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Friday, September 23, 2011

The Talent Education Code- part 4 – Feel to learn it

This is the forth in a series of blogs which are an in depth analysis of Daniel Coyle’s book The Talent Code as it relates to the "Talent Education method" developed by Dr. Suzuki.

 In the section on "Learn to Feel It" as a part of "deep practice", Daniel Coyle tells about how he observed students at the Meadowmount music camp in a class entitled “How to Practice”.  They are asked to listen to a violin that is out of tune and connect with how that feels:  “If you hear a string out of tune, it should bother you, Skye told them, ‘it should bother you a lot. That’s what you need to feel. What you’re really practicing is concentration.  It’s a feeling. “(1)
“Feeling it” is the way children learn naturally. The baby learns to walk by learning to feel its balance. Feeling is a term which includes the input from the senses such as hearing an out of tune violin, taste, tactile, physical feelings and visual input, It is the awareness directly from the environment without explanation.   In the book Sensibility and Education  Dr. Kataoka says:
“Children live in the world of feelings, and they feel things directly with their intuition…(Let us) try to understand the world of children’s sensibility and make an effort not to destroy it…(2)
Connecting feelings with learning engages the student. This does not mean we spoon feed feelings, but rather that we enable children to connect their feelings with their learning. By focusing the students awareness on the quality of the sound we enable them to “feel” the music through their senses, aural, tactile, and even the aural connection to the visual.  By properly sequencing skills with just the right amount of challenge to feel accomplishment and develop skill, the child can associate the learning with a deep concentration and sense of success. Focusing on tone while developing skill will enable the child to produce the highest quality tone as pure communication This will motivate, involve, and inspire the student in deep practice.

When listening to a great pianist, one of the most striking and distinctive elements in their playing is their ability to directly communicate through the sound.
Their learning has involved putting their own sensibility/feeling into the music. There is  a physical sense of touch connected with the quality of the sound, an aural understanding of the patterns of the music into patterns, phrases, and sections, and an ability to communicate deeply, individually, and directly through the language of music.

When practicing with your child, keep listening for good tone, and bring awareness of the feeling of the good tone into the practice.  Allow this to be the focus and it will take the student into a state of deep practice/concentration that connects the tone with the broader patterns of the sound as well as the physical motions,  In this same way they will be able to understand the visual picture of the music: the score; as it relates directly to the sound without any extra explanation. Thus we are enabling optimum learning by keeping the child connected with their sensibility.  Dr. Kataoka says:

“People who reach adulthood with their sensibility intact can make correct judgements about everything; this is because their natural sensibility has not been destroyed. It is because they can listen to the voice of God."(3)
1. The Talent Code by Daniel Coyle, p. 90-91
2. Sensibility and Education, Dr. Haruko Kataoka, p. 14
3. Sensibility and Education, Dr. Haruko Kataoka, p. 17

A previous blog from January 2009 which is also about feeling music:


Other Blogs in this Series:

 




Monday, September 19, 2011

Concert Recommendations


There are so many wonderful concerts in the SF Bay Area to go see this year!  Following is a list of recommended solo piano concerts and one SF Symphony recommendation with piano concerto. They are listed by performer in chronological order with links to the sites to buy tickets. Enjoy!  Leah Brammer


Yefim Bronfman
Tuesday October 11 8:00 PM
Zellerbach Hall - Berkeley

***Marc-Andre Hamelin- Get tickets asap
Wednesday Nov. 2  8:00PM –Herbst Theatre SF

SF Symphony-Garrick Olson
Performs Mozart Concerto #9
Performances Thursday Feb. 2-Saturday Feb. 4
Good for younger students

Leif Ove Andsnes
Thursday February 9 8:00 PM 
Herbst Theatre SF

Andras Schiff
Wednesday Feb. 28 8:00 PM
Zellerbach Hall – Berkeley

Murray Perahia
Sunday March 11 – 3:00PM
Zellerbach Hall - Berkeley

Stephen Hough
Monday, March 19  7:30
Oshman Jewish center in Palo Alto

***Jonothan Biss –Get tickets asap
Sunday April 1 -3PM
Hertz Hall – Berkeley

Olga Kern
Monday, April 16 – 7:30 PM
Oshman Jewish center in Palo Alto

*SF Symphony- Jean-Yves Thibaudet
Performs Saint-Saens Piano Concerto #5
Performances Thursday April 19-Sunday April 22
http://www.SFSymphony.org

Saturday, September 10, 2011

The four Principles of the Suzuki method


1. Mother-tongue - The basic philosophy upholds the understanding that music be learned as a language, by listening and communicating by sound first, with the written symbol as representative of the sound, and taught after the child has learned to speak/play. The term "mother-tongue" also emphasizes the parents involvement in providing the language in the environment for the child.
Thus, children who hear the music they are learning to play for many hours a day will progress much much faster than those who only listen to the disc once or twice a day.  
2. Talent Education - The name of Dr. Suzuki's school in Matsumoto, and a term which juxtaposes two terms which may at first seem contradictory.  Dr. Suzuki chose this name for his method to emphasize his realization that all children develop the "talent" of playing music if educated in the same way children learn to speak their native language. Again, the parents involvement in the education of the child is paramount over any particular "genes" the child may or may not have for music.
3. Ability Development:  This term is used to define the process  by which talent is developed - through repetition ;
"Knowledge plus 10.000 times equals ability".  Dr. Suzuki
This is the "how" of Talent Education.
4.  Natural Learning:  Natural learning is simply that which is learned directly from the environment without extra explanation, instructions, or mental thinking.  Providing the right environment is a core component of the Suzuki method.  Children who are listening, have quality instruments and parents to help them find body balance and connect their physical motions with the sound they have internalized through listening will be able to achieve a high ability to play piano as a result of a natural learning from the environment.