Piano Practice Methods
Piano Practice Methods
Piano Practice Methods
Peter Coraggio, illustrated by Jon J. Murakami (San Diego, CA: Kjos Music Co., 1997). At first glance--it is
a comic book, with silly characters and all--this seems an unlikely source for serious information about piano
practising. But in reality it is a wonderful source for intermediate to advanced pianists, which neatly
summarizes how an understanding of the psychology of learning can lead to faster and better learning of the
piano repertoire. It has many practical suggestions and useful practice techniques. In particular, Coraggio
suggests the "pencil practice" method (see below).
Why does this document keep switching between "practice the piano" and "practise the piano"?
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2. Do it right from the very first. Always aim for perfection in notes, sound, and musical expression. YOU
CAN DO IT! If you work to get it right from the very first, it's easy. Once you've practiced it a hundred times
the wrong way, though, it's very difficult to play it perfect. Remember: doing it one time right is better than
doing it a thousand times wrong.
Psychologists say: A stimulus enters long-term memory (that is, it is "learned") after it has been attentively
observed 7 times. But if an "incorrect" stimulus is first learned, it then takes an average of 35 (!) repetitions to
learn the "corrected" stimulus. Learning it right the first time is five times easier than re-learning after
learning it incorrectly.
3. Try to understand the music. Apply the things you have learned in your theory classes and everything
you know about music to the pieces you play. Look for the key, scales, chords, patterns, repeated sections, the
form, phrases, accompaniment patterns, rhythmic patterns--everything you can find. If you understand the
music, you will learn it faster, remember it better, and play it more musically. Keep a pencil by the piano and
write these things in the music as you find them.
Psychologists who study learning say: Analyzing the meaning of something helps you remember it longer.
4. Write things down. It helps you remember things better if you write them down. When you see it a day,
two days, and a week later, it refreshes your memory and helps make it a part of your permanent memory. If
you write things down, this process will happen automatically. If you don't write them down, you probably
won't think of them again, and you will forget them.
Things you should write down:
Things your teacher says. We pay hundreds of dollars for piano lessons, yet the minute we walk out
the piano teacher's door, we forget 90% of what the piano teacher has said. It's just like throwing away
90% of the money we pay for piano lessons. The piano teacher tries to write things down for you but
just can't write down everything. You should go home, play through your pieces, and right there in the
music or in a notebook write down everything you can remember about your lesson. This doesnt have
to be complete sentencesjust notes and phrases that you understand and which will jog your memory.
If you do this, you will be amazed at how much more you remember and how much less the piano
teacher has to repeat the same thing.
Things you figure out about the music. If you figure out a piece is in the key of D major, write down:
"D major." If you find an F major chord, write it down. If you figure out the piece is in ABA form,
write it down. Figuring these things out once and then forgetting them does no good.
Interpretation. Circle all the dynamics and tempo markings. Write in how you want to play the piece.
For instance, draw crescendos and decrescendos to show how you're going to play a particular phrase.
Psychologists who study long-term memory say: The key to making a particular stimulus a permanent part of
your long-term memory is to review it repeatedly over a long period of time. Memories that are not reviewed
in this way become gradually weaker with time. Writing things down allows you to review them over a
period of time and so make them part of your long-term, permanent memory.
5. Be your own teacher. Don't wait for your teacher to tell you every thing to do; figure it out for yourself.
Often you can figure out the problem and solve it just as well as the teacher can, so why wait?
In the end, you teach yourself how to play the piano, with some help from others.
6. Look at practicing as problem solving. Don't look at practicing as putting in a certain amount of time at
the piano, or as repeating your pieces a certain number of times. Look at practicing as finding and solving
problems in your pieces.
There are three steps in this process:
IDENTIFY THE PROBLEM. Know what that piece should sound like, and recognise
the difference between the way it should sound and the way it does sound.
FIGURE OUT WHAT CAUSES THE PROBLEM. Is the problem caused by weak
technique? Bad fingering? An awkward stretch or jump in the music? An unclear mental
picture of the music in your mind? Whatever it is, you have to figure out the cause of the
problem before you can fix it.
FIX THE PROBLEM. This might mean using some of the practice methods outlined
below, changing the fingering, analyzing the music so you understand it better, or (as a last
resort!) just practicing the spot over and over until it is comfortable to play. Problems you
cant solve yourself, ask your teacher or fellow students.
7. Remember three important questions. How do you know when a passage is good? How do you know
that it is, technically and musically, the best it can be?
Asking yourself the following three questions is a good start. If answer "yes" to all three questions, you can
have confidence you are on the right track. If there is a problem with one or more of the three elements, you
need to do some problem solving.
1. Does it SOUND right? Does it have the right notes, the right rhythms, the right
dynamics and phrasing, the right tempo, the right articulation, the right voicing?
