So here's the problem, at least for me: It seems like learning a piece should be fairly simple, at least the way my teacher puts it, learn the notes and the rhythms, figure out coordination, phrasing and pedaling and work in small chunks. Then in some time you should be able to play the whole thing through while being controlled throughout. The process seems so simple that even a small kid could do it with good instruction, in a few days. But for me, for some mysterious reason, it's not 'clicking' right, and it's taking longer than I feel it should.I think I can remember the notes pretty fast if I want to (in a day or two, but I cannot play it without pausing to remember what comes next), but I simply don't know how to 'perfect' a piece so that it comes out right every time. Even after months of playing it. But the latter is what is important for learning the piano.So I end up feeling like I'm an imposter who just learned to play some difficult pieces by rote (which maybe anyone can do) but doesn't have any actual skills yet. I feel like I cannot play even the simplest pieces 'well enough' and it seems like most elementary school kids who have had proper piano instruction are better than me in that respect.Is this normal? I can't call myself a beginner because I can play a Chopin etude, and I can't consider myself an advanced student because I can't play a damn Czerny study well enough.
Sight reading is a good skill to use because when you are successfully sight reading all the physical aspects of playing the piece is solved and you can focus your attention on the expression of what you are playing. It takes away all the steps of having to memorize, learn passages in chunks, coordinate yourself etc, because it all has been solved instantly with your reading skills.
Why would successful sight reading automatically "solve all the physical aspects of playing the piece"? What exactly is your definition of sight reading? Surely solving things like coordination, finding the most suitable fingerings etc is a separate process that needs time? Of course, if you already have good allround musical, technical and theoretical skills, then it doesn't make a lot of sense to memorize a piece before you can actually play it fluently. So I agree with you and other people here that practicing sight reading and those allround skills should be very useful in this context.
...It's the simple 80/20 rule--being able to play a piece at sight is, unfortunately, only a very small part of the battle.
I feel like I cannot play even the simplest pieces 'well enough'
There is no amount of time it SHOULD take to learn something.It depends to a huge degree on a large number of uncontrolled variables. People vary drastically in their inherent capacity to learn anything.What takes one person 10 seconds can take another 50 years.No body knows, or ever will know why.It is simply nature and randomness at work.
If you are an idiot and choose works too difficult for yourself then what you learn has an unmeasurable amount of time. That simply the fault in the choice of repertoire, overextension. It has nothing to do with your fantasy that nobody knows anything, YOU might not know but you are not the entire world.
Your an incompetent fool. According to you i should spend 20 years focussing on how to play a scale.
I dont give a *** what you think.
Im presenting the facts.
What the science and research says.
What millions of hours of research has shown.Talent is inborn, you will not accomplish if you are not born to accomplish.Do not dare attempt to tell me otherwise.Im not listening to your utter CRAP.
Quote where I said such things. Quoting your own world in your head doesn't count, thats only for you. It seems you only give a ** what you think, we all know that.Oh here we go! Mr facts!Quote the sources that exist outside of your head. I will tell you otherwise, you are wrong. Talent is over rated, discipline and mindful practice trumps all.
Funny, thats not what peer reviewed science says.
I dont give a *** what you think.Im presenting the facts.What the science and research says. What millions of hours of research has shown.Talent is inborn, you will not accomplish if you are not born to accomplish.
Here is an interesting article on the topic;https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/beautiful-minds/practice-alone-does-not-make-perfect-studies-find/
While I'm quite certain that music practice is one of the domains in which deliberate practice is a more reliable predictor of success, I don't think you can rule out entirely the other factors listed in the article, such as; "physical features, personality, cognitive ability, imagination, creativity, motivation, passion, inspiration, opportunities, encouragement, support, and just plain luck."All of those things are bound to play a role in your progress, if only because of the effect they have on the quality of your practice. If you don't have a deep interest in the subject, plus the motivation, discipline, and opportunity to pursue it, the best practice method in the world isn't going to be of much use to you.On the other hand, if you do have those qualities, the right practice method could make a world of difference. Just how much difference, I have no idea, but I suspect it would be the difference between becoming a good pianist and a great pianist. It's not going to be the difference between barely being able to play and becoming a virtuoso.
Certainly there are limitations for each individual based on lots of factors but I would like to see anyone improve with NO practice. If you have no practice you will never improve, so practice simply is essential and there is no avoiding it. The articles are trying to say only around 20% can contribute their improvement to deliberate practice, I think this is utterly wrong. Are they saying the other 80% can improve with no deliberate practice at all? That seems to me ridiculous. The other 80% they say there is UNKNOWN reason why they improve, that to me is ridiculous.
...I think what the article was saying, however, is that deliberate practice accounts for 20% of the difference in skill levels between individuals. That is, if you compare two individuals who have been practising for the same period of time and one of whom is far more skilled than the other, only ~20% of that difference can be attributed to the amount of deliberate practice that they do. They aren't saying that practice only contributes 20% to a person's skill level.
Honestly I don't see how they measured any rate of improvement specifically as it relates to piano or other instrumental studies. How can you measure a 20% difference at all? What are they measuring?
