How Much Practice is Enough? Part 1 Grade Total Hours Minutes per practice Grade 5 160 40-45 Grade 6 285 40-45 Grade 7 220 45-50 Grade 8 250 50-60 5 more rows •
One very desirable feature that the Roland does have over the Yamaha in this case, however, is the upright build. However, overall, the Yamaha is a...
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Read More »Studies show that if you invest 10,000 hours of practice into pretty much any field, you will be a master in that field. This applies to musicians, sportsmen, chess players, computer geeks, anyone. This comes from a book called ‘Outliers – The Story of Success’ by the economist Malcolm Gladwell. It’s a fascinating book that discusses all sorts of reasons why people become successful at what they do – accident of birth, opportunity, cultural legacy -but a big factor is how much time you put in, and he calls this the ’10,000 hour rule’. My first reaction upon reading this was to mentally calculate how much piano practice I’d done in my life and figure out if and when I had ever reached the 10,000 hour mark. I kind of lost count somewhere in the memories of 3rd year Uni, but I think that basically yes I have certainly invested 10,000 hours along the way, yet for some reason I am not a world-class concert pianist. Oh. Is this a flaw in Malcolm Gladwell’s theory? I don’t think so. The point of becoming a master of something also has to do with the rate the 10,000 hours are accumulated. Child prodigies who practise 6 hours a day will have done it in 5 years; chess champions have similar, intense exposure to the game. Perhaps if someone had told me, back in primary school, to hurry up with my 10,000 hours, I might have had a shot at the world-class concert pianist scene. (But really, probably not.)
Whereas the C7 chord is a major triad with a flatted seventh, the Cmaj7 chord includes the triad plus the major seventh. So, remember that a C...
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Read More »1500 hours of piano practice certainly sounds like a lot, but really when you think about it, that’s only 2 hours’ practice every single day for just over 2 years… woo hoo! 8th grade done in 2 years! How easy is that! Oh, that’s right. Students don’t practice two hours every single day. In fact I’m lucky if most of my students practice two hours every single week. T here’s always some good reason why practice hasn’t happened (see ‘The Seven Deadly Practice Excuses’). And teensy weensy beginner students certainly can’t practise that long. So here is a more realistic breakdown of how the 1500 hours would eventuate. Let’s assume you are about 6 years old and have just taken up piano lessons. The teacher has asked that you practice 15-20 mins 4 times per week (perfectly reasonable). If you actually do this, after a couple of years or so you will have invested around 150 hours into piano practice.
Major scales are the most common scales used in music and C major is the only one without any flats or sharps (black keys). That makes it easiest,...
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Read More »The important point here for parents, students and teachers to have a realistic expectation of the commitment required to do well in exams. There’s no point forging ahead year after year without increasing the practice. Defining the preparation as a concrete number of hours’ practice needed can really help to assess whether you are ‘ready’ to take a particular exam. The best way to keep track of how much practice has been done is to keep a practice log. By reviewing your logs regularly, you can see whether you’re doing enough preparation, or if you’re falling behind. Either way, it takes a lot of the guesswork out of wondering if you’ve done enough practice.
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Read More »The white keys are known as natural notes, and the black keys are known as the sharps and flats. Jul 20, 2017
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