2. Does it FEEL right? Are you as relaxed as possible to play this passage, or do you feel
excess tension in your hands, arms, shoulders, neck, or anywhere else? In general, do your
movements feel smooth and flowing or sharp and jerky? Do you even have an awareness
of how your hands, arm, and body feel, or have you blocked these feelings out altogether?
3. Does it LOOK right? Can you see any evidence of excess tension? Does the
choreography of your movementshands, fingers, arms, head, and entire bodyseem to
match the requirements of the passage?
Looking at what you are doing is often a great help in creating a greater awareness of your muscular
sensations and feelings. The muscular sensations are often very subtle; your eyes can help you tune into what
you are feeling. Observing yourself in a mirror or via videotape is often very helpful.
Students often pay attention to sound only. On the piano, it is very possible to get a perfectly correct and even
a beautiful and musical sound, while at the same time misusing your body in quite a terrible way. You may be
able to play like this for a year or even ten yearsbut eventually it will catch up with you. In the meanwhile,
you probably have various aches and pains and your sound and techniqueeven if goodare not as good as
they could be.
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sections to make larger sections. Practice this larger section until it is good. Continue combining sections
until you play the whole piece.
Make sure to divide the music into sections that make sense--a phrase, a half phrase, or two phrases, for
instance. Don't just divide it by two measures or one line if it doesn't make any musical sense.
At the start, your sections should be quite small--small enough that you can almost play it perfect from the
start. As you get more comfortable with the piece, the sections can get larger. With an easy piece, the sections
can be larger to start with; with a difficult piece, the sections will be very small.
The most common error students make is to start with sections that are too big. Pick a small section and work
out the fingering and the counting. Then try playing your section, with careful attention and at a slow tempo,
seven times over. If you cant play it flawlessly (at a minimum: correct notes and counting) after one or two
tries, then your section is too long or your tempo is too fast. After playing the section seven times, close the
book and try playing it by memory. If you cant remember it all, your section is too large. Cut it in half and
try again.
As you learn a piece, you will gradually be able to deal with larger and larger sections. But when you are first
learning a piece, your sections should be short enough that you can memorize them after playing them only
seven times.
Why this works:
The rule "memorize after seven times" comes from the psychology of learning. If a stimulus small enough to
fit into short-term memory is observed, with attention, approximately seven times, it will enter long-term
memory. If this process is repeated over a period of time (say, the stimulus is observed seven times a day for a
period of five days) the long-term memory gradually becomes stronger and strongera "permanent"
memory.
So if, in the beginning, you stick with sections that are small enough that you can "memorize after seven
times," you will be working with sections that are small enough to fit comfortably in your short-term
memory. These sections are the easiest for your mind to comprehend and process, so they will be learned and
memorized more quickly and they will be retained longer.
If in your practice you play sections of your pieces that are longer than your short-term memory capacity, the
beginning of the passage will have "slipped out" of your short-term memory by the time you reach the end of
the passage. This overloading of the short-term memory disrupts the whole memory process. Learning and
memorizing is much more difficult under these conditions.
ADVANTAGES:
Working in a way that complements the natural way you learn, you will learn faster and retain what youve
learned longer.
If you practice a whole piece or a section that is too long, you forget all those mistakes in the first phrase by
the time you get to the end. Working with a small section, you can grasp all the problems at onceand so fix
them.
You can aim for perfection. It is easy to get one small phrase perfect, even the first day you ever practice it.
But it seems impossible to get a whole piece perfect, even after weeks and weeks. Remember: Divide and
conquer!
2. Hands Separate.
Take a section, and play each hand separate until you can do it well. Then play it hands together until you can
do that well.
ADVANTAGES:
Playing each hand separate is easier.
The left hand can be weaker and just fumble along without being noticed too much. Giving it special
attention will strengthen it.
WHEN TO USE IT:
Usually you should only use this method if you are having trouble playing hands together, or having
particular trouble with one hand in a certain section. In sections where you can, it is usually better to start out
with both hands.
Hands separate practice works well with hymns, polyphonic pieces (for instance, fugues), and any piece
where the hands are fairly independent.
3. Whole-Part-Whole.
Do the whole thing, divide it up into parts, then do the whole thing again. For instance, play the whole piece,
then practice each section individually, then play the whole piece again. Or, play a whole section, then divide
it up into smaller sections and practice those, and finally play the whole section again. Or play hands together,
then hands separate, then hands together again.
ADVANTAGES:
Psychologists who study learning say that this is one of the best methods of learning. It helps you learn faster
and retain things better. Psychologists refer to this method as "synthesis-analysis-synthesis". It can be used in
other areas also (for instance, schoolwork).
WHEN TO USE IT:
It can be used at any time in learning a piece, but it is particularly good for a piece that is pretty good but
needs to be polished, or to bring an old piece back up to snuff. Play it through, practice it in sections, then
play it through again.
