Two
different ways to learn music
Because it is Christmas and
no one is working on music
anyway, I want to take a week
off from anything too heavy and
just give you some thoughts
about how to practically learn
music. This is a
controversial subject and I am
hardly an expert, but here is
the way I see it.
Imagine for a moment that
when you are in the first grade,
you decide you want to be a
great painter when you grow up.
Your parents enroll you in art
lessons and you start working.
After teaching you how to hold
the brush and mix paint, the
teacher shows you a painting by
Botticelli and tells you to
imitate it. After you
finish, you reproduce a
Donatello painting and after
that, a more complex da Vinci
painting.
All the way through
elementary and high school, you
reproduce great paintings of the
past as close as possible to the
original. You decide to go
to college and major in art.
In college, you reproduce more
masterpieces and become quite
good at it. Except for a
stray class on original painting
here and there, you focus on
reproducing classical
masterpieces.
Does this scenario sound a
bit ridiculous? Of course
it does. An artist that
can only reproduce classic
masterpieces is hardly an artist
at all. He or she will
have almost no relevant skills
as an artist except perhaps
teaching.
Sadly, what I have just
described is the way music has
largely been taught in the
Western world during the last
century. Children start
early on the piano, grow up
playing classics, go to college
to learn to perform harder
classics and come out of college
with almost no practical skill
except to teach other children
through the same cycle.
And we wonder why some
concert pianists and college
music professors cannot just sit
down and play "Happy Birthday"
without music...
Music has continued to
develop through the past
century, but the development has
come in genres that encourage
originality and theory during
the education process (rather
than just having students
re-learn classical music).
Suffice it to say that Christian
music is not one of the genres
that has developed during that
time.
Are the classics important to
the study of music? Yes,
students should play classical
music. But more
importantly, they should be
taught the theory behind
different styles of music so
that they can eventually create
their own music. This is
where the breakdown occurs.
Even in college, music
performance majors often get
only a few classes on
composition. Theory is
taught but the practical
application of that theory is
largely absent from the
curriculum.
So, there are really two ways
to approach teaching piano--the
approach I have just discussed
(learning to reproduce
already-written music) and an
approach that focuses more on
theory, ear training, and
originality. You can guess
which one I think is superior.
I certainly know which approach
is more relevant for the 21st
century.
Most of you that are reading
this have been trained with the
first approach and you are
possibly frustrated because you
see the limitations of it.
You would like to be able to
play church music by ear,
improvise, and do other things
you see pianists do flawlessly
even when you know they do not
have as much training as you.
Helping Christian musicians
cross over to the second
approach is what these lessons
are about. The good news
is that I firmly believe it is
possible. The bad news is
that it takes a lot of work.
If I had to guess what the
hardest hurdle is, I would say
it is the application of theory.
It is not that
classically-trained musicians do
not know how to build scales and
chords--they just don't know how
to practically incorporate them
into their music.
When you practice, I would
encourage you to spend about a
third of your time on theory
(playing scales, chords, etc.),
a third of your time playing new
music and applying the theory
you are learning (pick a hymn
and experiment with the concepts
we are covering), and a third of
your time playing whatever other
music you have to learn anyway
as a church pianist.
If you are a good classical
pianist, it is silly to compare
yourself to a good improviser.
You have two very different
skills and you are making music
in two very different ways.
As you work through these
lessons, understand that I am
trying to teach you how to play
the piano in a completely
different way from the
classically-dominant approach.
I hope you will stick with me
and start to experience the
difference in your playing
during the next year.
How to practice scales and arpeggios
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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