Welcome to PIANO STUDIES LA !

Where we are committed to grooming all ages of piano students’ talent so that they can become skilled and highly able pianists. We have well over a decade of experience providing comprehensive piano instruction in a professional yet friendly environment. We are proud to have a past record of training and instructing students in beginner, intermediate, and advanced levels of piano instruction.

OurLessons

Our foundation is based on classical training. Our piano lessons include Sight Reading, Ear Training, Harmony & Theory, Expanding Repertoire, Performance Skills, Enhancing Creativity, and much more. This means, we don’t simply provide basic piano learning skills but rather cover all aspects of piano instruction, from theory, to technique, to performance.

Our lessons are conducted in an environment that all students are comfortable in. Since we cater to a great population of beginners from young to adult, ensuring they are comfortable with us is necessary in order to bring out their true abilities. The lessons are as professional as they are fun; as enjoyable as they are productive. We don’t take the fun out of learning how to play piano – instead, we promote a fun side to it so students can become more interested and engaged in learning.

OurSpecialty

Our specialty at Piano Studies LA is that we develop our training and instruction according to each student’s pace and ability. We not only recognize but also celebrate the uniqueness of every young pianist and do our best to ensure their individual ability is only enhanced further with our instructions. We don’t believe in generic classes and will always continue to provide one on one piano classes that are ideal for each and every student.

For any questions or more information, contact us today!

BEGINNER

For very young children (around four to six years of age), average 15 to 20 minutes of supervised piano practice will suffice. The primary task will be to build the child’s capacity for concentrated learning. At least one parent should attend all lessons with young children and that parent should supervise their children’s practice, making sure that all exercises are completed as instructed by the teacher. The goal is for the child to be able to perform independent work at the piano.

Teenage and adult beginners should practice at least 30 minutes a day, six days a week. Once you have developed a proper working methodology, a practice regiment of 45 minutes to an hour five to seven days a week should be considered mandatory.

Beginners need to focus most of their effort on developing the many essential skills necessary for playing the piano.

Once you’ve progressed to an intermediate skill level, your next goal should be to maximize your efficiency to make the most of your practice time and accomplish more with less time (but not less mental effort).

INTERMEDIATE

Everybody is under intense time pressure these days, and musicians are no exception.

  1. Get organized. Practicing the piano efficiently is really about how to organize oneself to get the best results from the effort expended. It’s essential to be very clear about our daily practice objectives. Many students find that writing a daily practice plan helps them to focus on their most important practice tasks and gives them a feeling of accomplishment as they complete each one.
  2. Focus on one task at a time. Discipline yourself to complete each practice goal before moving on to the next. In the long run, you’ll save enormous time by completing the day’s work on your Mozart sonata before studying Debussy, rather than bouncing back and forth between them at whim. While you might not get that new Chopin etude note-perfect and up to tempo today, you can indeed ‘finish’ a given passage with musical polish at a slow tempo. Sviatoslav Richter’s way of building his enormous repertoire was to finish each line of music before moving on to the next.
  3. Only practice with full concentration! In his autobiography, Daniel Barenboim cites this as a fundamental rule for practicing. If your practicing does not demand enormous reserves of concentration, then you’re not practicing properly. Five minutes of concentrated practice is far more valuable than five hours of moving your fingers while your mind wanders. The mind must be active at all times, since it is first and foremost the mind that must play the piano.
  4. Always warm up first! Properly warmed-up hands will allow you to accomplish the physical tasks demanded by difficult repertoire with greater ease and with fewer errors. Scales and arpeggios make for a great warm-up.
  5. Practice slowly. It is a known psycho-physiological fact that the brain cannot absorb musical information in detail when playing fast. It is therefore essential to work slowly and carefully at all times. Never try to force practicing with speed as such attempts are harmful both to the memory and to acquiring velocity.
  6. Don’t allow yourself the ‘luxury’ of mistakes. Mistakes cost far too much time to repair and only create uncertainty, whereas your practice ought to build security. Remember, your performance is a direct result of how you practice, and efficient piano practice means playing correctly. If you start making mistakes, it means either that you’re going too fast to learn the music or that your brain is tired. If that’s the case, it’s best to take a break and do something—anything—else.
  7. Practice only short passages. The brain absorbs musical information much more readily when it is not overwhelmed by quantity. Each day, practice just one passage, and practice it extremely carefully and thoroughly. This makes for far more efficient piano practice in the long run.
  8. Schedule your practice sessions. As useful as this tip may be, it must be subsidiary to the rule of only practicing when the mind can best concentrate. For many people, this is first thing in the morning. Not only is the mind fresh, but you’ll have a feeling of accomplishment having started your day by completing a major task, not to mention an emotionally rewarding one.
  9. Keep a practice journal. A practice journal is a log of your practice sessions, including what you practice and for how long. It can be a notebook or even a spreadsheet. At the end of each practice session, write down exactly which pieces you studied and the number of minutes spent on each one. I’ve discovered that timing myself forces the mind to focus, and the clock doesn’t lie. At the end of the week, month and year you can discover how much time you spent on each piece, which can help you when planning your repertoire and performances in the future.
  10. Study away from the piano. Some of the most efficient piano practice can be accomplished without a piano. Analyze the piece, listen mentally, hear each voice in your inner ear, sing each line, discover thematic relations and harmonic subtleties. It is amazing how many music students simply learn notes without ever really knowing the piece or its compositional strategy. Instead, be sure to make mental study and analysis an integral part of your piano practice.

