I wonder why so many students tell me “I could play it at home, but when I get here it all goes wrong”?
Imagine you play darts. You stand on your mark and throw darts at your board until you get treble twenty every time. (If only). Then when you play somewhere else you miss every time. Why? Is YOUR mark positioned exactly the same distance from the board as the one at home? Is your board the same regulation size? Are you using the same darts?
OK. When you arrive at your lesson, is the seat the same height? Are sitting in the same posture as at home? Are you using the same instrument?
It might seem an obvious thing, but a LOT of people practise sitting down all the time, then go and do a performance standing up – and wonder why they don’t play as well as in practise!
Here’s a basic error that everyone makes when they’re learning a new piece. Step one is fine – learn each hand’s part on its own. Even as early as step two though, it all starts to go wrong.
When you have the notes sorted out for each hand, it might be possible to play hands separately to near perfection – and that’s where the danger lies. You’ll try to do it with both hands together.
You’re going to get impatient, and when you try to play both parts together you’ll struggle through from start to finish, over and over again.
You’ll be frustrated that you can’t play through without wrong notes, hesitation, stumbles, slowing down or grinding to a halt at the tricky sections.
You’ll practise a tricky bit, then forge ahead to the end and when you get back to the tricky bit next time it all goes wrong again.
My recommended approach is to imagine that you are now learning a third part… one which uses the other two together, but requires different thinking. Play the first two bars, no further. Make a “loop”, playing bar 1, bar 2, bar 1, bar 2… without stopping, joining the end to the beginning. When you can go round three times without a mistake or hesitation, and ONLY then, learn bar three and do the same with bar 2 and bar 3. Advance one bar at a time until you reach the end of the piece.
Now do it in four bar sections, then in eight bar sections, then sixteen… until you’re doing the whole thing.
That’s how to achieve a fluent performance without the bar lines looking like trip wires, and it works because you’re learning to flow through the piece instead of focusing on errors.
I believe it to be very important to understand what you’re playing. If you don’t, you just read notes off a page and reproduce them so your performance is flat and unemotional. No notation can describe an emotion. Loud or soft is certainly not an emotion, just a volume level – and there’s no musical notation for “this bit is supposed to make people laugh” or “make them cry here”.
Going further, even J S Bach wrote chord sequences. If you just slavishly follow the notes but don’t understand the chords (harmony) and why it moves as it does, it is much harder to learn. There’s logic in the harmony (especially in J S Bach!) and if you know the logic some of the learning is automatic.
So it doesn’t matter whether you’re learning something by Mozart or by Kings of Leon, you’ll do better with some understanding of why the notes are written as they are.