What is Performance Anxiety?
How It Affects Piano Students
Causes of Performance Anxiety
Addressing Performance Anxiety: My Approach
- Building Confidence Through Preparation Thorough preparation is key. I break music down into manageable sections and emphasize that mistakes are part of learning. Confidence comes from knowing the piece inside out.
- Simulated Performances I create mock performance settings in my studio to help students become comfortable playing under pressure. Inviting family or friends to watch practice performances helps de-sensitise students to the stress of performing.
- Mindfulness and Breathing Techniques Simple breathing exercises can help students stay calm before they perform. Techniques from the Alexander Technique also help reduce tension and improve posture.
- Positive Visualization I encourage students to imagine successful performances before they play. This helps them shift from expecting failure to visualizing success.
- Gradual Exposure For students with severe anxiety, we start with low-pressure performances for just one or two people and gradually build to larger audiences.
Reframing Mistakes Mistakes are learning opportunities, not failures. I emphasize that no performance is perfect, and encourage students to focus on the joy of playing rather than technical perfection.
Conclusion
In Notting Hill, where culture and creativity thrive, overcoming performance anxiety not only improves musicianship but also builds resilience and confidence. By taking small steps, practicing self-compassion, and focusing on the love of music, students can overcome anxiety and unlock their full potential as pianists and performers.
about the author
Gordon Hulbert is a piano/music teacher with a formal classical training at the RCM and LCM. He has nearly 40 years experience as a musical director and side man with multiple-grammy-winning artists in the pop, rock, soul, light classical, world and electronic arenas. His alter-ego as a composer/producer across multiple genres has produced an impressive body of work – with credits on international TV and feature film soundtracks and on commercial releases in the 90s and 00s by some of Europe’s biggest DJs. He is one of the longest standing members of Heatwave, is musical director for Alison Limerick’s various live projects and plays very selectively around the UK and Europe with his two projects Algorisms and Eat Logic, of which Alison is also a member. With a recording and piano teaching studio based in Notting Hill, London, Gordon moved to the south coast in 2021, where he now lives with his wife and their Norwegian Forest cat.
Gordon’s ‘West London Piano Teacher’ website: http://westlondonpianoteacher.com
Gordon’s ‘London Music Producer’ website: https://londonmusicproducer.com
Algorisms – acoustic jazz with a modern sensibility: http://algorisms.co.uk
Eat Logic – electro-acoustic cross-genre project, informed by jazz, soul, house, drum & bass etc: http://eatlogic.co.uk