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#1304074 - 11/12/09 02:01 PM
Re: The two things you can't practice.
[Re: keyboardklutz]
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6000 Post Club Member
Registered: 03/18/06
Posts: 6119
Loc: Olympia, Washington, USA
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Okay.
Actually, I disagree about posture. But perhaps you are implying something other than physically sitting at the piano.
_________________________
"Those who dare to teach must never cease to learn." -- Richard Henry Dann Full-time Private Piano Teacher offering Piano Lessons in Olympia, WA. www.mypianoteacher.com Certified by the American College of Musicians; member NGPT, MTNA, WSMTA, OMTA
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#1304088 - 11/12/09 02:23 PM
Re: The two things you can't practice.
[Re: Morodiene]
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Yikes! 10000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/21/07
Posts: 10856
Loc: London, UK (though if it's Aug...
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If something can be taught, it can become habitual. Posture can be taught, and art can as well. There I would have to disagree. Something that is constantly in flux can't be grasped.
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#1304108 - 11/12/09 02:56 PM
Re: The two things you can't practice.
[Re: keyboardklutz]
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7000 Post Club Member
Registered: 04/06/07
Posts: 7496
Loc: Boynton Beach, FL
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If something can be taught, it can become habitual. Posture can be taught, and art can as well. There I would have to disagree. Something that is constantly in flux can't be grasped. And yet, I can grasp posture and I can grasp playing musical. So these things aren't constantly in flux, or your premise is off.
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#1304119 - 11/12/09 03:12 PM
Re: The two things you can't practice.
[Re: keyboardklutz]
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3000 Post Club Member
Registered: 08/07/07
Posts: 3586
Loc: Orange County, CA
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They don't call you 'Lightening' John for nothing! I was not aware that John has the power to make people and things weigh less.
_________________________
Private Piano Teacher and MTAC Member
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#1304121 - 11/12/09 03:15 PM
Re: The two things you can't practice.
[Re: AZNpiano]
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Yikes! 10000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/21/07
Posts: 10856
Loc: London, UK (though if it's Aug...
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#1304123 - 11/12/09 03:17 PM
Re: The two things you can't practice.
[Re: Morodiene]
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Yikes! 10000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/21/07
Posts: 10856
Loc: London, UK (though if it's Aug...
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If something can be taught, it can become habitual. Posture can be taught, and art can as well. There I would have to disagree. Something that is constantly in flux can't be grasped. And yet, I can grasp posture and I can grasp playing musical. So these things aren't constantly in flux, or your premise is off. Tension comes out from anywhere and perhaps everywhere, as does art.
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#1304131 - 11/12/09 03:26 PM
Re: The two things you can't practice.
[Re: keyboardklutz]
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7000 Post Club Member
Registered: 04/06/07
Posts: 7496
Loc: Boynton Beach, FL
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Tension comes out from anywhere and perhaps everywhere, as does art. Tension *can* come from anywhere, but that can be controlled and part of one's habit in playing without excess/unnecessary tension. Art does not come from everywhere, just as chaos does not create order. Art comes from purposeful actions of a pianist to create it. Students have to be taught both of the above...they do not happen on their own.
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#1304266 - 11/12/09 07:37 PM
Re: The two things you can't practice.
[Re: Morodiene]
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2000 Post Club Member
Registered: 09/04/06
Posts: 2529
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Tension comes out from anywhere and perhaps everywhere, as does art. Tension *can* come from anywhere, but that can be controlled and part of one's habit in playing without excess/unnecessary tension. That is my experience. One's posture, and the basic level of relaxation at the piano is, in my humble opinion, something that is learned as one learns a piece of music, and thus eventually becomes ingrained as part of that piece of music. For example, there is a fast and intense piece of music I play solo with my band, (drummer only playing along), and that piece has a particularly hard section about in the middle. It used to be that I would tense up in anticipation of that section. So I deliberately practiced it until it became one of the strongest sections. I also deliberately practiced a deep breath and general body tension release "sigh" to be done at the onset of that section. And I also added a sitting up straight re-posturing at that same moment. Then, there was a stretch of several months when I did not play that piece, and, also forgot all about the deep breath, etc. Lo and behold, then very next time I played it, I was surprised when I automatically took a deep breath, a release of tension, and sat up straight, at that exact moment in the piece.
Edited by rocket88 (11/12/09 07:43 PM)
_________________________
Music teacher and piano player.
"They may call me a rube and a hick, but I would rather be the man who bought the Brooklyn Bridge than the man who sold it." Will Rogers
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#1304605 - 11/13/09 09:11 AM
Re: The two things you can't practice.
[Re: keyboardklutz]
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2000 Post Club Member
Registered: 09/04/06
Posts: 2529
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What I am finding out is that the full gamut of what is practiced is what is played. This includes not only the notes, the fingering, the dynamics, but also the posture, along with the level of tension or relaxation.
