Skip to content
Menu
  • Home
  • Listen
  • Homeschool Charter Schools
  • Contact Me
  • Blog
  • Ear Training
    • Ear Training Level 1
    • Ear Training Level 2
    • Ear Training Level 3
  • Videos for Students

Why Every Pianist Needs A Practice Journal

Author: Andrew Boyle
Published on: June 24, 2022
Comments: 0 Comments
      Once you have been playing piano for a while, it will eventually take new strategies to continue your improvement. Especially once you may be in music school, it is going to take a lot of thinking to figure out how to manage all of the responsibilities and music that you have to learn. Let me share with you something that was a game-changer for me in music school that I frankly wish I had discovered way sooner.
      It started because I had an almost overwhelming amount of music to learn and prepare in a relatively short window of time. I was working on the Rachmaninoff Cello Sonata, the Beethoven F major Cello Sonata, the Debussy Cello Sonata, the Ravel G major Piano Concerto, Stravinsky's Trois Mouvements de Petrouchka, Beethoven Op. 110, Bach G major Partita, two Rachmaninoff Etudes Tableaux, a Ligeti etude (Fanfares), a Chopin etude (Winter Wind), the Nutcracker Concert Suite arranged by Mikhail Pletnev, and Brahms Eight Pieces Op. 76, and each of these pieces were going to be performed over a period of about a month and a half. I had about five months beforehand to prepare all of them, and many of them were brand new.

 

      Needless to say I was quite overwhelmed to have five months to prepare so many different pieces. I knew that I needed a strategy to get a handle on this project. So I decided that while I worked on figuring out what my strategy was, I was going to keep a practicing journal. I needed to know what I was spending my time on in order to make sure that all of these pieces got the attention that they needed. So I wrote down what piece I played, for how long, what I did, what practicing techniques I used, what errors there were, and when I took breaks. At the beginning of each practice session, I would spend some time looking over the previous entries and seeing if I could notice any patterns.

 

      The whole experience was a revelation to me because it totally changed how I perceived my practicing. Suddenly I made connections between what I had done on previous days and what I was seeing later on. I saw what worked and what didn't work. I understood what effect each technique I used had on my playing. It brought a level of big-picture clarity to my practicing strategy that I had never had before without using a practicing journal.

 

      I am proof that it is never too late to start using a practicing journal. I had gone through years and years of recitals and performances and never really used one. But when things got too crazy, I started using one and it made everything not necessarily easy but at least somewhat under control. I can genuinely say that I am extremely proud of each of the performances I did during that time both for the quantity of difficult repertoire that I managed and also for the quality of the performances.

 

      If you want to add just one routine to your practicing to help you improve much faster, I would say you should keep a practicing journal. Its really easy to start: just get a paper notebook or even use a Google Doc or Evernote, and write down a brief description of what you did when you practiced and the date. Its that simple. You don't have to write paragraphs upon paragraphs, and you don't have to necessarily try anything radically new. What you are doing is bringing long-term awareness to what you are practicing and that will make a huge difference, and gradually your note taking habit will accumulate into a lot of stored up wisdom and insight.
iLEAD Charter Schools: How to Get Free Piano Lessons
John Thompson: Teaching Little Fingers to Play

Theme by The WP Club | Proudly powered by WordPress