UK Pianos.co.uk  Telephone Lines Open Monday To Saturday: 10am to 7pm
    Call: 020 8367 2080   Piano Advice, Pianos For Sale, Reviews and more... 

Home Page | Digital Pianos | Upright Pianos | Grand Pianos | Used Pianos  | Piano Rental | Accessories | Piano Lessons | Your Basket
Market Place: Sell Your Piano Here  | Ask a Piano Question |Forum | Piano Reviews
 | Articles
Movers | Tuners | Teachers | Contact Us

 

Teach Yourself Piano: How To Avoid Piano Lessons Using The 80/20 Principle

If you want to avoid having to pay for piano lessons, there is an effective
method which can save you both time and money. In essence it involves doing
the opposite of everyone else. I have used this principle to jump several
piano grades in a matter of months, on my own; I'm confident that you can
teach yourself piano using this concept.

One of the keys to doing this is to analyse what works and what doesn't -
and adjust what you do accordingly. This is a common concept in business,
but I have rarely seen it applied to piano practice. Using it you can avoid
having pay a teacher. It is invaluable when you want to teach yourself
piano.

It's called the 80-20 Rule.

Also known as Pareto's Principle, this is a highly effective concept which
has helped me to eliminate most of the less effective parts of my piano
practice, and allowed me to learn pieces 10 times faster than my peers. I
was also able to cut out the teacher element, which acted as a bottleneck,
and began to teach myself.

The principle simply states that 80% of output comes from 20% of effort or
time (or 90-10, or 99-1; the exact ratio doesn't matter, only the rough
concept). Applied to learning piano, we discover that 80% of progress made
is due to only 20% of effort. Therefore most of what people do when
practicing has a small impact compared to several very important things.
Unfortunately, often what a piano teacher does ends up in the inneffective
80%, which means that past a certain level lessons become less and less
useful.

The problem is, which 20% is most important?

Obviously when learning a piece, actually looking at the sheet music is
fundamental; if we don't do this, we can't learn the piece. Memorisation is
second; if we don't memorise a piece, we can't play it properly. So to begin
with, we must scan the piece and memorise it as fast as possible.

I do this by deconstructing the piece, using a pencil on the score. I mark
out all the different sections (look up different musical forms, such as
A-B-A and Sonata Form), count the number of bars, analyse the key changes,
work out any repeat sections, work out where the melody and harmonies are,
figure out any patterns in the piece (whether in the melody, harmony,
scales, arpeggios), and label all the different parts.

This is the best way to memorise a piece: by analysing it to death. Only by
doing this can you attain any high level of skill when you teach yourself
piano.

This activity is perhaps only 2% of what most people do during the entire
time they are learning a new piece, yet it accounts for a good 50% of the
end product. So it makes sense to maximise the effect of this by focusing
more time on it than usual, and by going as in-depth as possible. In order
to balance the time, we also need to eliminate things which have less
impact.

So, what can we eliminate?

Things which I had largely gotten rid of include: scales and arpeggios (at
least more than once or twice a week for more than half an hour - more than
this is overkill and not necesary); practicing easy bits (you don't need to,
they're already easy!); not getting carried away and practicing too much
(maximising post-practice improvement).

Remember, learning a piece to 95% proficiency only takes a few weeks at the
most, but learning a piece to 99% proficiency can take months, or even the
better part of a year. Stick with passable accuracy rather than invincible
technique; most audiences can't tell the difference. Most teachers don't
know this, but with this knowledge you've attained the first step to being
able to teach yourself piano.

About the Author
Sebastian Mitchell is the author of "Learn Piano More Quickly in 3 Hours or
Less". He has been using unorthodox piano learning techniques for
2.5 years, winning competitions against much more experienced players.

Get a FREE 5 part mini piano course written by the UK Pianos editor

You will learn how to read the notes on the piano, the music alphabet, basic rhythm, simple chords, correct sitting postions, hand positions and fingering. You will also get tips on how to train your ear so you can eventually play along to any song on the radio and much more. Check out the free piano lessons here.







 

 

Read more piano articles.

Browse
Guitar Articles
Drum Articles
Musical Instrument Articles
General Music Articles
Violin Articles

Submit an article here

 

 Free Piano Lessons Here!

Learn To Play Piano For Free

"Your piano course is the best I've ever had! The explanations are easy and straight forward", Patricia 

"Dear Graham, thank you for your free course. All six lessons contain advice I never had from any teacher", J. Rose

Click here to get your free lessons

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Piano Questions
Piano Reviews
Digital Pianos
Yamaha
Roland
Classenti
Kawai
Casio
Mantova
Kurzweil
Korg
Suzuki
Gem
Upright Pianos
Bohemia
Kawai
Kemble
Yamaha
Grand Pianos
Kawai
Kemble
Yamaha
Used Piano Market
Uprights
Grands
Digitals
Keyboards
Sell Your Piano
Piano Rental
Used Pianos
Piano Accessories
Keyboards
Piano History
Piano Makes
Digital Piano Makes
Piano Movers
Piano Shops
Piano Teachers
Sheet Music
Piano Tuners
Free Piano Lessons
Play Piano By Ear
What Our Customers Say

UK Pianos Newsletter

Free Piano Advice, Info, Tips, Secrets, Buying, Selling, Valuing

You Get...

~ONE TIME offers

~Piano buying advice

~Reviews/Comparisons

~Tips on moving pianos SAFELY so you don't damage your floor, furniture OR WORSE - your back!

~Practice tips/secrets

~Piano lesson reviews

~Advantages & disadvantages of private or online lessons

Click here to get your FREE newsletter.

Learn How to:

~Value your piano

~Get the best deals

~Find out the best piano to learn on (upright, grand or digital?)

~Choose the right piano

~Find the best places to sell your piano

~And much more...

Click here to get your FREE newsletter.

We hate spam as much as you! Your information will not be given out to anyone
under ANY circumstances. You can un-subscribe at anytime.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What Our Customers Say

Dear Graham

Thanks again for the very honest, knowledgeable and impartial advice for confused parents (but music lovers) like ourselves. Many thanks again for all the support and advice.

With regards

Dr A Maitra
MBBS, MRCP, MRCPCH, MMedSci
Sheffield, UK


Dear Graham Howard,
 
"Many thanks for your article 'digital pianos - which brand should I buy?'. It was really useful to get an insight of the quality and prices of different brands of digital pianos."

Rami Al Ashi


"I'd just like to say thank you for the E-mails you've been sending me. Some of them were really helpful and informative."

Many Thanks, Gaz

More comments...