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I have to balance many different aspects of my life commitments!
These primary tasks vary from
1. working at tonebase (of course!)
2. teaching privately at the Colburn School
3. performing concerts (lots of traveling!)
4. Recording projects (as performer, engineer, and producer)
5. and my hobby of training for Ironman triathlons!
So my days can get very limited with how I practice. Therefore I employ some important techniques to take advantage of my time.
I always have a "working" playlist of pieces on my iPhone. That way I can always cycle through the pieces that I am working on and need to listen to as I am in transit, at grocery store, etc... It really helps to have the music playing on repeat, saving me time when I get to the piano! This is especially important for chamber music. The MOST important aspect of this is having a clear idea of the tempo. I don't want to waste time practicing the piece for TOO FAST of a tempo or not practicing it enough leaving me at too slow of a tempo.
If I need to relax, I often spend a lot of time visualizing my pieces in my head, running through them even when watching TV or a movie. Visualization practice is super important for me, equal to playing the instrument, so if I don't have access to a piano, or it is too late to practice, I can still put some more work in!
Similar to the above, if I don't have access to a piano, I always can relax by watching TV and having my scores out on my iPad. Analyzing them by adding fingerings, marking harmony, circling patterns is great work to get done before getting to the piano next!
In fact, I usually DON'T practice my piece until I have done a cursory overview of it first, away from the piano, marking in all the obvious harmonies, fingerings, and more. That way when I get to the piano I can dive in with a head start! I practice music that already as that "preliminary work" done.
I also am always changing my "priority level" of pieces as I work on them. With a lot of repertoire, it is good to have a quick check-in each day, where I think about which pieces need the most immediate work - due to upcoming rehearsals or concerts! This list can re-arrange itself each day, typically guided by "what am I most nervous about "
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Thank you, Dominic. My life is different from yours, but I can really use your ideas. I am focusing on sight reading, especially fluency with fingerings and rhythms. I can use the scores wherever I am, clap rhythmic patterns or drill hands together on my lap. Of course, there's much more as you pointed out we can do with the score alone without being at our instruments that I know I will be able to incorporate. Scores can even go to the doctor's office while waiting for my husband. Thanks again!
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Such a great question. I am struggling with this at least as much (and probably at least as unsuccessfully) as the next person, but here are some things I always try to tell myself:
1. Use the time you have, and don’t try to use time you don’t have. As a physician at a large academic institution, I work anywhere between 60 and 80 hours a week, depending on whether I’m on service or not, have a project to finish etc., so during the easier weeks, I try to make good use of my evenings to get some practice hours in, and during the crazy weeks, I give myself grace to say: all I can do this week after work is have dinner, watch TV or read, and go to sleep.
2. “You can do anything, but not everything.” The internet tells me it was David Allen who said that. At any rate, it’s a great quote. I’m not even sure I can do ANYthing, but I am quite sure I CANNOT do everything. Just this past week, I told the folks at the Columbus Symphony Chorus that I won’t be returning to sing with them in the upcoming season because I am now taking piano lessons again which will take up a lot of my time. It was a hard and painful decision, but it was necessary to keep my sanity.
3. At times when you have no other commitments and do have time, but don’t feel like you have the drive or the strength to practice, remember that all you may have to do is decide to get started. This past weekend, many of us heard the wonderful panel discussion among the tonebase live directors about how to find and maintain motivation, and I seem to remember more than one person saying: “once I simply sit down and start to play, it immediately gets easier.” When I thought about that for a bit, I found that it is definitely true for me, too. Once I strike those first few keys, I almost always immediately build up the “activation energy” to continue working for a couple of hours. And that then frees up another evening, morning, or afternoon for something else.
4. Make the most of little chunks of time. Use strategies like the Pomodoro Technique (or whatever works for you) to get the small, but necessary parts of piano practice done that may feel like chores and drudgery. For me, that’s fingering, memorization, and (to a lesser extent) solving thorny technical problems. It sometimes is amazing how many of these pesky little tasks can be checked off in 20 or 25 minutes. That's another way to make some measurable, satisfying progress with your music without it taking up too much of your life.
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I also like to do a lot of listening of the pieces I am working on. I like to separate them in sections and focus on a section and parts of a section, and then put them together. It makes me feel it is less work than think of a whole piece. I don’t have a lot of time to practice so I do it in little chunks and again, lots of listening!