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« On Country Folk and Country Pianos | Main | Do we have practicing and performing backward? »

November 30, 2008

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You are not saying that the opinion of others, especially those whose opinion you may value, is not important? How are your own judgements formed over the years? Is it a combination of what others think, how others have played...certainly if you played a piece you had never heard played before, would you have a good or bad feeling about how it sounded? You might love the sound of it, but is your enjoyment enhanced by how others have played it?

Viktor

Very good points above!
I learned a lot from this post!
Thanks.
BestPianoCare Blog

Christian

Hello, I'm an Italian, I have just visited your blog, congratulations! with a few lines I managed to understand that you know a lot of music! I hope that your blog is very successful, indeed!
Sorry for the 'English is not correct;)

piano teacher

Thanks for the post. I appreciate your efforts in making our colleagues and fellow music teachers and musicians aware of the latest trends and techniques in teaching music to our dear students. Reaching out to as many music educators as we can around the globe is truly a good sign that we both have the passion and love for music as well as for our dear students. I agree with you when you say that motivation is a good key in piano teaching and in learning music. Your points and ideas are clear enough to make it very useful to many practitioners out there. Again, congrats and keep it up! Just in case, you wish to have more reliable and useful piano teachers resources, feel free to check this page out and see how these tips can take your teaching experience to the next level.

John Forster (foss)

good stuff.When does part 2 arrive ?

Nathaniel

Hi, I couldnt find your e-mail so I write it public here. Sorry for my english ;S
I want to ask u, I come from small village and once I had started playing piano because we have one at home. When I started enjoying it I joined musical school. Soon my teacher found out im a little bit faster and she claimed that she gives me more difficult pieces than to others. But I was unhappy, it spoiled me whole "fun" and artistic feeling playing the piano when I was playing only chords or primitive/tough etudes without feeling only for better fingering.

So I started self-teaching. I love Etude Revolutionnary, so I said I could try this. This is my first piece after very primitive exercise... It took me about year and Im not still done, but everytime I play it I enjoy it, I feel it, I love it. And here comes the problem and my question. If I want to be the artist, do I need teacher? Do i need perfect fingering, clear music, exact rhytm or I can adjust it by myself and leave only basics of piece? This is my attitude, this is my art, take it or leave it. But I`m afraid of critism, profesionals and without teacher tons of errors I do "for nothing". Im stuck and I dont know if I should be relaxing player with other "job" or this kind of artist. Whats your opinion?

Matthew McLaughlin

Hi Nathaniel -- In my opinion if you enjoy what you're doing you should feel free to continue doing it without a teacher. Usually people at the artist level these days have had many many years of training and hard work. You have to decide for yourself what level of playing you are happy with!

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