Group 4
Unlocking A deeper Understanding of Chopin's Music!
Together we will work on four etudes which can transform your approach to Chopin’s music as well as expand your concept of piano playing! In the first Etude from Op. 10 I will give exercises for tackling the right hand arpeggios, which will develop your ability to hear sonorities build upon one another across the entire keyboard. Through a discussion of Chopin’s use of the pedal and exploitation of the piano’s natural overtones, you will learn to pace yourself through this famously difficult work and achieve unity of sound within one harmony.
I will then focus on the Second Etude of Op. 25 where the lens will zoom in on Chopin’s use of polyrhythm and how this is integral to the fundamental “problem” of this Etude.
The discussion of the third Etude of Op. 25 will talk about the use of the thumb versus fingers 2-5 and how to achieve lightness and speed in this charming work.
Finally, we will revisit my lesson on Op. 10 No. 2 and dive even deeper into the secrets to being able to play this famously difficult work!
Improve your Chopin Etudes in Two Weeks with Henry Kramer!
- Sign-Up : September 14, 10 am PST
- Course Period: September 19 - 30
- Class Size: 4 Groups á 10 Participants
- Optional check-In via Zoom: tba
- Livestream: September 20th, 11am PST
FIRST TASK: SAY HELLO TO EVERYBODY!
Assignments:
Watch Henry's first of four assignment videos!
Download Cortot’s edition of Chopin etudes at:
- Choose 3-5 arpeggios in this Etude (eg c major, augmented 6th, a major etc)
- For each arpeggio show at least two octaves of playing each note of the arpeggio where you bring the thumb to the first finger joint of fingers 2-5 immediately after striking the key. For the thumb notes you should just play staccato
- Choose 2 of the Cortot exercises on pages 4 and 5 and apply them to your 3-5 arpeggio choices
- Share a video of you performing these exercices!
Watch Henry's second assignment video!
Watch Henry's THIRD assignment video!
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Hi everyone! Greetings from Germany. I will practice op10/1.
Practiced it some month ago but didn’t finish it at all. Nice to work in a group. I am also on op10/4 and op25/12 because they have for both hands a lot to do. Op10/2 I tried this year too but can’t get it in a fast tempo. So this is a great challenge. Lot of work.
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Oh, Henry! How wonderful that you're in Montréal!! I was just there all weekend to judge gymnastics. I'll be back there often.
I'm a returning pianist, having last had lessons at RCM 10-ARCT level 40 years ago. I am focusing on jazz waltzes this season, but have a desire to get beyond simply dabbling in the Chopin Études which have never been in my repertoire. My goal would be to perform a Chopin Étude at one of my bi-weekly piano group meetings at Steinway Piano Gallery of Ottawa.
My daily practice includes Oscar Peterson's 13 jazz exercises and Nahre Sol's modified Chopin exercises, of which I'm still stuck on #1. Nahre's modified exercises are a pleasurable, jazzy progression toward's the Chopin Op. 10 Études, a contemporary exploration to the Cortot exercises, if you will.
The pandemic effect has reduced my attention span and pain threshold to practicing in 5-10 minute spurts throughout the day, however. Working on short exercises at each sitting will hopefully work with this virtual class.
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Hello everyone! I have chosen bar 25-35. With this exercise it’s much better now.
https://youtu.be/jYY1680Zfx8
https://youtube.com/shorts/-trjKM19jTQ?feature=shareLG Kerstin
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Well, this was enlightening!
1> Finally, I had a meaningful way of practicing this Étude
2> A tenth and an eleventh have a certain feel, both in the hand – of course – and across the keyboard – intervals feel bigger in the higher register
3> I never knew how very fast a release had to be to effectively free up the thumb
4> Conscious awareness of which two fingers play the largest interval– whether fifth or sixth – is very useful, especially when it requires an awkward stretch.