Sure there is always something else creeping in, but the what is practiced, if practiced correctly and sufficiently, is what rules.
_________________________
Music teacher and piano player.
"They may call me a rube and a hick, but I would rather be the man who bought the Brooklyn Bridge than the man who sold it." Will Rogers
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#1304773 - 11/13/09 12:39 PM
Re: The two things you can't practice.
[Re: rocket88]
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Yikes! 10000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/21/07
Posts: 10856
Loc: London, UK (though if it's Aug...
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Sure there is always something else creeping in, but the what is practiced, if practiced correctly and sufficiently, is what rules. Yes, odd bits of tension are always 'creeping in', though I'd say 'creeping up' on you.
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#1304815 - 11/13/09 01:43 PM
Re: The two things you can't practice.
[Re: keyboardklutz]
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2000 Post Club Member
Registered: 09/04/06
Posts: 2529
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Sure there is always something else creeping in, but the what is practiced, if practiced correctly and sufficiently, is what rules. Yes, odd bits of tension are always 'creeping in', though I'd say 'creeping up' on you. I also have to disagree. I didn't say "tension" is creeping in. I said "something else", which can lead to tension, but the tension should not come from the actual playing of the music. Instead, if it comes at all, it should be from an outside source, which could include such things as an outside noise that startles, or noticing that a master player just walked in, or discovering that you are sitting on a tack, etc. But if one has practiced sufficiently, which would properly include practicing in a relaxed manner, then those outside stimuli should not alter one's playing. Using Morodine's example, if an accomplished pianist were performing in public a very simple piece, such as a one-note version of "Mary Had a Little Lamb", nothing short of a bomb exploding in the building should induce tension. Extrapolate that concept upwards to more difficult pieces, and the principle remains the same.
Edited by rocket88 (11/13/09 01:48 PM)
_________________________
Music teacher and piano player.
"They may call me a rube and a hick, but I would rather be the man who bought the Brooklyn Bridge than the man who sold it." Will Rogers
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#1304820 - 11/13/09 01:50 PM
Re: The two things you can't practice.
[Re: rocket88]
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Yikes! 10000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/21/07
Posts: 10856
Loc: London, UK (though if it's Aug...
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Here is Matthay: All unnecessary movements should be strictly eschewed. Even those secondary movements, required to enable us to test ourselves for freedom, and which must be greatly exaggerated in the learning-stage, should nevertheless subsequently be gradually reduced to the smallest limits compatible with a due fulfilment of their purpose. He is saying we must constantly test ourselves for tension - especially during performance.
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#1306777 - 11/16/09 05:29 PM
Re: The two things you can't practice.
[Re: keyboardklutz]
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2000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/11/09
Posts: 2881
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The fact that we need to "keep on top of" posture is not related to whether we can practice it or not. I'm practicing it right now, as a matter of fact. But I think it's a valid point that my posture practice won't "stick" in quite the same way that learning a piece of music does. Except for Stravinsky.  The notion of being able or unable to practice Art is akin to the notion of being able or unable to practice Aerodynamics. The question of "practicing" an entire field of endeavour is unintelligible.
_________________________
(I'm a piano teacher.)
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#1307118 - 11/17/09 10:22 AM
Re: The two things you can't practice.
[Re: keyboardklutz]
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Yikes! 10000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/27/02
Posts: 12483
Loc: Iowa City, IA
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If posture couldn't be practiced, Alexander Technique wouldn't exist.
_________________________
"If we continually try to force a child to do what he is afraid to do, he will become more timid, and will use his brains and energy, not to explore the unknown, but to find ways to avoid the pressures we put on him." (John Holt) www.pianoped.comwww.youtube.com/user/UIPianoPed
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#1307164 - 11/17/09 11:44 AM
Re: The two things you can't practice.
[Re: Kreisler]
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Yikes! 10000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/21/07
Posts: 10856
Loc: London, UK (though if it's Aug...
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If posture couldn't be practiced, Alexander Technique wouldn't exist. Practice as in 'practice one's religion' yes, not as in practice makes perfect. The practitioner aligns you - you've got to keep it that way.
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#1307178 - 11/17/09 12:10 PM
Re: The two things you can't practice.
[Re: keyboardklutz]
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4000 Post Club Member
Registered: 06/11/07
Posts: 4878
Loc: Puyallup, Washington
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The word "vigilant" appears many times in this topic. I would suggest not thinking in the terms of "vigilance" by definition.
What seems more appropriate to me is the word "awareness".
I think we have to be an aware practioner of the things contributing to our positive 1) be-ing and 2)do-ing, and we have to be an aware practioner of the things contributing to our negative and unwanted states of mind, the body at rest, and the body in motion.
