5 Steps to Fight Boredom During Piano Practice
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- Äas pĆidĂĄn 31. 05. 2024
- Do you find it hard to actually finish learning and practicing your piano pieces? Well, here's some steps to stave off boredom and actually get to complete your musical pieces.
Quick tip: there's 3 bonus tips thrown in there so don't miss out. Watch until the end. đ€
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đ Timestamps
0:00 Intro
1:02 1st Tip
2:05 2nd Tip
3:03 3rd Tip
4:00 4th Tip
5:23 5th Tip
5:56 Bonus 1
7:14 Bonus 2
9:25 Bonus 3
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One piece of advice which stuck with me was given by Andras Schiff whilst giving a masterclass. He used words to the effect: "Practice slowly if you want, but *always* practice musically". Every note can be a gem.
Love this also! I say the same things to my students!
Una Mattina by Ludovico Einaudi đ
Sonatina op 36
âTo play a wrong note is insignificant; to play without passion is inexcusable.â
â Ludwig van Beethoven :)
I've studied piano since 1971. Everything you teach is spot-on-the-money. Parents should find a teacher like you from the beginning.
I practice pieces every other day and try to keep it at no more than 30-40m per piece. Part of it that was not mentioned in this video is that just like you wouldn't listen to a song on repeat for hours and hours for days straight, listening to yourself practice the same song over and over can get boring. This is why it's so important to have a variety in repertoire. I rather make small meaningful progress each time I practice than to burn myself out and end up hating the piece and dropping it.
I love your analogy here - Iâm always telling my students not to practice for hours and hours on end - this is a great analogy. Thanks!
Yes, I find that keeping it to 30-40m per day per piece is best. I practice evenings only. I do see an improvement the next day. I typically work on 3 or 4 pieces at the same time, over many weeks/months. Self taught.
This is so true. I practiced La Campenalla no life, and when I finally could play the whole piece I never played it again because it became so boring.
I thought I would play a lot the last two weeks of 2022 since I was off work, but I took a break... and then went back last night and played the piece I'm working on better than ever. Sometimes you just need to rest your head and fingers.
One thing I love to do is play the piece in a swing rhythm. This makes it a little harder, but when itâs a technical piece like a Chopin etude, it actually helps you clean up the passages.
A very important think is the metronome. A very frustrating thing is those difficult part we occult. While training we tend to slow down when difficulties occur. You get a very better idea of those part you need to work with the metronome and if you level down the speed of the easy part to a speed you can cope on the entire peace you'll get less frustrated because you'll be able to play the whole peace faster. The worst frustration is when you feel like you'll never get to the end of the peace essentially because you're stuck. Sometimes it's a question of playing slower and more regularly.
Here are Timestamps to help guide you:
đ Timestamps
0:00 Intro
1:02 1st Tip
2:05 2nd Tip
3:03 3rd Tip
4:00 4th Tip
5:23 5th Tip
5:56 Bonus 1
7:14 Bonus 2
9:25 Bonus 3
đ€
Thanks sir
Wonderful wisdom Jazer
Thank you Jazer!đ
I started "la valse d'Amélie" From Yann Tiersen. I don't progress as quickly as I wish, but I keep going, because like all the other pieces I've worked on, when I'm done with it, it brings me such happiness and confidence, and each peace teaches me new techniques.
Thanks for your tips Jazer. It helped me Ă lot through the last 2 years đ
The difficulty thing ... when my teacher suggested that a Beethoven piece I was in love with was too difficult for me, that just made me more determined. And I won!
She also taught with the practice of omitting pieces her students didn't like, which is fairly obvious. There will be no happiness in forcing something on a student, knowing it will lead to failure.
I'm glad you have such a happy approach to learning, thank you Jazer.
@@LearnPianoWithJazerLee.. ???
I like starting with technique, such as arpeggios, broken chords, scales, one per day but in all keys, then continue learning a song, then finishing with video lessons (I am a Pianote member). Doing that every day - every day - has been very good to my progress.
