So it’s getting near to the piano exam, and an important and underrated skill is coming to the fore:
Recovery.
It turns out that despite my own deep desire to avoid mistakes, this is not a realistic goal. In fact, the more pressure that is put upon my performance to be exquisite, like the concert pianist I watched online, the more likely it is that my fingers will hesitate, trip over themselves and take a tumble.
So as well as practising getting the notes, pace, rhythm, tonality, expression right, I am also practising keeping going when it goes wrong.
I am getting accustomed to the heart-lurch and sense of impending doom, and telling myself this is part of the adventure of performance.
I am getting used to trusting that my fingers will be able to find their way back to harmony and beauty.
I am training my inner monologue not to equate a small stumble with a total collapse of the piece.
I am learning to hop my fingers out of the ditch of the wrong keys and back on the horse of the right keys.
I am realising that by starting at a manageable pace, I am more likely to be able to sustain a polished performance.
I am growing cannier in identifying ‘stepping stones’ where I will be able to regroup if I have a sudden nerve-jangling moment.
I am reminding myself to breathe deeply and be in the present before I set off.
I am noticing that if I look up at the music, if I anticipate a little, I play better than if I look down at the keys.
I am discovering that mistakes are part of live performance, and it’s how you deal with them that counts.
I am learning how to live.
Never attempt to avoid mistakes. They’re what life is made from.
LikeLike