4. Stops.
You insert stops at certain points in the piece. For instance if your piece has a section with running sixteenth
notes, you could stop on the first sixteenth note of every beat. Or, on the second sixteenth of every beat, or the
third or the fourth. Or you could group 8 sixteenth notes together, stopping only on the (for instance) the 1st
and 3rd beats of a measure in 4/4 time.
For instance, here are four different ways you could use stops in a passage with running 16th notes:
1 e & a [STOP] 2 e & a [STOP] 3 e & a [STOP] 4 e & a [STOP] 1 e & a [STOP] etc.
1 [STOP] e & a 2 [STOP] e & a 3 [STOP] e & a 4 [STOP] e & a 1 [STOP] etc.
1 e & a 2 e & a [STOP] 3 e & a 4 e & a [STOP] 1 e & a 2 e & a [STOP] etc.
1 [STOP] e & a 2 e & a 3 [STOP] e & a 4 e & a 1 [STOP] e & a 2 e & a 3 [STOP] etc.
A good way to practice using this method is to first stop every beat. Do this until it's perfect. Then stop each
two beats; do this until it's perfect. Then stop every four beats. Continue this way until you play the whole
section with no stops.
ADVANTAGES:
Inserting the stops makes you think in groups of notes. This can make your playing sound more musical.
Practicing with stops can help your playing sound more rhythmicone thing that is usually lacking in
student's playing.
Practicing with stops helps memory. It makes each group of notes absolutely clear in your mind.
Practicing with stops helps your technique. To oversimplify the subject slightly: There are two types of
nerves that control the muscles that you use to play. We can call these the "stop" nerves and the "go" nerves.
The "stop" nerves tell the muscles when to stop; the "go" nerves tell them when to go. Obviously, it takes coordination of both "stop" and "go" nerves for good playing. Not enough "stop" impulses makes your playing
out of control (fast, wild, uneven); not enough "go" nerves makes it slow and sluggish. Stopping before the
beat strengthens the "stop" nerves, giving you more control over your playing. Stopping on the beat
strengthens the "go" nerves, making you able to play faster. Obviously, both "stop" and "go" nerves are very
necessary in creating good piano technique.
WHEN TO USE IT:
You can use it on any passage, but it is particularly good for runny eighth and sixteenth note passages that go
at a fairly constant speed. It is very good for finger passages, or any passage where a regular rhythmic pattern
is followed.
5. Finger groups.
Like Stops (see previous topic), but you group according to fingering patterns instead of rhythm. For
instance, a C Major scale, right hand, could be practiced like this (notating finger numbers):
1 2 3 [STOP] 1 2 3 4 5 4 3 2 1 [STOP] 3 2 1
This is stopping at the end of each finger group. Another method is to go one note further, that is, stop on the
first note of the new finger group, instead of the last note of the previous finger group. On the C Major scale,
it would look like this:
1 2 3 1 [STOP] 2 3 4 5 4 3 2 1 3 [STOP] 2 1
ADVANTAGES:
The stop gives you time to evaluate, think, and plan ahead.
Helps you learn the fingering thoroughly.
Helps you memorize (you are breaking it up into small, easily digestible chunks).
Concentrates your attention on the most difficult point of any finger passage (the point where you pass the
thumb under).
6. Staccato.
Just play all the notes staccato.
ADVANTAGES:
Strengthens finger lifts (often a weak part of finger technique).
Helps give a clearer sound; keeps notes from running into each other.
WHEN TO USE IT:
Use on finger passages.
Warning:
Playing staccato can lead to tension; use common sense and listen to your body.
7. Soft.
Play each note as soft as you can. Be sure to play all notes very evenly. You can play slowly or up to tempo.
ADVANTAGES:
Helps evenness.
Helps control.
WHEN TO USE IT:
It can be used on any passage, but it is especially good for finger passages.
Warning:
Paradoxically, playing softly can lead to tension. Often this tension is not in your hands or lower arms, but
somewhere elseupper arms, shoulders, upper back, legs, or another part of your body.
8. Loud.
Play each note very loud. You will have to go slower than usual. Do it only for fairly short passages, then
switch to a different practice method (such as soft). If your hands or arms start to hurt or feel tired, stop
immediately. After you build up your strength for a while, you may find that you will be able to do it a little
longer.
ADVANTAGES:
Builds strength.
Builds endurance.
Can help memory, by presenting a very strong stimulus.
WHEN TO USE IT:
It can be used for any passage, but it is especially good for finger passages.
WARNINGS:
This is a practice technique, not a way to vent your frustration. Banging a passage out, from frustration, is
counterproductive and possibly dangerous to your hands and arms.
This technique, if overused, can be the cause of hand and arm problems. When practicing (with this
technique or any other), you must always be aware of the state of your hands and arms.
