Stealing Moments to Practice: Advice from Ruth Slenczynska

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 25 сер 2024
  • It is a great challenge to find enough time to practice! Even piano performance majors in conservatories have to deal with course loads to satisfy degree requirements. In my recent interview with Madam Ruth Slencyznska, I asked her how she managed to find time to practice, particularly when she was traveling from continent to continent playing concerts. Her answer was to steal moments!
    My father had the same philosophy. Whenever a student couldn't make a lesson, he would take advantage of the time by practicing. It's amazing how much you can get done when you take advantage of every spare moment!
    livingpianos.c...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 33

  • @nickk8416
    @nickk8416 2 роки тому +6

    Dear Robert, thank you for giving us an insight to your way of practice and memorization. I have realized that I'm too impatient with myself. I need to break things down into a few measures and stay there until it's locked in. Best Regards.

  • @neanderslob
    @neanderslob 2 роки тому +3

    One of your BEST videos. As a beginner, it's so nice to see a professional go through the same tedious process as I do to learn my own music. "Ah crap I can't reach all those notes with that fingering, what about this one?" "Ok I think I've got the left hand, let me see if I can remember how to do the right one again." Just wonderful! It's easy to fool one's self into thinking that folks of a higher caliber are somehow above learning a piece phrase-by-phrase, one hand at a time. Having a background in string instruments, taking a piece apart and puzzling it back together, as one does on a piano, is something I am still getting used to.

  • @JayMSinger
    @JayMSinger 2 роки тому +6

    After a 30 year hiatus I'm studying piano again. It's revelatory to me that we can drop notes as you did. I'm even applying pedal in spots of the WTC. You also use your own fingerings. As I wrote, revelatory!

  • @grumpybumblebee6663
    @grumpybumblebee6663 2 роки тому +8

    Very interesting to see the learning process. Very instructive!

  • @geraldfriesen5600
    @geraldfriesen5600 2 роки тому +3

    Thanks for sharing your learning process with us Robert!

  • @rodsalvador3608
    @rodsalvador3608 2 роки тому

    i have to remember to be as patient, and to treat each voice/note as its own instrument. thanks!

  • @oswaldoschmitt7221
    @oswaldoschmitt7221 2 роки тому +1

    Robert is amazing! This simple and really effective lesson is a precious advice for all pianist level. A gold we all should incorporate for all our pianist learning life. Thanks Robert. Oswaldo Schmitt Brazil.

  • @mariar4431
    @mariar4431 Рік тому

    Excellent. You really inspire and motivate me.

  • @rafaelgomez1989
    @rafaelgomez1989 2 роки тому +2

    THANK YOU ROBERTO FOR TEACHING US SO MUCH = GOLD ....LOVE OF THE PROCESS + ADDED CONSISTENCY = SUCCESS !!!!

  • @stacerogers4008
    @stacerogers4008 2 роки тому

    This is actually very insightful to watch and very few others on UA-cam show this element of practice. The piece itself is not critical. I would also love you to do the occasional analysis of pieces. Enjoying as always 👍

  • @Highinsight7
    @Highinsight7 2 роки тому

    I was a Jane Allen student... BUT... I too also studied with Ruth... she truly is a GIFT!

  • @mfurman
    @mfurman 2 роки тому

    It was actually one of the most interesting videos about learning to play and practice, I have watched recently. I wish some teachers could spend this much time teaching the details to their students (let alone all those on line piano schools who teach to “play beautifully”)

  • @lluisrafalessole-classical5068
    @lluisrafalessole-classical5068 2 роки тому +1

    Great tutorial 🎹🎶👏

  • @VetsrisAuguste
    @VetsrisAuguste 2 роки тому +1

    This approach reminds of the process involved in learning a classical “ballet variation” (a.k.a. solo dance) except, instead of having a score to read, the dancer is taught the choreography aurally by a répéteur (teacher of repertoire). A good répéteur will dispense the information in 4-8 count sections spending 10-15 minutes on each section addressing every detail from head to toe before moving on the the next segment. Often taking several hours or even days to learn a 90 second solo, the process can be maddening for an eager dancer, but the method produces undeniable results.

  • @evertvandenberghe
    @evertvandenberghe 2 роки тому +1

    loved to see your process... never was thought now to study, unfortunately... at that time, I just had to play both hands seperately, than together, but no one told or showed me to break it up in a few measures... could have used this 45years ago... pffff...

  • @Magnet12
    @Magnet12 2 роки тому +1

    I hope you have the chance to interview her and upload to UA-cam for us all to enjoy

  • @myboibill
    @myboibill 2 роки тому

    Thank you Robert. This reienforces my practice.

  • @velcroman11
    @velcroman11 Рік тому

    Memorising this piece after reading it 2 or 3 times!?!? 😱😱

  • @mervynewing358
    @mervynewing358 2 роки тому

    Hi Robert. Thank you for your music. Interestingly I picked up on your Tonic Solfa as you see the scales which apply to almost any key. I see the tonic solfa as I play and after that intervals which help me to sight read. My Primary teacher taught us to sing using the old old charts on the wall of tonic solfa. When we needed to change a key, say from C to G she would sound the tuning fork for middle C and go up the scale, Doh Re Me Fah, to Soh which would be G, which then became your Doh for the new scale. My music teacher discouraged that but my Primary teacher got there before her😀☘🎹🎼

  • @sheryljohnson9540
    @sheryljohnson9540 2 роки тому +3

    Thank you, Robert, as always, for another useful video with helpful tips. This would be a good one for me to incorporate. By the way, that is a lovely piano. Is it your personal instrument?

    • @LivingPianosVideos
      @LivingPianosVideos  2 роки тому +1

      Yes, this rebuilt, vintage Chickening baby grand is in our music room!

  • @exoticbarbies161
    @exoticbarbies161 2 роки тому

    Hope u show us the final results of the piece in the near future !!!

  • @rich5310
    @rich5310 2 роки тому

    Good video. CAN U DO A VIDEO WERE U SHOW FROM AN ABOVE CAMERA ON ACCEPTABLE WAYS OF MOVING HANDS ON HARD TO REACH OR STRECHING TO MUCH TO MAKE CHORDS OR CONNECTING NOTES. I THINK I STRETCH TO MUCH OR WHAT NOTES CAN B SACRIFICED. THANKS

  • @MrFrapado
    @MrFrapado 2 роки тому

    👏👏👏

  • @ilegeul
    @ilegeul 2 роки тому

    Hi Robert, if you don't mind, a beginner's question: when you say "and again with the music", what do you mean by that?

    • @Photologistic
      @Photologistic 2 роки тому

      Not looking at hands, most likely.

    • @georgenorris2657
      @georgenorris2657 2 роки тому

      He is playing the extract off by heart and then looking back to check he has it correct.

  • @DandGBears
    @DandGBears 2 роки тому

    Hahahahahahahhahahahahahaha!!!!!!!!! What am i Doing 😂😂😂😂. I say that so much to myself when I am practicing lol. I do t feel so bad now!

  • @James_Bowie
    @James_Bowie 2 роки тому

    I see 5 sharps as the key signature. How is that F minor?

    • @georgenorris2657
      @georgenorris2657 2 роки тому

      The Fantasy is mostly in F minor but in the middle this slow section is in B major. It reverts back to F minor when the main themes return.

    • @James_Bowie
      @James_Bowie 2 роки тому

      @@georgenorris2657 Thanks!

  • @gjeacocke
    @gjeacocke 2 роки тому

    the problem with pianists is they feel the NEED to 'interpret' every piece they play as if that is 'correct' way to do things. in fact a piece may only be there to play at its most basic. it lies with another pianist.