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I have a sixteen year old student who plays very well and comes prepared to each lesson. She wants to go to college for music so I have been preparing her for her piano audition by giving her a couple of pieces to learn and memorize (Erik Satie's Trois Gymnopedies No. 1, and Bach's Two Part Invention No. 8). She is a great sightreader and memorizes quickly, but here is her only problem...

She plays like a robot!

I recently had her learn for a recital a section from the Adagio from Beethoven's Pathetique, and she played every note perfectly, but it could have just as easily been played by a computer. I've been trying to get her to expell some creativity in the way she plays, with dynamics and such, but even then, they sound robotic and forced. She is such a good player, she just has no feeling behind it! How can I get her to break out of that shell?

Last edited by Hannah R; 08/05/09 10:12 AM.

"Why should we be in such desperate haste to succeed, and in such desperate enterprises? If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured and far away." -Thoreau
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I completely disagree with your post.
Your judgement is subjective, based
on your personal biases. Another
person might find her playing perfectly
fine. You've got to hit all the
right notes in an audition. Playing
with what you call "feeling" (which
is your personal judgement) while
hitting numerous wrong notes is going to
get her nowhere in the piano world.

This is her way of playing. Trying
to force some so-called "expressive" way
of playing on her that is unnatural
for her will destroy her as a pianist.

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I'm sorry that you misunderstood my post.

I am not trying to "force" anything unnatural, nor am I suggesting that it is better for her to play wrong notes than to play without feeling.

I make it a very big point in my lessons that music is not just about getting all the notes right. I don't think anyone would ever agree with that. As teachers and students and musicians in general, we often get caught up in playing every note perfectly and forget about the purpose of music in the first place: it is an art form. It is an outlet of expression.

I know that my student has the potential to play "beautifully," and not just "correctly." These are two separate things, although easily interchangeable. What I would ideally love to see is her eventually accomplishing both. I can literally see the tension in her demeanor and her playing and I can see that it is unhealthy tension, that she is capable of letting go of all of those inhibitions and allowing the emotion of the song to be evident through her fingers.

Please read my posts more carefully before jumping to such extreme conclusions, I meant nothing of the sort.


"Why should we be in such desperate haste to succeed, and in such desperate enterprises? If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured and far away." -Thoreau
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Take a look at some of the top
concert pianists. Some of them
play "like a robot," and yet get
universal rave reviews. They
apparently cannot play "expressively"
and at the same time hit all the
right notes from memory while playing
lengthy pieces in front of thousands
of people. "Expressiveness" and
"accuracy" are apparently mutally
exclusive and are not so easy
to put together in one player as
you so cavalierly propose. Trying
to force both in one player is going
to destroy the thing that the player does
best, which is accuracy, in this student.

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Hannah (sorry, I like that nick better than the new one),

Welcome, and fret not. When you've been here longer (or if you happened to lurk before you registered), you'll know to recognize (1) contributors who routinely offer "extreme conclusions" and bizarre, off-topic responses to trumpet certain predictable soapbox issues, and (2) contributors in the Teachers Forum who aren't teachers.

The arc of a discussion thread sometimes goes from the sublime to the ridiculous. At other times, unfortunately, it's the other way around. smile But at least that means you can expect some input from those who are best qualified to give it.

Steven

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Ditto what Steven said smile

I have the same issue with a few students. I have them watch performances by some emotional pianists. I think it is difficult for them to understand what we mean when we say "play with emotion" and if they can see it for themselves, they may understand it better. There are some good examples on youtube if you weed through them smile



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On the topic of "correct notes" vs. "with expression" - have her listen to two VERY different artist's recordings of her pieces. Listen to them with her during the lesson, and point out the differences in each artist's style of playing. (Of course it might be harder to distinguish with Bach!)

Or try this: you play it for her in a very robotic "all the notes right" way, and then the "beautiful" way with more expression. Try it with just a few select measures at a time. Have her close her eyes and tell you which way is "just the right notes" and which way has some emotion with it.

Then, take those few measures, and show her some ways she can add "emotion." To ambiguously say, "Play it with more feeling" doesn't necessarily make sense to a kid. Show her how to add rubato if desired, add emphasis on certain notes - whether they are downbeats, syncopation, dissonant harmonies - whatever. Add obvious or exaggerated dynamics (usually, a student's "exaggerated dynamics" are right on!) Have her think of phrasing (lifting at ends of phrases and climbing to the tops of the phrases - for Bach especially). Also, lots and lots of RH melody alone is helpful. Without having to think of hands-together coordination, RH can be more creative and expressive.

Basically, use those concepts as tools to "create" the emotion. She may not know HOW to incorporate it into her piece. Show her spots in the piece where it's very important to have "more feeling."

The purpose of music is to express our feelings. With her at age 16, I'm sure she has much more emotional depth than she did at age 10! Since she already plays well and has the notes under her fingers, she should physically able to add the emotion to it.

Let us know how it goes!


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Thank you so much Klavier, those are all very good ideas!

