loader from loading.io

Your Simple Six Week Holiday Music Readiness Plan - PHH 231

Practicing Harp Happiness

Release Date: 10/20/2025

Where Harp Beginners Go Wrong - and Maybe You Do Too - PHH 235 show art Where Harp Beginners Go Wrong - and Maybe You Do Too - PHH 235

Practicing Harp Happiness

I know what I’m going to talk about with you today could be controversial. It could sound totally off target to you. Nevertheless, I hope you will hear me out. I want to share with you why and how I think most harp beginners start wrong, even if they are working with a teacher. It isn’t exactly that we teachers aren’t teaching the right things or that we aren’t dedicated to the success of the students who are trusting us. It’s that the path we walk with them feels so slow. Every individual comes to the harp with a unique skill set and level of musical experience, with their own...

info_outline
Three Keys to Relieving Stress - PHH 234 show art Three Keys to Relieving Stress - PHH 234

Practicing Harp Happiness

I was moving the harp the other day and once again, it occurred to me just how much stuff we have to carry around with us. Granted, I move my harp all the time for rehearsals and concerts - it’s a big Lyon Healy Salzedo model harp - so you would think I’d be used to it by now.  I guess I am, mostly; I don’t have to think about what goes in the car, and my harp bag is always ready to go. But when I start counting the number of trips I have to make between my car and the concert hall in the pouring rain, I start wishing for a Star Trek transporter.  But recently, while I was...

info_outline
A Behind the Scenes Look at My Practice Week - PHH 233 show art A Behind the Scenes Look at My Practice Week - PHH 233

Practicing Harp Happiness

Over the years I have had questions about my practice: how much practice I do, what I do in my practice, and so on. There has also been the occasional request to sit in and listen to my practice. I have always thought that my own practice routines and what I do on any given day in my practice wouldn’t be useful to share with most harpists, the reason being that the demands on my time and on my playing are vastly different from what the majority of harpists experience. And I have never believed that anyone could benefit from watching me practice or listening to my practice. But gradually I...

info_outline
Starting a Piece? Don’t Take It From the Top - PHH 232 show art Starting a Piece? Don’t Take It From the Top - PHH 232

Practicing Harp Happiness

So you decided to learn a new piece for the holidays - good for you! When I think of all the years I’ve been playing the harp, it’s a little amazing that I still feel a little thrill when I pick up a new piece of music to learn, and I’m sure you feel the same. Starting a new piece is a voyage of discovery with the promise of adventure, new notes to conquer, a few challenges to meet along the way, and finally, a beautiful piece of music we can play. Of course, the voyage is often a little rougher than we anticipate. It can take longer than we thought and can be more discouraging. We...

info_outline
Your Simple Six Week Holiday Music Readiness Plan - PHH 231 show art Your Simple Six Week Holiday Music Readiness Plan - PHH 231

Practicing Harp Happiness

It’s nearly the end of October and already my daily practice is revolving around what I will need to play this holiday season. Yours might be too. The smart harpist knows that this is the time to plan your practice carefully so that you don’t have to cram practice time into an already overloaded holiday schedule. If we feel prepared to play going into the holiday rush, it makes everything about the holidays more fun. So now is the time to plan. We have about six weeks from now until the end of November. In my own planning I usually use our Thanksgiving as my target date to have my music...

info_outline
Here’s Why You Should Do It My Way: A Teacher’s Response - PHH 230 show art Here’s Why You Should Do It My Way: A Teacher’s Response - PHH 230

Practicing Harp Happiness

I once had a student say this to me: “But it doesn’t work when I do it that way.” We were trying to fix a passage in a piece she was learning. When she played the passage for me, there was an obvious stumble spot, and I had a definite idea about what was wrong and how to fix it. But after a week of trying to implement my suggestion, she came back to me, saying that her old way, even though it wasn’t really working, worked better than mine and so she was sticking with her way.  Please understand that the student didn’t doubt the solution I was offering. She had tried it, just as...