Who knows? You'd need to read the original papers to find out how these studies are conducted. I didn't read them because, well I couldn't be bothered.I do wonder how they measure musical ability in the first place though. Not everyone agrees on what it means to be a good musician, and different musicians all have their own strengths and weaknesses. The whole area is pretty fraught come to think of it.
With the time youre going to waste learning to play music nobody listens to, you could solve world hunger and fix the climate. If you dont have natural ability, give it away and move on.
Ok, deciding to take this at face value. Neither I, nor you, can "solve world hunger", or can we "fix" the climate. Moreover, it's not something I'm interested in trying to do. As far as "nobody listens to" - actually at times people do, but that's not the point. It's not why I play. This is for myself. YOU can choose for YOURSELF what you want to do. But don't tell ME (anyone reading this thread) what they should do. I'll make my choices. You make yours. Which I'll respect as much as I expect this to be the case for anyone here. This is the "Students' Corner". It is for those who for whatever want to learn to play. It is not a place for discouraging other. For any reason. I answered your questions in another thread. So far you have not taken the time to do anything with that. I always start off by taking questions as being sincere, and being questions, in case they are.
Sorry, you failed to answer anything in another thread. What do i do with something thats not provided. You mentioned the myriad of inherent problems with the process of teaching.
Its too late for me. The process of overcoming the problems has been botched beyond repair, because I couldn't be offered a simple truth relating to innate ability. Basically being continually lied to about what practice does or does not accomplish, and what methodology can and can't do.
What do you do when you feel you suck at the piano?
The level of piano proficiency achieved is largely a function of ALL of the following:1) Upper limit given to them at birth (i.e., natural talent)2) Start age of leaning piano (or taking music lessons of some kind)3) Quality of instruction4) Motivation to learn5) Hours spent practicing the pianoHere you notice that hours spent practicing the piano is just 1 of 5 major items. Lets assume the following 0 to 100 scale for piano proficiency: 0 -Never touched a piano and never had any music lessons.100-The greatest pianist that ever lived lets say LisztHere you will notice that EVERYONE will receive a piano proficiency score of 0 (Zero) if they practice the piano 0 hours. So piano proficiency of any kind requires practice.For sake of discussion, here are very rough piano proficiency scores for two selected cases (these may be way off, but are offered as a starting point for discussion).10 the best pianists that post here maybe 1/10 as good as Liszt0.5-the average person that starts piano at age 5 with good motivation and good instruction and practices 3 hours a day to age 21.At birth, everyone has an upper limit on their piano proficiency score (again my numbers may be way off, but the values serve as a point for discussion."100" - Liszt had 100 as his upper limit at birth"1" - Average person has an upper limit of 1.Lets start with Liszt:If he practiced 0 hours, his piano proficiency score would be exactly 0 (not the 100 he actually achieved.)If he started piano at age 30 and practiced 5 hours a day for 20 years: His piano proficiency score after20 years may be something like a 5 (not the 100 he actually achieved.)If he started at age 5 but had no instruction from anyone and was completely (I mean 100%) self-taught and he practiced as much as he did: His piano proficiency score may be something like a "3" or a 20 at its highest point (not the 100 he actually achieved.)Next, lets look at the average person that is very motivated to learn to play piano.If the average person starts from age 5 with expert instruction with access to good piano and practices 3 hours a day from age 5 to age 45 he will achieve his upper limit piano proficiency score of 1.If the average person who never took ANY music lessons starts piano from age 25 with good instruction with access to good piano and practices 3 hours a day from age 25 to age 45 he may achieve a piano proficiency score of 0.25.If the average person practiced 0 hours, his piano proficiency score would be exactly 0.Who should practice the piano?How about an average person that starts piano at age 45? He has no hope of earning a living at piano. Why practice then? For enjoyment. If he does not enjoy trying to increase from 0.020 piano proficiency to a 0.021" score, then he should not practice.How about Brahms brother and Father? They had similar genetics and environment and desire to be great at music as the great Johannes Brahms, but the best that they could do with all their hard work was earn a very modest living. Should they practice and work to improve? In their case, they were actually supporting themselves with their music, so they have an additional reason to practice. But if they hated practicing, they should also not practice.
I like this post, the numbers look fairly good to me. The question is now what each level roughly means. Since you say that 10 is around the level of the best posters here, I would say that's the level at which someone can play say difficult pieces such as Gaspard de la Nuit competently at a concert, at least from what I've seen on this site. What comes after that?
Can someone play a piece beautifully with a piano proficiency score of "0.020" (referring to my prior post)? Absolutely! How about Bach Prelude in C major WTC book 1! How about Beethoven Moonlight sonata 1st mvt! But you need to make sure you have good basic technique. Also, take a break by working to polish up earlier level pieces. If you complete level 5 piano (for example) and can use a break - work on polishing level 3 pieces.
My final thoughts here: Is it possible that your basic technique is at fault? This seems to me to be the most logical place to look based on your description quoted above.
I do believe my basic technique is at fault. But the problem is that it looks like the only way to achieve basic technique properly is to start with a very good teacher at a very young age and play La Campanella at 12.