I've shown students to play other songs while getting good at harder ones. I had one student that came in and didn't know chords on piano! Shr could read sheet music pretty good,, but didn't have much chords knowledge. It opens up a lot of music ability and you start to notice patterns and learn songs much faster
You are the best teacher. Finally, my question has been answered on item two : developing strict fingering. At 73 Iâm enjoying learning how to play, with my goal of learning how to read; itâs like learning a language- love the challenge. You break down lessons with practical explanations. My biggest block has been my using any finger as long as got to the notes in time, especially my left hand. Thanks much for the how-to get âunstuck.â Great video.
Thank you so much for inspiring me. I started piano at 6 years old, and now in my mid-60s I'm on my 4th attempt to make my playing sound like I feel it in my heart đ I think in this video you have pretty much nailed all the reasons I've failed so far, but this time I feel completely different. Thank you đđ
Jazer I'd love to listen to a video of just you playing some songs. It's so nice to listen to!
Great video, thank you
THe video i need : 5 steps to finish your own creations
relative chords is certainly the direction i have to follow
good video as usual
Iâm learning Leopold Mozartâs Minuet in C for Nannerl
Having a little difficulty going from section to section in tempo. I like your suggestion about playing hands separately first a few times, and playing each section repeatedly to develop & retain muscle memory.
GREAT ADVICE! Thank you! Always a pleasure to watch your videos!
Your videos are very valuable. I really appreciate them all.
Iâm starting off with a thumbs up just because youâre addressing this important topic. Thank you! I set piano to the side for a time while I had young children paired with zero sleep, and now coming back to piano Iâm working on bringing back my old repertoire. Itâs been rough but your videos really help. Iâm also working on memorizing so I have a handful of beloved pieces in my back pocket. Very good points in this video. For me, the tip about working on pieces that are not too hard is important to remember. I canât simply pick up where I left off years ago.
I do hope you have had the chance to pick up from where you left years ago. If not, it's okay. Slow and steady is how it goes.
Needed that one. Thank you so much!
Thank you Jazer... You are a wonderful teacher!
Thanks Lee. It's great to learn piano with you. I love your videos!!
It was a great surprise yet exciting to bump you in person today! Thanks for sharing your piano skills through the channel, I leant a lot from you! All the best
I don't mind to temporarily drop a song. It's been 2 times already that I stopped playing Zanarkan, same for Moonlight Sonata. I have a lot of satisfaction in learning small pieces. I consider that if I struggle with the simpler RCM 1 pieces I'm not ready yet for the tougher one. So for now, I trying to build a strong foundation. I'm not in for a sprint but a marathon.
Great! Thank you!
I'm so glad you're posting these videos - they are wonderful. I'm going to take notes.
I really liked the "just break up with your piece".
Thank you Lee, just by looking at you I get motivation to practice those tips!
Thank you so much for your videos. They help so much! I love how you tackle the little nuances of the piano-learning experience by addressing the psychology behind learning and breaking through mindset obstacles to enhance the process of mastering a piece. Thank you thank you!
Great advice! Iâm working on La Fille au Cheveux de Lin and I sometimes take it ONE MEASURE at a time, depending on the measure!
thanks, jazer
for the lovely video .. really helped to understand our own flaws and weakness in the practice of piano.
Thank you! đđđ
Once again, great tips from a great teacher !!! Thanks Jazer !!! Greetings from Argentina !
One thing I do, after I warm up with scales or chord inversions, or both, is to play a piece I almost know, hands separately, very slowly. Paying close attention to mistakes in fingering, or dynamics. When it starts to get 'meh' I either change to another piece I'm learning, or switch to goofing around on the keys for a few minutes, looking for interesting harmonies or such. Then I spank myself and get back to the piece đ
God bless you bro
You are the best thing that happened to piano teaching since the great composers. You should be the template of piano and music education. Thank you for not missing a beat..
Thanks a lot for these valuable ideas đđđ
Maestro Jazer: very useful advices (as always). Yes, you right, sometimes we get bored or lose motivation after a couple of weeks with a new piece but following your suggestions, we can overcome the problem. Un abrazo from La Palma of one of your many fans.
Thank you. You are a great professor.