info_outline
The 3 Things All Harpists Need to Do Well - PHH 229 show art The 3 Things All Harpists Need to Do Well - PHH 229

Practicing Harp Happiness

If I were to ask you what you think the most important skills are for any harpist, what would you say? There are lots of obvious choices. You might include technical skills, like scales or arpeggios or putting hands together. You could mention skills like note reading, or sight reading, or rhythm skills or knowing basic music theory. What about working with a metronome or playing expressively? All of these are important, and none of them is particularly easy.  While all of these are crucial, I consider them all just part of playing the harp. Every harpist develops these skills...

info_outline
The Real Reason to Memorize Your Music - PHH 228 show art The Real Reason to Memorize Your Music - PHH 228

Practicing Harp Happiness

Do you have to memorize your music? Of course not. How’s that for an easy answer? Okay, the podcast is over and we can call it a day. But of course, the answer isn’t that simple.  No, you don’t have to memorize your music, but the fact that you’re asking the question tells me that you’re almost certainly thinking about memorization the wrong way, or at least very differently from how I have learned to think of it. What I want to help you understand today is the role that memorization can play in your musical growth, how it can make you a better musician, how it can help you...

info_outline
Why Every Harpist Needs a Method - PHH 227 show art Why Every Harpist Needs a Method - PHH 227

Practicing Harp Happiness

When I was a beginning harp student, the technical method I was learning - the Salzedo method - was something I took very seriously. From my very first harp lessons, I learned the important points of technique, as Salzedo taught it. I wasn’t studying with Salzedo, of course, but my teacher, Marilyn Costello, was a student of his, and his method was what she taught her students. For a long time, I played the harp in innocent ignorance of the fact that there were other harp methods. In fact, it was a revelation to me in those early years when I discovered that most harpists in the world...

info_outline
Perspective Over Perfection: The Secret to Playing with Freedom - PHH 226 show art Perspective Over Perfection: The Secret to Playing with Freedom - PHH 226

Practicing Harp Happiness

I’m sure you’ve seen that famous optical illusion picture that can be perceived either as two faces in profile looking at each other, or as a vase. That image is named the “Rubin Vase,” after Danish psychologist Edgar Rubin, who authored a book in 1915 called “Visual Perception.”  This image, and others like it, have stimulated much scientific debate about how our brains understand and process images.  What fascinates me is that moment when my understanding of the image shifts, that instant where I can see the second interpretation of the picture. Naturally, there’s a...

info_outline
 
More Episodes

It’s nearly the end of October and already my daily practice is revolving around what I will need to play this holiday season. Yours might be too. The smart harpist knows that this is the time to plan your practice carefully so that you don’t have to cram practice time into an already overloaded holiday schedule. If we feel prepared to play going into the holiday rush, it makes everything about the holidays more fun.

So now is the time to plan. We have about six weeks from now until the end of November. In my own planning I usually use our Thanksgiving as my target date to have my music ready. If you’re not up to speed on American holidays, our Thanksgiving is the fourth Thursday in November, so date-wise, it’s a movable feast, but as it marks the kickoff for our holiday rush, it’s a great target date for music readiness.

Today, I want to share what I think is the easiest and most realistic schedule for making sure whatever music you have to play this December will be ready. I start by looking at the three most critical decisions: what “ready” means (and believe me, it’s different for each piece, each player and each performance), how much practice time you have and how to divide that time among everything you want to practice and play.  Once you have made those decisions, it’s about making a realistic and flexible schedule that allows you to get your music ready without the stress and lets you feel confident that you are ready to play your best.

Links to things I think you might be interested in that were mentioned in the podcast episode: 

Get involved in the show! Send your questions and suggestions for future podcast episodes to me at podcast@harpmastery.com

Looking for a transcript for this episode? Did you know that if you subscribe to this podcast on Apple Podcasts you will have access to their transcripts of each episode?

LINKS NOT WORKING FOR YOU? FInd all the show resources here: https://www.harpmastery.com/blog/Episode-231