By Ronald Worthy
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When the practicing "blahs" strike,
you just need an attitude adjustment. You don't have to sweat blood
to practice well. You don't even have to
think of it as work, or
duty, or even something that you ought to do.
Stop a minute and think about it.
You like music, and you want to play some special piece that really
means something to you. You want it to sound through you - right
through your fingertips.
Okay? Well, you practice it to
fulfill that desire, not to frustrate it.
Pause here and ask yourself some
questions:
What if you could look at a piece
of music for the first time, and play it correctly straight off,
just as fine as you please?
How would you feel about practicing
then?
Or, what if you were practicing for
the Olympic swim meet next year, and felt deep down that you had a
chance? How would you feel then about the training? Would you plunge
into it each morning?
What if you were interrupted at a
good point in yesterday's practicing? What if you had just about
broken through a tough spot when you had to stop? Would you want to
get back to it today as soon as possible?
You answer those questions,
honestly, for yourself. There are ways to say "YES!" every day.
But, first, you've got to stop
blaming yourself. You don't have to be perfect every time. You don't
have to be the best player, today. And you don't have to listen to
what other people say about your playing - people who are only half
listening, and don't care the way you do.
Put all that out of your mind. What
matters is your desire to play as well as possible.
Just start with playing - one note
after another, and keep going. As the Chinese say, "A journey of a
thousand miles begins with the first, step." And, if the very first
step leads to the first slip, be glad for it. You can't, repeat,
cannot learn without mistakes!
Now, start to think more personally
about your instrument.
The piano, like the guitar, is a
"touchy" instrument. Touch it, and you both produce and color its
tones, like a potter molding clay. Think of the keys, all gleaming
white, as the "skin" of the piano; you can either please them or
hurt them. Stroke them, and the sound will come out mellow and
purring. Poke them, and the sound will either "bark" sharply or
woodenly "thud."
Stop thinking of yourself as
playing "on" or "at" the piano. Rather, think of the instrument as
an extension of your own body. When an artificial leg is fitted to
an amputee, he is then taught to walk with it. Gradually, it feels
more natural - more like his own leg walking. The French call the
keys "les touches," or "touch-points" - as if the keys, not you,
were doing the feeling.
Every musician wants to personalize
this instrument. Take a look at the vocalist who hugs his guitar, or
without a guitar, woos his microphone, or, without a microphone,
simply woos the audience?
Every musician seeks to make his
instrument an extension of his own body, the tool he or she needs to
put across the strong feelings he as for the music.
Nadia Boulanger, one of the
greatest teachers, put it best: "Don't speak to me of talent; speak
to me of desire."
Go to the piano or keyboard not to
reproduce a piece, but to experiment with your best way to bring out
what is there. There is no one right way to play a piece - no matter
how loudly some people protest that there is.
Artists in fact, vary greatly, and
audiences return again and again to hear the same piece, as played
by pianist X or pianist Y. You simply cannot play a piece twice the
same way. Try it!
Here's how to practice an exercise
or a song:
Six quietly, upright and relaxed
Hear the music in your head: hear it better than life. Sense its
movement and pulse rolling through you, turning and adjusting your
own pulse, you are the prime "instrument" of this music - sitting
there alert, tuned by silence, vibrating to is rhythm, lending it
your own life entirely.
As you feel the music filling you,
heart and soul, you will know that it is getting ready to be born.
When it has stirred you, lift your
hands to the keyboard. This is the reason you wanted to play in the
first place: to bring alive what has already moved you. And,
suddenly, by centering your focus, you've turned practicing from a
duty into an attraction.
About The Author
Ron Worthy is a Music Educator,
Pianist and Songwriter. He offers online instruction that focuses on
Rock, Pop, Blues, Cocktail, R&B and "Smooth Jazz" piano styles. To
Download Your FREE Piano Lesson Video, go to:
http://www.playpianotonight.com/VC.html.