Pedaling at the piano, from Level 1 to Virtuoso! with Dominic Cheli
The pedals are the soul of the piano, and today Dominic Cheli shares tips and advice for everyone, from those just starting out to advanced players!
Follow this event link to tune in!
https://app.tonebase.co/piano/live/player/pno-pedaling-beginner-advanced
We are going to be using this thread to gather suggestions and questions!
- What questions do you have on this topic?
- Any particular area you would like me to focus on?
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Here are some areas I have questions about. It would be nice if you could cover them.
Please say something about partial pedaling of the sustain pedal. Does the piano need to be carefully regulated for partial pedaling, i.e. so all strings decay at the same rate for a given pedal position? Is it possible to increase the range of pedal depression over which the dampers go from just on to full on, making it easier to partial pedal, or is this just how the piano is built? (Really a question for my tuner, I suppose, but of interest anyway.)
Chopin, among others, often mark notes as staccato while he marks the sustain pedal as down. What sound is he trying to get? Can it be achieved with a modern piano?
Thanks,
Gerry
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Dominic:
The pedaling lesson was very helpful in throwing some light on what has been for me a murky area. I am going to rework the moonlight sonata based on your lesson and that of john o'conor and the rachmaninov c sharp minor prelude in combination with claire huangci's lesson and see how I can start to incorporate this new knowledge into my playing. I will give you an update when I manage to make progress.
Thanks for the help
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Dominic, you are exceptional in your musicianship, musical expertise, as an educator and storyteller, with technology - - and in the thoughtfulness category, too! I marvel at the way you were able to notice that the view on the screen during this lesson became bright at one point, and you adjusted it adeptly and quickly. Immediately, it made a noticeable difference. It softened the view and improved it for us all. Thank you!