Knowing what is unwanted and what the replacement will be is what we work to perfect with short term and long term awareness and evaluation.
The more we understand our better choices, the why and how of it, and make those changes deliberately, the more power we exert in creating the person we want and need to be in different situation on demand.
This suggests "acting" and "filling our spaces" with awareness about ourselves from within and also awareness of how we appear and how effectively we communicate to other people in our midst from what we say and from what we do.
Sometimes the "do" is just to be there in presence. This should not be a "nothingness" but a feeling of occupying the space with the capacity to come "alive and active" in an appropriate way (for us). Potential waiting to happen.
I say you can practice being and doing with good intentions.
Maybe we just haven't noticed the significance of ownership of our mind and body before. Maybe we think of it as just living.
Betty Patnude
_________________________
Piano Teacher - Member MTNA/WSMTA
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#1307320 - 11/17/09 04:47 PM
Re: The two things you can't practice.
[Re: keyboardklutz]
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4000 Post Club Member
Registered: 06/11/07
Posts: 4878
Loc: Puyallup, Washington
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I compared vigilant and aware to each other, KBK.
vigilant: alertly watchful especially to avoid danger to keep watch, stay awake ever awake and alert; sleeplessly watchful Vigilance is attested from 1570.
awareness: cognisance, cognizance, consciousness, knowingness, sentience informed; alert; knowledgeable; sophisticated sense
As long as we are aware or vigilant, catch ourselves, and say affirmations to ourselves we should be able to make a dent in anything that we have set up as an item to be watching for.
It is with good intentions that we affect change. I think it requires more than a one time catch and the more positively we can state our intentions, goals for change, and our affirmations toward being it to our attention repeatedly, I think it's a "can-do" thing.
Being productive in behalf of yourself is practicing good mental health.
I'm getting good information about these kinds of things (it meets my needs anyway) in reading and using "Excuses Begone" by Dr. Wayne Dyer.
I don't think we are disagreeing, KBK, it's just our own different versions of how we say it.
_________________________
Piano Teacher - Member MTNA/WSMTA
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#1307560 - 11/18/09 12:44 AM
Re: The two things you can't practice.
[Re: Betty Patnude]
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Yikes! 10000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/21/07
Posts: 10856
Loc: London, UK (though if it's Aug...
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As long as we are aware or vigilant, catch ourselves,
No, we don't disagree. We just may be saying different things. Certainly I couldn't go with 'catch ourselves'. Tension comes from the outside, a person could easily be vigilant in the wrong direction.
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#1307833 - 11/18/09 02:37 PM
Re: The two things you can't practice.
[Re: keyboardklutz]
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4000 Post Club Member
Registered: 06/11/07
Posts: 4878
Loc: Puyallup, Washington
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May I add a passage from Dr. Wayne Dyer's "Excuses Begone!"?
"In his book "The Miracle of Mindfulness", which Thich Nhat Hanh advises us on this practice:
"The Sutra of Minfulness says, 'When walking, the practitioner must be conscious that he is walking. When sitting, the practitioner must be conscious that he is sitting. When lying down, the practitioner must be conscious that he is lying down'. The mindfulness of the positions of one's body is not enough, however. We must be conscious of each breath, each movement, every thought and feeling, everything which has any relation to ourselves."
It is being said that consciousness is an each and every moment awareness. I believe it is being understood that there is no tension to this consciousness. And that it is pure objective observation that is the awareness. No "doing" to fix things in the conscious moment. Doing, adjusting, fixing is a later, following thought and is also done with mindfulness. I think this works best with a quiet, inner mind.
Betty Patnude
_________________________
Piano Teacher - Member MTNA/WSMTA
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#1308036 - 11/18/09 08:04 PM
Re: The two things you can't practice.
[Re: Betty Patnude]
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2000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/11/09
Posts: 2881
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You mean, we can't practice posture in the sense that posture can never reach (and then automatically remain in) a state of "ultimate correctness"?
The list of things in piano playing that can never reach and then automatically remain in a state of ultimate correctness is quite long I would think. A few of them:
Posture Listening/attention to the music Breathing Pedalling
If we say, yes, but those are all part of Art - well then, pretty much everything we do is Art, and we're back to square 1.
In fact, what CAN we practice, so that it will well and truly "stick"? I would think, for any given piece of music: the notes, a good fingering, and the correct rhythm.
_________________________
(I'm a piano teacher.)
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#1308947 - 11/20/09 12:56 AM
Re: The two things you can't practice.
[Re: david_a]
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Yikes! 10000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/21/07
Posts: 10856
Loc: London, UK (though if it's Aug...
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Posture Listening/attention to the music Breathing Pedalling
'Listening/attention to the music' is the art. Breathing?? Pedalling comes under 'Listening/attention to the music'. Wouldn't know about square 1, where's that?
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