What is your practice and preparation routine a few days before and the day of the performance?
I have a performance coming up in 4 days in a competition where I am playing Beethoven Sonata Op.27 and Gershwin three preludes. I already know the music very well and inside out and I practice all the challenging sections at a slower tempo everyday.
I always feel a mountain of stress climbing as the performance day comes up. Even though I know I practiced the program and played through it like a thousand times but I have this fear that something might go wrong while on stage.
Just asking fellow pianists here, do you have any specific advice or rituals that you do a few days before and on the day of the performance for practice? Do you have long practice sessions, short and multiple ones throughout the day? Do you play the whole program or just play through the challenging parts?
I try to record myself to simulate the feeling of the performance but I appreciate any ideas here!
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I am in the same boat right now. I have a 45-minute recital coming up with five different pieces on it, and I am going back and forth between feeling confident and feeling scared to death! Mostly because this is the first time Iāve done something like this.
What Iām hoping will help:
-playing through the entire program in order at least once every day (preferably first thing in the morning)
-practicing backwards and at random in sections
-hands-separate practice
-practicing in different tempos (especially slowly)
-mental practice
-going over problem areas in detail with my teachers
Iāll be interested to see if others have other suggestions.
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I know this will sound like that my advice is far TOO simple. You have lots more experience than I do.
BUT...when I am getting ready to play for an audience (or when I used to do competitions as a kid), all I would try to think about is HOW BEAUTIFUL the music is, and that I hoped everyone to enjoy listening.
I hope this helps a little bit.
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I've done a lot of competitions and now only performances but the preparation is the same. By now you have built your endurance for the pieces you are about to perform. Daily go over the challenging spots slowly and with confidence. Treat yourself to a playthrough up-to-speed occasionally, but always finish the days practice with slow, comfy play through on the spots you have marked on the music. I agree with Gail Starr in reminding yourself about what you LOVE about the piece. What unique interpretation will you bring to the world? Playing it through in your mind or on a tabletop is a great way to bring yourself into focus too. On the day I eat gentle foods, have a nap a few hours before the performance and get lots of fresh air. Then embrace the excitement you feel and share your music with the world! All the best!
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The following routine worked wonders for me in preparation for a Bach competition, on advice of my teacher at the time.
For two weeks, I played everything very-very slowly, at least three times, with and without music. This is Rachmaninoff-style super slow practice. And only two days before the competition did I return to non-stressful normal practicing, but limited to two hours a day. It worked wonders.
Btw, I believe Dominic Cheli has a module on what to do before performing. Check it out.