April 15

0 comments

Different Layers of Patience

There are several layers of patience involved when you're learning to play the piano.

There's the patience of acquiring and mastering new skills to learn new pieces.

There's the patience it takes to learn the notes and rhythms on the page accurately.

The patience to add the details that make the music magical.

The patience to memorize that piece of music.

The patience to deal with the days you don't feel like practicing.

And then, there's the patience of maintaining a piece of music you've already learned and memorized. Personally, I feel this is the most difficult of all.

Many students over the years had a piece learned backwards and forwards for months, only to have a memory crash on performance day. Because they ran through it so many times at home, it became stuck in muscle memory.

And muscle memory isn't reliable with the adrenaline of a live performance kicks in.

This level of patience - maintaining a learned piece - is the deepest of all. Because when we have a piece of music learned, we want to just play and have fun.

But to really keep bringing it to the next level, we have to practice it slowly. Even when we know it very well.

And we also need the patience to continue discovering more and more nuances that take the music from good to great to breathtaking.

Patience is part of the game when it comes to learning a musical instrument. The key is making sure you know which layer of patience you're dealing with at all times.

Never miss a blog post!

For parents, students, and anyone else who believes that music can and should be a meaningful part of everyone's life.

About Jonathan Roberts

I am the founder and director of the South Shore Piano School, and I have been teaching the piano for nearly 20 years. My work centers around bringing music to the lives of kids, parents, and adults in an enriching, meaningful way. At the South Shore Piano School, my incredible colleagues and I accomplish this through skill-based teaching, community, and an innovative, people-first business model. You can read more about me here.


Tags


You may also like

The Weekly Review

How did this past week go? What’s something you could have done better? What can you change this week to do that thing better? And how will you make sure you stick to it? Weekly reviews aren’t sexy, by any means. But they’re effective. Do it for a couple months, and you’ll be astounded by the results.

Read More

When 2 + 2 = 10

When it comes to practicing, most people don’t get how time works. People think the amount of practice time is most important. Rather than the frequency. Logic tells us this: Practicing 5 minutes for six days would be the same as practicing 30 minutes for one day. It adds up to the same total minutes, so the benefits are the same.

Read More
Leave a Reply