Group 3
Welcome to the NEW TWO WEEK INTENSIVE on tonebase!
Improving your Lyricism (feat Chopin)
Post your progress with videos and written commentary on how things are going for you!
- Course Period: June 26 - July 10th
- Class Size: ALL are welcome!
- Optional check-In via Zoom: July 2nd at 11am PT
- ZOOM MEETING Recording!
- https://youtu.be/Fl-ExGT9aZY
Assignment #1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQpw6fZBOlE
- Pick a short piece (Mazurka, Nocturne, Prelude) or excerpt of a longer piece (Ballade, Polonaise, Scherzo, Sonata, Concerto). Focus on lyrical/slow sections.
- Learn bass carefully, labelling all chords and cadences.
- SING melodic line. Practice singing until your voice can identify the melody instantly.
- Submit a video: playing the Bass while singing the Soprano.
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Assignment #2
https://youtu.be/ri2UD1z8sKE?si=w36XWzqb_rao3RAu
-Label all breathing points with an apostrophe between phrase markings. Practice deep breaths between significant points or use a regular breath for phrase changes.
-Sing Bass notes of all chords while playing Soprano melody.
-Submit a video: playing hands together (performance).
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Here I am at the 11th hour - but at least not a week late as usual.
So, here is singing the melody
https://youtube.com/shorts/hBeKdJwm24E?si=vkkhtsZGnbTtcg-E
and singing bass line
https://youtube.com/shorts/yLneta2ORAM?si=Y_SczeL-nOgCVWXw
and my analysis
I think this has been a great challenge!
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https://youtu.be/fGu3vD5sNio?si=-z5XNXh4stWQoXc9
Here’s my hands-together video. I also recorded one with me singing the bass line but I am censoring it (haha).
Singing the phrases and marking the cadences in Week 1 really helped me to get clear on the musical lines and where things begin and end. I am hearing this more clearly in my own playing. The refinement journey continues. Thanks for this two week exploration, Jarred and friends!
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The best version I can do for now.
What you can't see is my brain's CPU running at 100% So much to think of. Now I need more practice to gain better note security, so that I can listen better to both hands. And then apply what I've learned on the second part of the piece. But I know already, that this is much better than it would have been without the course!
1) In one sentence, what did you learn from this TWI?
Singing out loud, not only in my head, makes a difference.2) What skill do you need to practice daily to improve your lyricism in Chopin playing?
Listen to bass independently3) How easily (or not) was it to practice singing/solfege? What did you learn from it?
So tough. I needed to practice the singing assignments for some hours and still had to cheat on the bass part. But I am proud that I went from just guessing notes to being able to sing the right notes in harmony.
I especially learned that the bass in Chopin has more importance than I tought and has a direction and kind of melody, not just some fancy "let's add harmony".4) Which new practice methods began with frustration or struggle, but need to be used regularly until they are habits?
Singing. Singing. Singing. Especially harmony. So frustrating at first.5) How important are harmony and colour to lyrical playing in Chopin?
Far more important than I thought. Not only the voice independence-part, but also the harmonic analysis lead me to a slightly different interpretation than what I first had in mind/intuition.
7) What new understanding(s) did you gain about Chopin's music?
That he's not just filling the melody with some random harmony acccompaniment notes. In fact, that the LH is not "accompaniment", but of more importance.8) Do you have a new set of questions or topics to approach in your lessons?
I need to practice to address the left hand more independently. I did the singing and got the essence, but don't feel like I can already DO it.
9) How has your listening changed?
I can hear the bass better now! I listened to several recordings of my piece, and heard some pianists nicely shape the left hand, others treating it as accompaniment. I realized that I found the first ones more interesting and expressive.10) How has your score reading changed?
I think I will ask myself more (not only in Chopin, but in general) what the left hand's intention is. Is it simple accompaniment, to enrich the sound, or is it a universe of its own? I might also look closer to phrasing by singing. Although I used to do this already in all of my pieces, I find that loud singing makes things clearer and helps me set new phrases more accurately and with the trust that a short rest is not as long as it might feel. -
Apologies for the double post, and slow response. My posting privileges were blocked for a while. :(. Thank you to Dagmar Andrea Buckland for the feedback.
I'm reposting this my post earlier to get a bit more feedback (it was buried after my account was unblocked).
Here's my bass singing attempt (https://youtu.be/XE6X-EAITw4) and
both hands. https://youtu.be/allBQjQ8nHw.
Thank you Jared , I learn so much in this TWI!
Biggest take home for me - Don't just "sing in the head" - singing out loud with singer-like long breath is critical. Do the same for bass line and hear those harmonies.
So excited to relearn pieces with this new technique. If i'm brave, i'll try it with as i'm learning new pieces too (seems every so much harder if i dont' already know the notes) .