Like I said before, I am not literally trying to FORCE anything upon her, that's why I put "force" in quotations. I am merely trying to make her aware of the difference and the possibilities of what she can do beyond just playing the correct notes.


"Why should we be in such desperate haste to succeed, and in such desperate enterprises? If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured and far away." -Thoreau
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She is sixteen!
Ask her to play, as though she is serenading her boyfriend :-)


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Ok so since I played this song "like a rainbow" in front of a panel of judges (their opinion not mine), I think I can comment although I am not a teacher.

First off, I believe some students play like robots before they learn the piece by heart because they are focused on getting the notes right, and dynamics right first before the feeling. Maybe some time is needed before she plays this with emotion. Does she play all pieces like "a robot"? (very disparaging term IMHO)

Now, with the emotion part from experience before playing this piece I always envisioned a very sad occurrence in my life, but nothing too depressing. And then I start playing slowly, I think a little less than the 60 beats per minute required if I remember correctly. Playing this slowly and soulfully is best because it just evokes the sadness that Beethoven obviously wanted out of this piece. A good example is to have her listen to Freddy Kempf's interpretation on YouTube which is a very good one even though he exaggerates it a lot with his little depressing headshakes, but that should give your student an idea on the feeling that is required behind the playing.




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Ha!


"Why should we be in such desperate haste to succeed, and in such desperate enterprises? If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured and far away." -Thoreau
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By the way, beautiful music comes only when the player adds "feeling". If a piece has "just the correct notes" and nothing else, it is not necessarily pleasant to listen to.

If I were evaluating a student in terms of ability, one who can play with emotion and feeling is superior to one who has "just the correct notes." You must have a higher level of control to incorporate emotion into music. I would rather listen to a couple of accidentally chipped notes with expressive and very "musical" playing than 100% accuracy with robotic style.

toejamfutbol, you are on the right track with this girl! Keep it up!

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Well, choose robotic music for robotic students. Not everyone has "musicality" in the sense of expressiveness. I think fast, robotic playing has its place in music, especially if the piece calls for such manner of performance. I don't like it, and don't teach it to my students, but sometimes I wonder if those little robots in my studio need something robotic just to let them be good at something.

Last year I heard a robotic teenager at a recital playing the Prokofiev Toccata. It was note-perfect and very fast. Not one ounce of emotion. His face never changed expression. I'm not even sure he blinked. [Linked Image]


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BTW, your student might like "Machines on the Loose" by Kevin Olson.


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I agree, AZN, which is one of the reasons I gave her the Bach Invention, since it is very technical and "mechanical." (Not to say that it doesn't require expression as well)


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Originally Posted by toejamfutbol
I have a sixteen year old student who plays very well and comes prepared to each lesson. She wants to go to college for music so I have been preparing her for her piano audition by giving her a couple of pieces to learn and memorize (Erik Satie's Trois Gymnopedies No. 1, and Bach's Two Part Invention No. 8). She is a great sightreader and memorizes quickly, but here is her only problem...

She plays like a robot!

I recently had her learn for a recital a section from the Adagio from Beethoven's Pathetique, and she played every note perfectly, but it could have just as easily been played by a computer. I've been trying to get her to expell some creativity in the way she plays, with dynamics and such, but even then, they sound robotic and forced. She is such a good player, she just has no feeling behind it! How can I get her to break out of that shell?


I begin by talking to the student in a robot voice, so they can understand the concept. We talk about oral reading, about students who's reading is pleasant, interesting, or even exciting to listen to, and those which are very correct, but boring and mechanical. After the student begins to grasp the concept, we turn to music.

Even with my elementary students, we begin to dissect each phrase, trying to find that point where the music is flowing to. Then find where each phrase is going, and the main point, if you will, or high point, of each piece or section of a piece.

I use my pencil to draw a line, usually curved, from the starting note of the phrase to the high point (and we discuss multiple possibilities and the student plays each, to see which they like better).

With some students, it's sometimes necessary to mark the entire score, phrase by phrase. Other students get it and we don't have to mark everything.

I hope this helps, and BTW, good to have you join us! Welcome.


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Originally Posted by John v.d.Brook
and BTW, good to have you join us! Welcome.


Oops. Yeah, what he said smile smile


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What music does she like? Why does she like it? If it's a rock band, then what about their music "speaks" to her?

How would she verbalize what it means to play with expression?

How does she describe what it's like to have to listen to robotic playing for a long time?

Can she play a phrase, or a line, or two from the Op13 2ng mvt. expressively? Is she too worried about the notes, and memory?

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Not all people have enough empathy in them to play well. If listening to the Pathetique(Tchaikovsky's) doesn't press any buttons, she's not really suited to music.

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I'm not a teacher, but your problem reminds me of a passage from William Westney's The Perfect Wrong Note. He talks about an un-master class that he taught where the focus on a particular student with this type of a problem was to get the student to role play playing as someone else. The entire class provided suggestions and the student really improved in their performance.

Rich


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