Really good tips and very helpful. Thank you Jazer. I am self taught...I learned through CZcams tutorials, read books and learned theories. I find myself slow in learning but managed to learn a song, as you said...by breaking it to small pieces. I learned the song measure by measure then put it together until I finish the song.
In 12 months, I was able to learn 7 songs and play them through muscle memory without reading the sheet music anymore.
Your channel has helped me a lot and I am so grateful to you. Keep sharing us your tips and more power to your channel !!!đđđ
I am now learning May Be by Yiruma. It sounds like a really spectacular and pleasant summer melody. I have started playing piano only for 2 months, and this piece is not so easy but, in my opinion, achievable for me. I think I will be able to play it completely in next 2 or 3 months.đ
Good luck on your journey â€ïž
I agree with @äœłçç and I am with you all the way.
Thank you very much for this
Thank you so much! You just make a great video â€
Can wait to finish presto thank you for your help
Hi Jazer, very helpful again to keep going.
I have no teacher. Played as a child, played while raising my family though much less, and now retired, it fills my day. I'm learning theory at 60 years old and it's changing my world. I listen for songs on youtube, I've found my fav (comfortable) arrangers. I first loved Dietmar Stienhauer, moved on to Neil Archer and Sangha Noona, and now trying Francisco Parrino. I always buy music that is too hard for me because I can learn something from it even if I can't complete the piece. Who am I kidding? I am no Francisco Parrino ... I wasn't trained ... but I can try. Piano is a deep deep well. I look at that as a positive ... always more to learn. I will adopt the separate hands ideas and stop sight reading over and over. This music now is hard and deserves to be broken down and really studied. Thank you for your tips on boredom!
Hi, Jazer! I really enjoy watching your videos. They are very helpful, motivating and I like the way you talk - it is not boring đ đ I use some of your tips when I practise and it helps đ Thank you!
Such a good video!!! Ty a la so much for this!!! Iâm currently learning Lisztâs Serenade. Iâm in love with all Melodieâs and this is going to help out with some techniques about the piece! Thank you!
Struggling with the scales on nocturne c , this video inspired me to continue , as the piece is in the video, like a sign from above to keep on trucking đ
So I've been playing piano for a little over a year. I have a theory degree and I've been playing music my entire life, so I've progressed pretty quickly. Gate of Steiner from the anime steins;gate is the piece that made me start piano, and I've spent the last year working on several other pieces to get my chops up to the level that I can start learning it. Well last week I sat at my keyboard for my monthly attempt at gate of Steiner and finally broke through the skill ceiling that had held me back all this time. It's a beautiful piece, and it felt amazing for all my hard work to pay off.
I recommend giving the piece a listen. It's probably fairly easy for an expert like yourself, but I'm sure you will enjoy it nevertheless.
Great video Jazer, thanks for putting it together. I do get bored occasionally with songs I'm working on, typically the reason is that I've started it but realize after a while it doesn't have the elements to keep my interest. For me, I feel that letting a song go isn't a bad thing, I've got enough great ones that are still interesting to me years later and new ones coming along all the time that I don't feel bad if not every song I start is a keeper. :-)
You're a great Guy and good Inspiration.
Really good discussion subject and good tips.
Great tips, thank you. Love your choices: just found the music for Fur Elise, which I bought 40 years ago, & have begun to learn the core melody, bit by bit. Now, after some 5 years as an adult beginner (very slow learner here) I have enough skills to be able to start. Very challenged from ~ Bar 25 -35 & the section from about Bar 60, beginning with the repeated Left hand bass A staccatos. But it now seems to lie within the realm of the possible. Yes - enjoying the wonder of seeing the musical structures unfold as I learn it, after a lifetime listening.
You nailed it !
Your video is really useful
You are amazing! I just LOVE your videos! Thank you! Maureen from Argentinađ
Really great tips thank you!
You're welcome.
I'm a beginner of the Kalimba, but I love your advice, and would like to get a digital piano in the future.
Thanks
Hi Jazer - just wanted to say - What a brilliant video, and so eloquent and well put. Having played for a few years now, I know that this vid really offers great advice. My 'dream' piece to play is Gershwin's That Certain Feeling. But luckily I understand that it is above my 'pay grade' at the moment so I am NOT attempting it (yet) and therefore am not getting demotivated. One day I'll get there!
