Leah's Practice Diary (updated 2/1/23)
I started playing the piano about six years ago. I think the hardest part for me has been bringing my adult expectations to an activity where I started with as much experience as a child. The last year and a half Iāve been making a concerted effort to work through significant performance anxiety, and Iāve made enough progress that I can post videos here.
What am I working on? Being happy with where Iām at, accepting my mistakes, enjoying the fact that this is a challenging hobby that takes time. At the end of the summer, it finally sunk in that I could keep playing and taking lessons for another 50 years, so there really is no reason to rush.
I take lessons with a teacher in the city where I live, and we focus mostly on repertoire and some technical exercises. Iām interested in composition, so I recently committed to taking lessons twice a month from a teacher in the UK who is going to help me with other aspects of musicianship like sight reading, theory, keyboard harmony, aural training, and composition.
I think it would be fun to keep a record of my progress. Iām hoping to post an update every 2-3 weeks. Please feel free to ask questions or give feedback. Thatās helpful to my learning process :-)
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October 24, 2022 Update
I have three videos to post this week.
The first is Czerny Op 299, No. 3 (School of Velocity). I think Iāve been working on this for at least three weeks. In the past, technical exercises, especially ones with arpeggios, made me anxious and tight, so my teacher and I focused mostly on repertoire to help me relax. Now that Iām less self-critical, I wanted to return to this kind of work. Iāve used a few different techniques to help learn the piece, but overall my teacher encourages me to focus on creating a story or characters, and making sure to take physical pleasure out of playing with each hand. Right now, Iām playing this with a very heavy pedal so that I donāt worry about the arpeggios sounding too choppy. As I improve and it becomes more fluent, Iāll lighten the pedal.
The second video is of the first two pages of Schumannās āAufschwungā. Iām about two weeks into this project. In the next two weeks I will focus on fluency and balance between the two hands, as well as learn the next two pages. Iām going to try and be better at incorporating some days of very slow practice, as I tend to get too excitable and play too fast while Iām learning things. (I'll fix the mic for the next recording.)
The third video is a sight reading piece written by the composer Florence Price, followed by a piece I wrote. Iām absolutely terrible at sight reading, which is why I signed up for the two-week intensive on Tonebase, and chose it as a focus for the work Iām doing with my composition teacher. He works within the ABRSM system, and heās having me start at level 1, which Iām happy about. Thereās no pressure, so I can look forward to learning this instead of dreading it. For our first lesson we looked at reading the shape of the line rather than the individual notes, and looking ahead to the end of the phrase so that you have an idea of where youāre going. He explained itās like when youāre driving and you mostly look right in front of you, but you also are aware there is a stop sign at the end of the block.
I can also use each piece as a theory lesson, look at overall form, try sight-singing the piece before I play it, etc. I decided that Iām going to write a mini piece inspired by each of the sight-reading pieces. It gets me in the habit of writing, itās very low stakes, and you can critique each piece, helping me see what was more or less effective and how I could change it.
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Hereās my update for 11/7/22:
Sight reading/Composition work:
Iāve been continuing with sight reading and managed to write 4 little pieces, each inspired by a different sight reading piece. I meet with my composition teacher tomorrow. I told him I needed to get over feeling silly about starting at the beginning, both in terms of sight reading and composition. I asked that he give me feedback on what was effective in my pieces, what wasnāt, and why. I might post a few of those in another update. Weāre also going to talk about what defines success for sight reading. Using his suggestions, I felt I was able to capture the spirit of the piece rather than reading a bunch of disconnected notes. It definitely helped to look for patterns and cadences. At the same time, I still had mistakes and hesitations, and given how easy these pieces are, Iām not sure if that means I can move on or if I need more practice.
Memorization work:
At the beginning of the semester I learned the first movement of the Moonlight Sonata. My teacher told me there was no way to continue avoiding Beethoven. I got the piece to what I would consider a āsecond draftā stage, and then asked if that was good enough and she said that was fine. After a weekās break, I decided that I did like the piece well enough to memorize it. I have to memorize a piece in order to play it as expressively as I would like. The video attached was a cold run-through with the purpose of determining how much I could remember. Itās not very musical, tempo is all over the place, etc.
Iāve been working on it for a few days since the recording, feeling stuck with it, not making much progress. I realized last night that Iāve been trying to take shortcuts and memorize this by brute force (lots of repetition), which never works for me. I need to take a step back and do the following: Finish my harmonic analysis of the piece, map out the piece with my interpretive/emotional plan, find the images that help me feel connected emotionally to this piece, make a memory palace so I can easily sing the score in my head away from the piano, work each section in layers (eliminate the triplets and focus on the structural elements), play each section with a different emotion word so that Iām not locked into one reading of the piece. Iāve avoided this work because it takes time, but Iāve noticed that if I do one of these things for just one practice session (like playing the structural elements without the triplets or using five different emotion words for one section), Iāll see a significant jump forward. Itās enough to break me out of the rut, and then I need to return to repetitions in order to build fluency.
