Thoughts about learning to play better
Over the past four weeks, I have
been covering modulations, and
starting next week, I am going
to start covering chord
progressions. Today, I
want to take a breather and just
talk about a few things that are
important to me.
I read something this week
written by a very
confident musician, and it
made me cringe. He
basically said that all the best
Christian musicians play
classical music and the bad
musicians play church music.
I cringed not only because he
was showing his own ignorance
but also because he was sharing
a common misconception about
what a good musician is.
How did we ever get to the
point where we believe that the
best musicians are the ones who
can most accurately play
somebody else's music? The
fact is that many musicians that
would be considered excellent at
playing classical music have
poor ears, little working knowledge
of theory, little ability to
improvise, and little musical creativity.
If you want to experience good
musicians, listen to some of the
great jazz pianists of the last
century. They played music
every bit as technically
difficult as most classical
music and often improvised it
on the spot. Many of
them started as classical
pianists but used it only as a
foundation for the amazing
things they later learned how to
do.
There is a reason why most
jazz pianists play classical
music well but few classical
pianists can play jazz.
The biggest differences you will
often see between excellent jazz
pianists and excellent classical
pianists are these: first,
jazz pianists have superior ear
abilities and secondly, they
have a working knowledge
of music theory. Yes,
there are exceptions--I am
speaking in generalities.
I am not hinting that we need
jazz music in the church.
What I would say is that church
musicians need the same skills
that jazz musicians have--ear
skills and a working
understanding of theory. I
would also say that most
classically trained church
pianists have woefully
incomplete training in these two
areas, and that includes those
with college degrees in music
performance.
By the way, let me elaborate
on what I mean by the phrase
"working understanding of
theory." I am referring to
an understanding of theory at a
level that can be actually
applied when playing. For
example, it is one thing to know
what a subdominant chord is.
It is another to know when to
use them in your own music.
A college music theory class
will teach you the theory, but
that is just the first step
toward a working knowledge of
theory.
The same is true for ear
training. A year of ear
training classes is probably not
enough. The good news is that
there are more efficient ways to
train your ear anyway. I
am actually light years away
from where I want to be in this
area, and I
want to share a resource that I
use to improve my ear. It is software called EarMaster Pro and you can
research it and download a free
trial at
http://www.earmaster.com.
It will help you train your ear
to identify intervals, chords,
chord progressions, and more.
If you decide to buy it, it is
only $70 or so. I think it
is a great value.
By the way, it also has a
rhythm component that will help
you learn to play rhythms more
precisely. Church music is
getting more rhythmically
complex, and if you are like me,
you may need to grow in that
area.
I have told my story before
in these lessons to demonstrate
that you do not need a music
degree to learn how to be a good
church pianist. In my
opinion, you only need some
talent and a passion to learn.
With current technology, we have unprecedented access to
information, and if you have a great
teacher, you can learn
practically everything outside
of college that you would learn
in college. You simply
have to want to.
I have known many great
musicians (with more talent than
me) over my life, and when I
talk to them today, I always ask
if they are taking lessons or
continuing to learn in other
ways. Almost always, I am
saddened to learn that they did
not continue their music
education past college. I
find that sad because I think
you can learn a lot more after
college--in fact, college should
be nothing more than the
beginning of your musical
education.
So, here is what I am trying
to say. Making learning a
priority. Don't believe
that your best days are behind
you or that will probably turn
out to be the case.
Believe that you can be a better
musician next year and much
better in ten years and that
will probably come true too.
One other thing. I am
trying to cover some fairly
advanced topics in these
lessons and not everyone
learns well in this kind of
format. If you are
struggling to learn here,
consider getting a teacher.
Get the best possible teacher
that you can find and afford,
and get one that understands the
kinds of concepts I have been
discussing. I drive 30
miles to downtown Atlanta every
other week for a lesson and it
is time and money well spent.
Return to Christian piano
lessons and downloads main page.
If you have a question about
this lesson or something you
would like me to cover, please
email me at
greg@greghowlett.com.
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