Molly Gebrian - seven months later
Kaydia "The New Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain" by Betty Edwards.
I also have the old version of this book, and it also helped me a lot to learn to draw so much better.
However, the science in this book is 26 years old, and a lot, a lot has happened since.
Still, the way she teaches drawing was revolutionary then, and that still stands.
The inner game of music was first published in 1986. So if there is any neuroscience in this, I wouldn't trust it. But, the ideas may still be profound!
Molly's ideas resonate with my logical, systematic way of thinking. It would be refreshing to explore a book that speaks to my more musical and creative side! So thank you Kadya for inspiring me.
*
... feeling like the pianist on the Titanic ...
- Edited
Animisha The inner game of music was first published in 1986. So if there is any neuroscience in this, I wouldn't trust it
I am still getting into the re-read of this book, so maybe there’s something about neuroscience in the Inner Game that I’m not remembering, but my memory is that there isn’t any. The idea of the “inner game” is more about what you think about and how you think about it, how you have to focus as much on your inner game as on your “outer game” (i.e. technique and the physical aspects of playing).
Animisha If what you enjoy is to have nice recordings of most of your pieces, then why wouldn't you do what makes you happy? It's a hobby, not a race after all.
I only make nice recordings of a very small fraction of what I play and find more enjoyment in spending most of my practice time in the early stages of a piece where I feel the challenge and growth more. Only occasionally do I strive for a polished recording of a full piece. Honestly, I sometimes feel the opposite of what you express, that I might regret not keeping a recorded archive of more of what I've played for when I may no longer be able to play.
Kaydia Pardon the interruption, but I was reading through this thread and came upon this comment, and would like to recommend a book I have called, "The New Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain"
Thanks! I looked it up - there is a 2012 revision with updates on the neuroscience aspect. I have never been interested in drawing and this book is not included in Kindle Unlimited or I might review it...but I was planning on looking for other books on right brain vs. left brain so I appreciate the reminder!
One of the books in my 'to be read' stack is "This Is Your Brain on Music". I did a quick check of the fly leaf and contents and didn't see any mention of right brain although the index has some page numbers listed for right hemisphere. What will interest me when I get around to reading the book is Chapter 7. - "What Makes a Musician?".
I also have Molly Gebrian book. It is helping me a lot. Learning to play a musical instrument have many similarities with learning sports. Therefore science, and neuroscience particularly, can be very beneficial in the learning process. Also, it is a false dilemma to have to choose between tradition and neuroscience. I find it a fascinating topic that it is just starting, but as in sports, it will be developed over the years.
- Edited
One thing that Molly's videos really helped me with was learning how important breaks are for the brain's learning process (she takes 2 weeks at the end of her ~4 week schedule!), thus eliminating any minor guilt that I had from having a very erratic practice schedule. My natural weeks or months-long breaks are actually beneficial!! I just need to incorporate consistent 10-second microbreaks into my practice to help lock things in better.
I think a great strategy for me is giving myself TONS of lead time for learning a new piece (like 6-12 months). I can start and get familiarized by reading through it a few times and then come back to it way later. When an actual deadline approaches (playing chamber music with others or performing at a casual playing night) and I need to get serious about practicing, suddenly everything feels more natural and easy, and I haven't even spent all that much time on practice yet.
I'm experiencing this right now. I had promised to play a Beethoven cello sonata with a friend about a year ago and it was not good enough invite her over until recently. I was just reading through it from time to time because I was focusing on other stuff. But now we set a date and I'm seriously working on the Beethoven and I'm just astounded at how easy it is now!
I've split this discussion into two threads. The original purpose of Animisha's post was to gather the opinions of people who have used Molly Gerbain's methods for the last 7 months. I tried my best to keep those posts in this thread. Everything else has been moved here:
Discussing Molly Gebrian (Splinter Discussion of "Molly Gebrian 7 Months Later")
It was a difficult discussion to split! Let me know if I made any glaring mistakes. Also, let's try to keep this thread on topic, and use the linked one for all other discussion.