While these efficient piano practice tips themselves take some practice, I’m certain that you’ll experience gains in productivity from the first day you start using them. Happy practicing!

ADVANCED

Learning any piece of music well first and foremost means learning it in different ways. This means using multiple sensory modalities as well as your analytical faculty.

Inadvertently, most piano students rely only on their fingers to learn all music. The “muscle memory” that thereby ensues is notoriously unreliable and leads to insecurity and memory lapses.

Remember: *Muscle* memory is not musical memory.

Learning music only with the fingers would be like learning to write Chinese only by imitating the symbols and never understanding what they mean. Under performance pressure, you may well recall most of the brushstrokes only by force of habit (practice), yet the impressions in your mind will be of mostly random strokes rather than of the words they form and in their proper grammatical context.

Learning piano music is very similar: If the music is essentially a bunch of more or less random keystrokes in your memory, learning music will always be extremely difficult and the impressions left in your mind will be superficial. You will have difficulty retaining music and you will always be insecure.

How to Learn Music

To learn music effectively, it’s vital to be careful and methodical. Here are several steps to learn any piece of music:

Read the Piece

First, read the piece through. It’s important to do this once and only once. Many students, if not most of them, tend to keep reading their pieces through, mistakes and all, as they practice. This is their primary practice method.

This isn’t proper practice though, which must never allow mistakes. The brain is a perfect recorder, and it records our every movement as we practice. It will play back whatever it learns. If you practice mistakes, you’ll learn mistakes. If you practice correctly, you’ll play correctly.

That said, it is a good idea to keep your eyes on the score as you work, for two reasons: First, it reinforces the critical visual memory of the music, allowing you to take a mental photo of the score.

Second, it keeps your eyes focused on the music, not on your hands or the keyboard. The more you can play without relying on looking down at your hands, the more secure you’ll be.

Analyze the Piece

Analyzing your music is a must for all pieces and playing levels. There’s no need to “micro-analyze”; you just need an overview of what’s happening in the piece—in other words, the music’s architecture.

In addition, it is essential to understand piano theory. Again, this doesn’t mean micro-analyzing every last chord, but simply understanding the most important harmonies and their functions in the music. You should stop to analyze any chord you’re unsure of, keeping in mind that not all notes that sound at any given time are necessarily part of that chord. (These are called non-harmonic tones.)

Identify Each Voice

Virtually every piano piece you’ll ever play is polyphonic, meaning that there are multiple voices. Pianists tend to pay the most attention to the top voice (since it’s usually—but not always—the melody), then the bass voice. It’s all too easy to neglect the inner voices, which has negative consequences on both our interpretation (since we’re not truly hearing everything in the piece) and memory (since we’ll easily forget things we don’t consciously learn).

The solution is to isolate the voices. This can be done by singing them using the solfège method (do re mi fa sol la si = C D E F G A B) as well as by playing them individually. Fugues are ideal for practicing this learning methodology.

Work Each Motive in Detail

Practice each motive with perfect articulation, fingering and dynamics before and after the study of each phrase. Do not do any less than 20 reiterations of each motive, both hands separately and hands together.

Practice Whole Phrases

Like language, music is composed in phrases, which are complete musical thoughts. Don’t make the mistake of leaving musical thoughts unfinished as you work. Instead, practicing whole phrases is beneficial to both musical memory and your musicality. Your playing will make more sense and simply sound better.

Learn the Hands Separately

You should learn each hand alone as well as you know the hands together. The hands function together as a unit. If you only learn piano music by practicing with both hands, you may be shocked to discover that you’ll be totally unable to play either hand by itself.

The solution is to practice hands separately as much as together. This means that more time is spent practicing hands alone than hands together.

Summary

The above is merely an outline of a methodology for learning piano music. Learning music is both synergistic and cumulative. This means that the more the different sensory modalities and the analytical faculty are engaged in the learning process, the more they will reinforce one another and the more skilled you will become at learning music. Tonal music (nearly all the music we play) is a coherent, consistent system, and the more we learn, the more the system will make sense to us.

~ Happy Practicing ~