Why does my music teacher insist on slow practice? | iServalan | Digital Conservatoire

Why does my music teacher insist on slow practice? | iServalan | Digital Conservatoire

Why Slow Practice Is Crucial to Excellence ......and is often misunderstood. It is sometimes framed as remedial, cautious, or something you endure until you are “good enough” to go faster. And it is, in many ways, all of those things. But the advantages of purposeful slowing down cannot be underestimated. When you slow a passage down, you are not merely reducing speed. You are changing how the brain experiences the music. Gaps appear where none existed before. Tiny weaknesses are now revealed and can be adjusted. Transitions become visible. Movements that once blurred together can now be felt individually. "What am I doing wrong?".... becomes "now I can solve this little thing I do which I am not happy with." This is why slow practice is used by elite performers across disciplines — not because they lack skill, but because they understand how learning consolidates. Fast practice relies heavily on momentum. Slow practice relies on awareness.Slowing teaches you how to breath the music. There is a crucial difference between muscle memory and narrative memory. Muscle memory allows the body to repeat actions. Narrative memory allows the brain to understand why one action leads to another. Slow practice builds the latter. Glenn Gould was famously meticulous about tempo in the practice room, often working at speeds far removed from performance. He understood that speed, when it arrives too early, conceals instability rather than resolving it. This approach aligns closely with the Suzuki principle, though it is often misunderstood. The goal is not perfection through discipline, but fluency through familiarity. When the body knows what comes next without anxiety, speed emerges naturally, inevitabley. Listening and predicting add an advantage to players that put them ahead of the novice. Speed is not something you add like a condiment.
It is something that appears when nothing is in the way. Slow practice is not about being fearful and should never be shamed.
It is about giving the music time to organise itself in the mind and the body.Speed runs the risk of hiding mistakes which then become learned and embedded, the mistake is now an irreversible habit. This is fatal for exams and performances.This is especially important for children and neurodiverse students who should be led by the slow example well before flashy, nimble virtuosity.

iServalan™
Music, listening, and the Continuum Approach: Exploring sound across genres, eras, and performance cultures — from Baroque to punk, hip-hop to minimalism — without hierarchy or haste.

🎧 Podcast & essays: 🎻 Music School
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https://iservalan.gumroad.com📚 Books & long-form work by Sarnia de la Maré FRSA:
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Episoder(252)

Music as Mental and Physical Occupation in Recovery | iServalan | Continuum Approach

Music as Mental and Physical Occupation in Recovery | iServalan | Continuum Approach

Music as Occupation(Why disciplined attention leaves little room for self-destruction)Music does not make people virtuous.It makes them busy in a particular way.Learning an instrument occupies the bra...

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What Would Chopin Have Done If Johnny Rotten Asked Him to Stand In One Night? | iServalan | Continuum

What Would Chopin Have Done If Johnny Rotten Asked Him to Stand In One Night? | iServalan | Continuum

What Would Chopin Have Done If Johnny Rotten Asked Him to Stand In One Night?(Public Image Ltd., not the Sex Pistols, this is my fantasy, and it was PIL who put the art into punk like no other).  If y...

22 Des 20253min

What Would Mozart Have Done If He’d Been Dropped Into a Grime Night? | iServalan | Continuum Approach

What Would Mozart Have Done If He’d Been Dropped Into a Grime Night? | iServalan | Continuum Approach

What Would Mozart Have Done If He’d Been Dropped Into a Grime Night? People underestimate Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart because they confuse charm with lightness. Mozart is funny, yes.He’s elegant, yes. A f...

22 Des 20253min

Beethoven by Robert S. Carr Live Public Domain Reading | iServalan | Continuum Approach

Beethoven by Robert S. Carr Live Public Domain Reading | iServalan | Continuum Approach

Robert S. Carr wrote a poem titled "Beethoven," published in Weird Tales magazine in August 1927, and it's available as an audio recording on LibriVox as part of a poetry collection, showcasing the Am...

22 Des 20251min

Who Would Win X Factor: Bach, Mozart, Chopin, Liszt or Rachmaninov? | iServalan | Continuum Approach

Who Would Win X Factor: Bach, Mozart, Chopin, Liszt or Rachmaninov? | iServalan | Continuum Approach

Who Would Win X Factor: Bach, Mozart, Chopin, Liszt or Rachmaninov?It sounds like a parlour game.But like most good parlour games, it reveals something uncomfortable about how we judge art.If the five...

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The Shepherd William Blake Public Domain Live Recording | iServalan | Continuum Approach

The Shepherd William Blake Public Domain Live Recording | iServalan | Continuum Approach

Beutiful #spokenwordiServalan™Music, listening, and the Continuum Approach: Exploring sound across genres, eras, and performance cultures — from Baroque to punk, hip-hop to minimalism — without hierar...

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Using the Body in Music | iServalan | Continuum Approach

Using the Body in Music | iServalan | Continuum Approach

Using the Body in Music(Why rhythm is learned before it is explained)Before music is something you do, it is something you coordinate.Long before a child understands beat, bar, or tempo, they already ...

21 Des 20255min

Teaching Tempo as Sensation, Not BPM | iServalan | Continuum Method

Teaching Tempo as Sensation, Not BPM | iServalan | Continuum Method

Teaching Tempo as Sensation, Not BPM(Why time must be felt before it can be counted)Tempo is usually introduced as a number.60 BPM.80 BPM.120 BPM.Neat. Measurable. Reassuring.And completely insufficie...

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