How To Keep a Piano Piece in Shape

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Welcome to LivingPianos.com, I’m Robert Estrin. Today’s subject is about how to keep a piano piece in shape. Sometimes it’s the most difficult thing. You have a performance, and you get everything in good shape. But it can be like a ripe banana. Suddenly the whole bunch is just a disaster and you have to throw them away. Sometimes that happens with your piano music! Everything is going just fine, and then suddenly, you feel like you can’t even play! What can you do about this? It’s a tremendous challenge keeping your music on a high level. Sometimes you can peak early. Everything’s in shape, and then at the performance just two or three days later, everything disintegrates. How can you get things back into shape?

Go back to the score!

One of the most important practice techniques for a piece you have learned, whether it’s a reading piece or a memorized piece, is to go back through the score slowly with no pedal, using the metronome, exaggerating everything. Even if it’s a quiet piece of music, it really doesn’t matter what the piece is, play it with everything over articulated. If everything is fine, great! But suppose you’re playing, and little mistakes are happening. You have insecurity, and the technique isn’t clean. Go back to the score! Go slowly. Take your foot off the pedal, and play incredibly deliberately, almost like you’re practicing scales or arpeggios slowly with raised fingers. By doing this, you reprogram your hands. You also reprogram the sound into your head by playing with the metronome very deliberately with raised fingers.

Play slowly and deliberately.

You’ll instantly know if the piece has gone overly ripe, and has started to show some signs of rot. That’s because when you try to play slowly, suddenly you can’t play it! You’ll be tempted to go back to the beginning and play fast just so you can have the satisfaction of playing through it again. But make sure to take the opportunity to slow down and figure out how to play it slowly and deliberately, whatever the piece is. This is the answer: keep your eyes on the score, play with the metronome, without pedal, and play deliberately. If there are staccatos in the piece, you’ll want to articulate those with the wrist. Exaggerate all the dynamics. Exaggerate every finger that goes up and every finger that goes down so you really feel it. You still have the dynamics, but everything is raised up.

Don’t depend upon motor memory.

You’ll find that anything that’s weak, anything you really don’t know, will become obvious. Your fingers sort of have a memory all their own. But you can’t depend upon that. After a while, like making a copy of a copy of a copy, things degrade. You’ll find that the music will deteriorate over time, and your fingers don’t really know what they’re doing anymore if you just keep playing over and over and over and don’t go back to the original source: the score. Use the metronome, take your foot off the pedal so you can hear what you’re doing, and watch the score carefully. You will learn so much! It will help to revitalize your music so it stays in shape. You can get music back into shape using this same technique. Let me know how it works for you! I love to read your comments here on LivingPianos.com and YouTube. Thanks again for joining me, Robert Estrin here at LivingPianos.com, Your Online Piano Resource.

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11 thoughts on “How To Keep a Piano Piece in Shape”


 
 

  1. I find that playing the piece hands alone is the real answer. Get each hand memorized separately, that really makes each hand solid and competent for the hands together playing. If you keep playing hands together, it always gets worse!

    1. Memorizing phrase by phrase hands separately, then together, connecting phrase by phrase is the first thing I do with a new piece after reading through a couple of times. Then comes the refinement work which involves a great deal of slow practice without pedal, with the metronome (and other techniques).

  2. Hi Robert
    Totally agree on the slow articulated practice. When we accumulate so much repertoire over a life time. That is the way to go.
    By the way
    Nice Knabe piano. I learned piano on a 1910 6’4 model when young in Montreal. Very similar to the Masons which I am fond of.
    Thanks for your great videos. They are much appreciated.
    Cheers

    1. Memorizing and reinforcing memory are the two major parts of practicing solo piano repertoire. Yes there are great similarities in tone of the great American pianos. Yet each has its own voice.

      1. Yes there are also slight differences in voice.
        My mom who was a singer chose the Knabe for its slight nasal quality that was close to the human voice. It was once the piano of choice of the métropolitain opera. As for reinforcing memory I need all the help I can get at 75 years of age LOL.

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