Your signal to stop and rest your hands and arms is when the muscles of your arms have reached a point of
exhaustion. The muscles of your arms are small and delicate. They reach this point of exhaustion far sooner
than most people would think.
The signs that your muscles have reached a point of exhaustion and subtle and easily overlooked. Your arms
(typically the top or bottom of your forearms) may feel tired, heavy, full, or have a slight tingle. Your fingers
may seem to be a little sluggish or unresponsive. You will not feel pain as such; the point of exhaustion is far
below the threshold of pain. (If you do feel pain, you have gone WAY too far. Stop immediately and take a
long rest!)
If you stop at or before this point of exhaustion, you will not need a long rest before you can resume
practicing. Your arms may recover in as little as 10-20 secondsjust long enough to reach for a new book or
look over the next section you wish to practice. Careful observation will tell you when you can resume
playing. Your arms will no longer have that tired, full, tingly, or sluggish feeling.
Every time you continue playing past the point of exhaustion, you dramatically increase your risk of hand and
arm problems. Some large muscles respond well to being worked beyond the point of exhaustion (ask a
fitness instructor about this next time you are at the gym). But small muscles (the ones we use in piano
playing) do not respond well to overwork. They are damaged, often irreparably.
12. Metronome.
The metronome should be used often in practice. It forces you to be more precise in your counting and
playing. It helps develop your rhythmic sense.
Metronome practice can and should be combined with other practice methods, such as practicing in
sections, stops, staccato, loud, soft, and so on.
14. Subdivide.
This is similar to counting, but instead of counting "1 & 2 & 3 & 4 &", you say a syllable such as "tah tah tah
tah tah tah tah tah". Say it along with eighth notes if your piece has eighth notes, or with sixteenth notes if
your piece has sixteenth notes.
You can do it out loud or silently when you practice; you can even do it silently during a performance.
ADVANTAGES:
It helps develop your rhythm.
It makes your rhythms very precise.
move the pencil actually saves time in the long run!). It gives you time to think about what you just did and
what youre going to do next.
Stopping to move the pencil is a "micro-break", which helps you to break up rigidity and tension. Take a
slightly longer micro-break after you have "passed off" a passage, to briefly stretch, move, etc.
Moving the pencil helps you keep track of where you are and keeps you mentally on task.
Warning:
Like "Practicing for Perfection", Pencil Practice can lead to "end-gaining"that is, trying so hard to "pass
off" your passage that you forget how you are using yourself.
If you try too hard to connect the notes when youre playing without pedal, this can lead to tension ("holding"
notes when you dont need to). "Holding" the notes too long can, paradoxically, lead to phrases that dont
have the line and smoothly flowing legato you are aiming for. Often the smoothest flowing legato (especially
in passages with chords or octaves, as opposed to a single melodic line) is not achieved by using your fingers
to hold the notes to their full notated value. It is quite common for the fingers and hand hold the notes for,
say, to of the their written value. The pedal makes the connection the fingers dont.
So, when practicing without pedal, do not expect or try to make these kinds of passages have the kind of
ultra-connected sound they will have when you add the pedal.
19. Visualize.
Start with a piece you have memorized. Close your eyes and try to imagine yourself playing it at the piano.
Imagine the piano keys, and your hands playing them. Try to make it just as vivid in your mind as it is when
you actually do it.
Visualising is one of the best practice methods, but it takes a lot of thinking! Here are some ways to make it a
little easier:
Visualise just one hand at a time. This is much easier than doing both hands.
Visualise only a short passage at a time. Play it, then try to visualise, then play it again. Keep
doing this until you can visualise it very clearly.
Look at the music while you visualise. This builds up your visual image, but you don't have to
have it memorized first. In fact, it will help you memorize it more easily.
Try table-top practice, that is, play your piece away from the piano. You simply imagine the
sound and feel of a real piano as your fingers play on the tabletop. If you can play a piece or a
passage this way, you really know it!
Exercising your brain is just like exercising a muscle: with visualisation, you have start out with just a little
bit, and then gradually work your way up.
ADVANTAGES:
Visualisation makes a clear visual image and improves memory.
Mentally practicing the music gives your hands a rest, while giving your brain a workout.
used to. If you have practiced your piece soft, loud, staccato, legato, with and without pedal, with five
different kinds of stops, hands separate, visualised it, counted it, recorded it, played it with metronome at a
variety of tempos, and practiced in small and large sections until they were flawlessyou probably wont
have that problem. You will be used to playing your piece with a variety of touches and in a variety of
situations (psychologists call this "overlearning").
Usually, when practicing, you don't need to repeat each practice method over and over; what you need to do
is repeat each method until you can do it well--with no mistakes, a good sound, and good technique
(SOUND, FEEL, and LOOK). Then move on to a different method. This will give more variety to your
practice, as well as giving you a series of practical, small goals to aim for and achieve in your daily practice.