Illustration of an adult piano student showing the difference between mindless repetition and conscious piano practice with variation, structure, and mental understanding, as applied in piano lessons for adults at Studio MusicalMente in The Hague.

Many people who learn piano do the same.
They play a piece.
And play it again.
And once more.

They hope the piece will stick in their head naturally.
But often, that doesn’t happen.

They only know the piece as long as everything goes well.
A mistake, a distraction, stress – and everything is gone.

That’s not a problem of talent.
It’s a problem of hoe how you practice.

Why endless repetition doesn’t work

Repetition feels safe.
Your fingers move.
It sounds good.

But you only learn the piece in one way.
You follow a fixed path, from start to finish.

That is called muscle memory.
It helps, but it’s weak.

If you only learn this way:

Repetition without thinking trains the hands, not the head.

What “playing from memory” really means

Playing from memory is not:
“I hope my fingers know it”.

It is:

Good pianists don’t have better memory.
They have more reference points.

A piece only truly sticks if you learn it by:

A piece only truly sticks if you learn it by:

If one path fails, there are others.

That’s why I always work with variation.

Technique 1: starting from different points

Most students can only play a piece:

That’s dangerous.

If you can only play from the beginning,
dan you’re following the piece.
Je don’t know it.

What I do:

This way, the piece becomes a map, not a chain.

You know:
“I am here – and this comes next”.

That gives peace.
Especially for adults.

Technique 2: practice without a piano

Many people find this strange.
But it works extremely well.

Practicing isn’t always playing.

Sometimes thinking is better than repeating.

What I have them do:

For example:

If you can’t explain a piece,
you can’t really play it from memory.

This trains:

Why variation is better than more repetition

Doing the same thing always feels comfortable.
But comfort makes memory weak.

Variation makes memory strong.

Think of:

Every different way is an extra support.

If one path fails, the piece remains.

Try this at home (without a piano)

Take five minutes.

Can’t follow a section?
Then you know exactly where you need to work.

That’s smart practicing.

In conclusion

Playing piano from memory isn’t talent. It’s the result of a specific way of practicing.


Who am I?

I am Luca Ridolfo and I founded Studio MusicalMente in 2018. I’ve been driven by music since I was a child. But I wasn’t a Musical Prodigy. I really enjoyed making music and had a drive to learn more about it. My music teachers supported me and always encouraged me to keep going.

And indeed, I went on to complete a music education at the Royal Conservatory in The Hague. And even now, I never stop learning.

I firmly believe that everyone can improve their musicality and that this shouldn’t be reserved only for children. That’s why I decided to open a music school for adults in The Hague.

I believe that learning creative hobbies with experienced role models is one of the best ways to develop new skills and learn more about yourself.