From now on, I will be posting most of my writing on my new Substack page, Picking Up the Pieces: A Piano Practice Journal . I will keep this blog here in case the Substack thing doesn't work out. I may also still post here occasionally, but probably not much. Please consider a free subscription to my Substack so we can stay in touch!
Phase Two is that stage of learning a piano piece where you've learned the fingering, the notes, the rhythms, and the harmonic structure, but you haven’t yet started making music. It’s the stage of slow practice, dynamics work, chunking, rhythmic variations, and slowly, ever so slowly, bringing up the tempo. Phase Two is where the metronome comes into its own. And Phase Two is a grind. It’s hard. It’s nitty-gritty detail work. It feels like one step forward and two steps back, every day, every measure. It comes after the excitement of Phase One, when everything is new and progress feels obvious. Phase Two isn’t exciting the way Phase One is. But it is exciting. It’s a grind, and a grind, and a grind, until suddenly: You play through that difficult passage at 80 bpm five times in a row. You stop consciously thinking about what you’re doing, but your hands still know where to go. The tricky cadence at the end of the section becomes automatic. The runs you drilled an...