The grade examinations are fantastic as they provide you with a structure and help balance your education equally between technical exercises, sight-reading and piano pieces.
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Read More »As a piano lover interested in getting started or as a piano learner, you have probably heard about the grade examinations offered by ABRSM or Trinity College. Praised by some and criticised by others, they are undoubtedly a well-known topic among piano students and teachers. Depending on how you approach them, the grade examinations can either provide you with a fantastic structure or turn into a handicap in disguise. As a master piano teacher, I encourage my pupils to sit the grade examinations but I always ensure that they understand how to approach them correctly. Let’s have a look at the pros and the cons.
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Read More »Being obsessed with grade examinations can be very dangerous. Instead of supporting you throughout your musical journey, it can have the opposite effect and take you in the completely wrong direction. You might not believe it but I have had a couple of piano pupils who gave more importance to their exam result than to the art of piano playing. It is honestly heartbreaking and devastating to meet people who only swear by their piano exams! It can go so far that they lose interest in what piano playing is all about to focus exclusively on the requirements of the grade examinations. One of my pupils could not memorise the name we give to eighth notes in British English. He was not interested in remembering that they were called “quavers” since knowing this denomination was not a requirement for the grade 2 exam. Another form of obsession is the profound desire to get to the final grade as soon as possible as if piano playing was a race against the clock. You would not believe how many times I have heard these questions: “How long will that take me to get to grade 8?”, “Can I sit more than one grade a year if I practise a lot?” Being ambitious is wonderful but wanting to complete all the grades in the shortest period possible is ridiculous! Once again, piano playing is an art and not a task to be completed with a sense of urgency.
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