Group 4
Weâve probably all been told, âPractice slowly!â or, âDonât rush!â and almost certainly, âUse the metronome!â These statements can be valid, but how we treat time, rhythm, and meter in our playing, and what we doâthat's a much more nuanced thing. In this Two-Week Intensive, we explore unique practice techniques that impact how we use tempo, technique, rubato, and expression.
BYOP: Bring your own Piece! This challenge does not rely on specific repertoire, so feel free to pick any piece that best suits your current abilities.
Pianists of all levels are welcome. You may choose how much of the piece you would like to work on. It can be a phrase or a page.
More Detailed instructions coming soon!
- Sign-Up : Monday, February 13 - February 19
- Course Period: February 20 - March 6th
- Class Size: max. 4 Groups ĂĄ 10 Participants
- