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Joined: May 2012
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Joined: May 2012
Posts: 1,394
Latest Graham Fitch article:

Originally Posted by Graham Fitch
A late, esteemed colleague who had amazing sight reading skills once told me he never read through more than once a new piece he was about to learn. It was just too risky for him – on a second reading he would already have been forming habits that would hinder him in the finished version...


See the rest here: http://practisingthepiano.com/?p=2070

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This comes at an opportune time for me. Thanks for sharing. I read several other good posts while I was there and ended up subcribing.

Regards,
c.

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Thank you for the article. Graham Finch plays a high level. The article is about best practices, and has good information for all, including new beginners. That said, what works well for one person may not work for another.

This is especially true for what works for the top 1% or 5% (a decent number of regulars on the forum are in the top group for their experience level) and the average player. The quote in the original post is one example. For the average person one read only of the sheets is going to result in total confusion. Perhaps one in a million pianists have the memory and sight reading aptitude to use a one read through method to learn a complicated piece.

That said, there are a number of excellent tips in the blog entry that have been repeated on the forum over and over, such as:
* deliberate and consistent fingering
* no mistakes (practice slow and deliberate enough that no wrong notes get played)
* distinguishing between practice and playing

Some other parts seem to be more controversial such as learning hands separate.

Few things in music or learning are written in stone, again a person needs to find a method that works well for them.

I also found Mr. Finch on Youtube, featured by Pianist magazine. For the advanced beginners and above, they might find those videos to be of value.



Moderated by  Bart K, platuser 

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