty much impossible for now. If there really is no progress, I'd find something that's easier and more of a doable challenge.
Sort of is the problem since the OP admits he never completes pieces. I guess it is being too hard on himself choosing pieces too large scale to complete in time thus the discipline he has is not up to match the difficulty of his chosen works. I don't know about that, you can't just work off your own self motivation and high spirits to drive you work. You do need to bunker down and work hard even during the times you might not totally feel like it. This is at least what higher level pianists I know do, I don't know any personally who don't practice hard and just produce wonderful results that is just not very normal at all but I have heard people admit this is what they do (and I guess we have to believe that without real evidence).
You seem not to have read my whole post. At least you didn't quote the part in which I answer the objection you raise here.
Of course you have to work hard. But nobody can force themselves to work hard for years *against their own inclinations.* Also nobody can work only on the basis of transient enthusiasms, either. People who succeed at it, though, largely enjoy what they are doing; on the basis of that enjoyment they form a habit of regular, good practice; and they use that habit to get them through the occasional times that their motivation falls off.
If someone is frequently unmotivated to practice, not just occasionally, then the answer is not better self-discipline, but an approach to practice that is more interesting and engaging.
I'd appreciate an example because I'm not exactly sure what you mean by this.
Worth noting that, as a semi-professional composer, I do have pretty highly developed aural and memory skills. For me learning a piece just means committing to memory all of the notes and expressive markings at the correct tempo, etc. Actually getting the notes under my fingers (probably what other people mean when they talk about learning a piece) takes an order of magnitude longer. So if I've memorised a piece in an hour or so, it will probably then take a few more days of sustained practice before I have a sense for how it needs to be played & can be able to convey this through physical actions. And then from there on it's spot practice of difficult sections for months, years etc.
I don't see how it would have changed my response though outherwise I would have quoted it too.Forming good practice habits certainly has study which is full of drudgery. For example improving your sight reading to improve your practice method. You need to act against only studying what might excite you and also make time for things which are good and beneficial for your development even though you might not enjoy it. Once you start doing things successfully you can learn to enjoy even these things that you originally didn't.
The amount of "forcing" yourself to do activities you don't enjoy depends on how much you can subject yourself to, of course you don't want to so an amount that sucks up all the enjoyment you possibly can have however to avoid it altogether a bad decision especially if those activities are highly beneficial for you. Even the act of sitting on the piano and practicing a passage when you don't really feel like practicing is a good habit to get into, sometimes after a few minutes you can get into "the zone" and do productive work. To only go onto the piano when you are inspired or want to will leave you with an erratic practice routine.
This seems to be the answer but I have found in practice that it only offers short term solutions. When I teach students who only function when they are studying something that excites them these students usually lose inspiration to play piano some way down the track since their insatiable need for excitement eventually comes to an end when reality strikes how they have to get there. Sure we can study all the pieces that excite them and they can achieve it, but what if what they want requires a building up on skills which needs a path that includes music that they might not be so excited about? If they cannot subject themselves to that they are really in a losing position especially if they have works which are beyond their ability but they pigheadedly only want to study those works too hard for them because it excites them.
Yes, you learn to enjoy things that might have seemed like drudgery. And when you've learned to find interesting ways to enjoy all sorts of things that seem like drudgery, someone looking from the outside may think you are extremely self-disciplined, forcing yourself through hours of drudgery. But that's not what's happened. What's happened is that you used a basic, modest amount of commitment to get you to stick with something long enough to find creative ways of thinking about and enjoying what you are doing.
Yes, as I said, I agree that you cannot succeed just based on transient enthusiasm. I don't believe I ever suggested that you should only practice what spontaneously excites you. What I suggested is that if you are stuck and unmotivated, you're probably going to get farther by finding more interesting and creative ways to practice than by gritting your teeth and forcing yourself to go back to doing things the way that left you unmotivated in the first place.
A person, for example, who figures out ways to make working on clean, fast, pearly scales fun and interesting, is going to make faster progress, and be happier, than someone who dutifully and mindlessly grinds through 30 minutes of scales and arpeggios every day while he daydreams of playing Opus 111.
Well, they may be doomed. But I think it's a better approach to try to find them ways in which building up skills is interesting and enjoyable - it certainly can be. There may be people recalcitrant even to that approach, people with totally unrealistic expectations, but I doubt they'll be helped by just being told they need to suck it up, either.
You seem to enjoy thinking things out, nothing wrong with that. However, playing piano is as much a physical activity as a mental one. You can't solve all problems in the security of your mind. That is what I mean by transferring the problem from your head space, to your physical space. Say you had a difficult passage in a Chopin Etude where you were working out fingering. You did your research, you read Cortot, you read how people solved it in online forums, you watch videos of people playing it. However, you still need to work it out for yourself at the keyboard, using your body, being attentive to the feedback loop of output and response. You need the physical interaction with the instrument to complete the solution to your problem. You need the focus to shift from mind to body.
But why devote such energy at the beginning stages of a piece to commit it to memory? Have you ever considered tackling the technical and physical aspects of a piece before committing to memory?
It does help to do things which you find joy in or at least understand its application which will benefit you. In the end if what gets you to sit on the piano is excitement or urge to practice and that is your sole motivator, well I don't think that will last long, inspiration just doesn't burn that long or strong enough. You need to be able to get onto that piano and practice when you don't want to, especially in the situation of the Op who is playing fairly substantial works. The discipline for concert stage pieces requires you to sacrifice otherwise your output is merely fleeting inspiration with little discipline to control your estimated playing.[...] Learning the piano needs to be understood is not always fun, it is hard work and comes with a lot of frustrations. I don't want my students to think that because they are not enjoying an activity that something is wrong and it should be avoided. In fact studying piano requires that you actually submit yourself to practice when you don't want to, that is a good skill to get good at for life as you will be able to take on more responsibilities and experience much in life. In the end however if they are not learning and progressing something is wrong and if they cannot find any enjoyment at all then something is certainly wrong.
I generally agree with all of this. Playing the piano is only "fun" (or worth doing in general, I would argue) if you have complete mastery of whatever you are playing. Otherwise it is intensely frustrating, because you often know exactly what a piece should sound like, but you can't physically realise that sound, or not completely. And getting to the point of complete mastery requires many thousands of hours of hard and unrewarding work. At a beginner level, and perhaps also once you reach a very high level, practice can be its own reward, because you can hear improvements immediately. But for those of us somewhere in the middle, though various strategies to make practice more fun can potentially help (I'm not sure—I'll try them), it's something that requires... well... discipline. You have to have the ability to work even in the absence of motivation.That is, ultimately, what I'm asking for help with. I can't work at all unless something is of continuing interest to me or unless I'm forced to by intense anxiety or other external pressures (and in the latter case, the quality of the work is not good, which is why I don't just schedule a recital for myself in one month from now and hope that the anxiety and public pressure somehow substitutes for years of training). I've never been able to hold down a job, or clean my own living space regularly, or exercise regularly, or maintain friendships, or complete schoolwork in subjects that were uninteresting to me, etc. This is a lifelong problem for me and one that needs to be solved. I'm focusing on learning discipline within the context of piano playing because I am very deeply engaged with classical music and therefore I think it's a context where an attempt to learn discipline would have the most success. I just don't know how to acquire the ability to work without motivation if you're born without that ability, and that's what I'm asking for help with.
I generally agree with all of this. Playing the piano is only "fun" (or worth doing in general, I would argue) if you have complete mastery of whatever you are playing. Otherwise it is intensely frustrating, because you often know exactly what a piece should sound like, but you can't physically realise that sound, or not completely.