Nice one!!! đ
Your content is always some of the best I see here on CZcams, practical, worth incorporating into my regimen. I found especially useful the hands-separate plus having multiple pieces that you're working on. One other thing not mentioned that works for me is to never practice the same piece every day. I find if I give it some rest between sessions, my synapses or those brain bundles or whatever they are, have a chance to form and when I return in a day or 2, things go much more fluidly. Looking forward to all your vids Jazer.
I am glad my tips and tutorials has helped a lot! đ€
I agree. when I am too excited to finish the piece I tried to do it with both hands however it did not work out, it was difficult and challenging and I end up lacking the interest to finish it. Thanks for the tips. đ
đčđč I'm a self-taught pianist and your tipps are so helpful for me...thank you so much for your great videos...
Upvoting before this premieres because it's a great topic and I know the tips are going to be great.
So great that you have posted another terrific video, Jazer! Your tips are âspot onâ and resonate very well with me. You are a natural educator! Currently working on Traumerei by Shuman. Practicing and playing piano is a Wellness activity for me - it is mindful, meditative, focused, and stress reducing. I like to play at night when I am a little tired because I am more relaxed - always looking for beautiful slow sad pieces in a minor key, intermediate level!âŠ
I do that, too, play beautiful slow music to help me calm down and relax. đ€đ€
After 1 year of playing piano, I am at thr level to play Fur Elise, River Flows in you or Comptine d un autre ete. Now I have chosen Ballade Pour Adeleine, but so far it seems over what I'm capable of.
Another progression would be to properly read from the notes instead of copying youtube tutorials slow down to 50% speed. And yes, the biggest challenge to finish the piece to the end is to keep loving it when you practice the melody for a thousand time :)
Thank you Jazer for all your videos, you are a great motivator.
Your fan Stan the Man :)
Good stuff. Hadn't heard of the Rumba Tocatta before! Sounds like a super fun piece to play.
excellent video!
Thank you so much for your advice!! I struggle with playing fast pieces, and having to play them slowly is so frustrating for me because Iâm impatient lol, but it does work!
Muchas gracias por los consejos Maestro, hace poco me di cuenta que fallaba bastante en repetir y repetir con diferentes digitaciones sin llegar a ningĂșn lugar, lo que causaba confusiĂłn a mi mente, asĂ que comencĂ© a cambiar eso y vaya que fue muy positivo, ahora cada vez que empiezo a practicar una nueva pieza me centro en escoger una digitaciĂłn.
I play this nocturnes now, and that pieces are very Melodic and Lyrical! I love play Chopin's pieces, because that pieces are very soulful
This is very true! The brain needs time to process the new information. Sometimes you literally need to âsleep on itâ and allow it to sink in.
Youve literally played almost every song on my learn to play list. I just bought my piano recently and my inspiration was also Nocturne in C sharp minor from The Pianist đ .
Thank you for these tips!
great tips! as a harmonica player i can easily translate them to my practice routine; even the one on fingering. on a chromatic harmonica each F and most C's can be played as blow and draw notes, and with the slider in or out. which ones you choose makes the figure or sentence easier to play or sound better in the context of the section or the whole piece. so using the same specific blow/draw note sequences helps with muscle memory, a very important skill for every harmonica player because we really can't see what we're doing ...
Thanks for your professionalism I use to do this but have gotten away from it. I will be returning.thanks again man good job!
I'm learning Gospel. Praise Team songs. From a Caribbean Church..
good job Mr Lee
Now I'm playing River flows in you by Yiruma. I can practice it for hours)) I love everything about this piece! Thanks for the video!
