The Art of Practice by Laido Dittmar — book cover

Your Pedal Harp vs Lever Harp App Says You're Practicing. Here's Why You're Not Improving.

October 09, 20256 min read

You've been logging sessions for months. Your Yousician tracks minutes practiced, songs completed, streak days. The streaks are intact. The numbers pile up.

And your playing level haven't budged in a season.

The apps aren't lying. You are practicing. The problem isn't that you're not practicing. The problem is that practice and tracking aren't the same thing.

Running the same lever/pedal changes on autopilot isn't progress

Every session follows the same pattern: warm up, run through familiar pedal harp vs lever harp material, log the session. This is running the same lever/pedal changes on autopilot. Comfortable practice on familiar ground. The default.

The comfort makes it sustainable. You can show up. You can do it again tomorrow. That consistency is real. But consistency in what?

When every session happens at the same tempo on the same material, your muscle memory settles. Your technique improves for a window — maybe four to eight weeks — then plateaus. Your body adapts to the stimulus. The material that felt challenging in week two feels automatic in week eight.

Yousician shows you the output (minutes, songs, streak). It doesn't show you the quality of what happened during those 20 minutes. It can't distinguish between a session that pushed your ability forward and one that simply maintained it.

Yousician, Simply Piano, Soundbrenner track volume, not structure

Every major pedal harp vs lever harp practice app answers the same question: Did you practice, and how much?

None of them ask: Did you do the right session today in the right sequence?

A structured practice plan has layers. Running the same lever/pedal changes on autopilot has its place: it maintains what you already have. But maintenance alone doesn't improve your playing level. You need material at the edge of your ability to build new capacity. You need the techniques that scare you to break through ceilings.

These sessions are different. They build different things. And they compound.

A harp player (specialized) who cycles through growth work, building work, and maintenance will improve faster and more durably than a harp player (specialized) who does weeks of the same running the same lever/pedal changes on autopilot.

But both harp players (specialized)' apps will show "completed." Both will have streaks. The apps treat all sessions as equivalent because they measure volume, not leverage.

The piano principle

Cross one discipline and the pattern becomes obvious.

A pianist can play through the same pieces every session. The sessions happen. But the level doesn't change. Running the same lever/pedal changes on autopilot isn't the same as practicing.

Pedal harp vs lever harp has the same split. Running the same lever/pedal changes on autopilot is the equivalent. Working on and is isolating the hard passages. Both feel like practicing. Only one compounds.

Real change takes structure

Kasia Florchuk, professional ice skater with 10+ years of competitive experience, had been stuck — doing the same practice, getting the same results. When she restructured her sessions around these principles, the shift was immediate: "Completely changed how I practice. I wish I had this 10 years ago." Not months of more practice. Weeks of different structure. Same hours. Different leverage.

Harp players (specialized) stuck at the same playing level typically respond by adding volume: "I'll practice more often." More of the same stimulus doesn't break the plateau. It deepens it.

The move is lateral, not vertical. Different session types. Different stimuli. Different order. That's what forces adaptation.

Before you need better tools

The practice apps are excellent at what they do. Yousician tracks minutes practiced, songs completed, streak days. Simply Piano gives you structure.

And none of them solve the plateau because the plateau isn't a tracking problem. It's a design problem.

Before you need a better app, you need to know what you're tracking. You need to understand what building material looks like. What growth work requires. How to sequence them so they compound instead of interfere.

The app measures the outcome of that knowledge. The app doesn't create the knowledge.

Common questions

Should I stop using Yousician?

No. These tools are excellent for confirmation and community. Use them. But don't mistake logging a session with designing a session. The app can't tell you whether today should be growth work or maintenance. That decision comes first. The app records it after.

How long until I break the plateau?

Most harp players (specialized) feel the difference in their very first structured session, because the moment you see how much of your time was running the same lever/pedal changes on autopilot and how little was actual development work, the problem becomes obvious. The playing level follow within days, not weeks.

What if I don't have a teacher?

A framework replaces a teacher for the design phase. Once you understand session leverage — what building material actually builds, why growth work spikes progress — you can sequence your own practicing. The methodology is learnable. The tools become secondary.

The Art of Practice by Laido Dittmar
Same effort. Twice the progress. Any skill.

Laido Dittmar — fourth-generation circus performer, Cirque du Soleil Performer, one of four jugglers in the world to flash 10 rings with a balance, Winner of the Cirque du Soleil Prize Best Juggler 2026 — started with no talent and a decade behind his peers. He spent 20 years reverse-engineering how elite performers practice unconsciously, then wrote it down. The Art of Practice is the result: 17 techniques for structuring how you practice any physical skill. Not theory. Not motivation. A concrete operating system for your sessions. 14,000+ copies sold in 30+ countries.

Learn More About The Art of Practice →

Laido Dittmar

Author of The Art of Practice. Former Cirque du Soleil performer. 20+ years studying how elite performers practice.

Back to Blog