Learning Music the Smart Way – Why Bach Still Has It Right
There’s a funny thing about learning music…
Everyone wants to play the piece — the big dramatic number, the one that makes the neighbours think you’re a genius.
But very few people want to do the boring bits that actually make you good.
And that’s where Johann Sebastian Bach quietly smiles from the 1700s and says…
“I solved this problem 300 years ago.”
The Well-Tempered Secret
Bach wrote The Well-Tempered Clavier, which sounds grand (and it is), but at its heart…
…it’s a training manual.
- 24 keys
- Each with a Prelude (technique builder)
- And a Fugue (brain workout of the highest order)
Then he thought… “That worked well.”
So he wrote another entire book of it.
So What’s Going On Here?
This isn’t just music.
It’s deliberate practice.
Each piece sneaks in:
- Finger independence
- Hand coordination
- Reading fluency
- Musical phrasing
- And the terrifying ability to think in multiple voices at once
You don’t notice you’re doing exercises…
…but you’re getting better.
Why It Still Works Today
Modern learners often:
- Jump straight to difficult pieces
- Skip fundamentals
- Wonder why progress stalls
Bach’s approach is the opposite:
Do lots of small, structured challenges
Cover every key and pattern
Build skill without even thinking about it
It’s exactly the same idea as:
- Practising past papers in maths
- Repeating experiments in science
- Doing manoeuvres again and again in sailing
(Yes… even tacking badly 20 times before getting it right )
The Real Lesson (Not Just for Musicians)
The genius of The Well-Tempered Clavier is not just the music.
It’s the method:
Don’t avoid exercises — disguise them as something interesting.
And It’s Not Just Bach…
Others followed similar ideas:
- Frédéric Chopin – Études (beautiful but brutal)
- Carl Czerny – endless technical drills
- Claude Debussy – studies hidden in art
Some are obviously “exercises”…
Bach just hid his better.
Final Thought
If your practice feels too easy… you’re not improving.
If it feels impossible… you won’t stick with it.
Bach found the sweet spot:
Challenging enough to grow
Interesting enough to keep going