Hi Jazer, i love your charismatic aproach playing the piano, it motivates me to like practicing like i never experienced it before, i thank you so much giving me such a pack of motivation đđđ
Bro took the words straight out of me. Lol
Iâm like 1 year self taught and a lot of people say Iâm gifted because I see a piece I wanna learn, and I go and learn it and Iâm thinking of taking up lessons to this guy I know who works partially at the school for lessons in class times and I was thinking of doing it for the next 2 years untill end of grade 12 to improve my skill, technique, and general music theory. The first piece i tried learning that was up there in difficulty was moonlight sonata 3rd movement.. I love this piece so much and i it took me 8 months to learn like 10 seconds of the scaling because I was in and out and I eventually got it and am learning the up and down scaling technique but Iâm taking a break from that piece, and itâs been like 3 weeks, but now Iâm learning a piece from Chopinâs etudes, etude no4 torrent, and I love everything about it, all the things you said about the piece your learning and what you like about it, tick all my boxes! Iâm 2 weeks in learning it no sheet music pure muscle memory after learning the notes and I can play the first 11 seconds, im happy to get the piano teacher im going to see also help me in my technique but I can play it properly at about 90-120 bpm tempo. Iâm definitely not getting bored of this piece as I listen to it all the time and I canât get enough of it!!
I love your videos! So helpful and interesting!!! Great advice. Please keep them coming. My problem is finding more than 30 mins per day to devote to practice.
Danke!
Despite the fact that my mother tongue is Spanish, and I don't handle English very well, your channel is one of the few that has really helped me a lot to improve my virtual piano learning; so... thank you very much!!
Great video,
I struggle with this problem all the time.
Could you please make a specific video on tip 3: Strict fingering?
I often struggle finding the most efficient way to move across a piece..
Could you please offer advice on how one can tackle this challenge. A piece example is of Spring Waltz (Frédéric Chopin, Franz Schubert and Felix Mendelssohn).
Hi
I would just like to say how inspiring, informative, and very well articulated your presentations are. You explain everything simply and passionately. As an adult piano player myself I have gained valuable advice and tips from watching you which has really improved my playing. Your videos have made me become much more mindful of my playing which has helped me slow down my playing and try not to rush a piece so much and also helped with my body/finger tension.
I am an adult piano student in my 50 s and have been playing for 7 years. I have completed my ABRSM grade 1-5 music theory and I am about to take my ABRSM grade 3 piano practical exam in the next few weeks having completed grades 1 and 2. Do you have any advice on how to control nerves whilst taking my exam?
Thank you keep producing these videos very much appreciated. Best on youtube.
Kind Regards
Tracy
Good luck w ur exam, Tracy!! I just took my Royal Conservatory of Music Prep B exam & although I was shaking I was so anxious, I started to calm down as I played & I did well!! You got this!!!!
Hi Jazer!! Iâm in agreement w everybodyâs positive comments on you and ur teaching style!! I love ur channel!! Iâm currently working on Freddie Mercuryâs, Bohemian Rhapsody a piece Iâve been in love w since high school. Itâs slowly coming but Iâm making steady progress!! Thanks for this video though cuz I was just wondering if I should take a break or maybe itâs too far above my level! I have a teacher and heâs been extremely helpful and is encouraging me to stay w it!! So thatâs what Iâm gonna do!! It sure will be sweet when I can play it in its entirety!!
Happy new year to u and ur family??
These are great tips. Thank you. Maybe I can get through the 5 songs I started and stopped.
Hi Jazer - do you give one on one online lessons?
Thank you so much I watched your video a month ago and now I am a pro never thought this would happenâ€
Glad it helped!
Thank you so much for posting this video. I am 53 years old, and just now started learning to play. Today was the third day I did these exercises, and they really help.
Glad you have started to play again, Ave Easley. I am with you all the way.
And also you love showing off.. đ tbh the way ur hands move on the key...is a magic..
Even I can herd you breath and sounds musically â€â€â€
Nice job
I'm starting to watch your videos. I have been having lessons for 6 months. I play right hand well. I play left hand well too. When I play both hands I have difficulty
Something I've started doing is to try playing a piece, or just one passage, in all the different keys, to help commit the sound to memory and get a feel of the relationship between the intervals in a passage.
Left hand of the chopin e flat piece is so challenging
What I've been doing the last few months that seems to be working for me is I choose three pieces to work on. One Romantic era, one video game/movie, and one rock/metal/jazz
I enjoyed your playing. Would you like to guide me as a beginner how to play hard songs like Jesus be a fence all around me by Fred Hammond?
I love the melody and the words so much as a vocalist.