New repertoire:
Iāve got an update of the Schumann piece āAufscwungā. I had a good lesson last weekāgot a pep talk from my teacher that I needed because this piece is quite challenging for me. She reminded me how important it is to practice Schumann in layers because his music is very polyphonic. To interpret it, I need to be aware of the different lines. Otherwise it ends up as mud. Itās coming along. I decided to keep this recording, full of interruptions from my husband and kids, because I think it captures many things about my experience of learning pianoātrying to fit it in between other commitments.
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I think I had a breakthrough this week. My teacher has suggested several times over the last few years that I be consistent about making recordings and critiquing them. She (like every other teacher out there) has said it is the fastest way to make progress. After a useful discussion on why I've avoided following her advice, coupled with a great CBT technique on establishing a new habit (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lF0g-F69MMU), I sat down this morning and recorded all of my current projects. I played without any warmup, as she recommended, the better to see where things fell apart.
The breakthrough part is that as I reviewed each video, it occurred to me that rather than call this a "self-critique" (scary, ugly word), I would call it "making my weekly to-do list." I love to-do lists. My plan is to repeat this every Wednesday morning before I go to my lesson.
Current projects:
- Continue to work on Aufschwung (video below). Besides technical issues, my biggest goal for the week is to work on voicing. The secondary material is too heavy. I'm going to try "ghosting": playing the main material firmly, but playing the secondary material so lightly that it can't be heard. The purpose is to exaggerate the difference then work back towards a balance I like.
- Continue with a new Czerny exercise--Op 299, no 4 (my final run through of Op. 299, no. 3 is below).
- Polish the first movement of the Moonlight Sonata. I like how it's shaping up, but in focusing on the larger structure, the right hand triplets have been on autopilot, and they sound like a metronome. My teacher's suggestion was to play the triplets with the right hand and sing the top voice.
- Start a new piece--Ritual of Fire Dance by Manual de Falla.
- Polish the secondo part of the first waltz in Brahms Op. 39.
- Start a new piece with another duet partner--an arrangement of a Siciliano by Bach
- Continue with sight reading practice and start a new keyboard harmony exercise with my composition teacher. I'm really excited about this project, and appreciated his advice to have fun and not worry about the fact that I'm stumbling around the piano. He said fluency will be a goal for further down the road. I attached a picture of the first exercise (he provides the melodies, I decide how to harmonize them).
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(Decided to put this in my practice diary as well) I'm going to amend my resolution list. I started learning the piano as an adult about six years ago, and developed terrible performance anxiety, in part because of some negative experiences with my first teacher. I now have a wonderful teacher, but when we started working together I dreaded lessons and found it painful to play in front of another person. My teacher suggested making recordings of myself, but as soon as I hit the button my phone, a loud voice would start shouting at me in my head to the point that it was difficult to follow the music in front of me. I decided to tackle this problem two years ago, and found the book "Feeling Great" by Dr. David Burns tremendously helpful. In addition to some great cognitive techniques for perfectionism, I've been engaging in gradual exposure therapy. Joining Tonebase and posting videos in my practice diary has been part of the process.
I now enjoy my lessons and can make a recording for a friend without having a panic attack, but I still find myself avoiding posting videos of "finished" pieces. I tend to fixate on all the things I would like to improve, rather than celebrate what I've achieved.
My piano resolution for this year is to post videos of pieces I've finished, without any apologies or excuses, and to list two things I like about my interpretation.
Below is the first movement of the Moonlight Sonata that I learned earlier this fall. I was stuck at home with COVID for New Year's and decided to take a couple days to revisit it. I'm happy that I'm getting better at voicing. I felt I committed to my interpretation and maintained that focus through the piece. Thanks for watching!
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I finished the fall/winter semester of lessons last week, and took some time to reflect on what went well and what didnāt during the last 4 months of practice.
My biggest takeaway is that Czerny is not helping me. The pieces look like they should be relatively easy to pull off, but they take so much work (at least for me) to bring up to any kind of reasonable tempo cleanly. I practice and practice, and at the end of it, all I have is a Czerny etude. Itās been frustrating, and a bit demoralizing. So I kicked Mr. Czerny to the curb and started a Chopin prelude last week. Played it today at my lesson and got a lot of good feedback for making forward progress. (Slower tempo, loud counting to control the rubato with my voice, wider dynamics, more of a singing tone in the top voice of the left hand.)
I mentioned Czerny to my composition teacher, saying maybe I should just go back to scales and cadences. His opinion was that scales focus too much on fingers 1-3, and suggested I learn the first 30 patterns in Hanon. He said, yes, Hanon is dangerous if you bang away on it too much because it can lock up the hand. However, he thought using it judiciously was a nice workout for fingers 4 and 5, the patterns are easy to learn so that you can focus on playing with different touches, and that itās beneficial as a beginning transposing exercise because itās easy to take around the circle of 5ths. He also said in his experience the way to really get familiar inside a key isnāt to memorize cadences, but to practice harmonizing a scale. So Iām experimenting with those two things in between repertoire work.
I have my first meeting with my new duet partner on Saturday. I hope it goes well because she signed us up to play at a recital on February 5th!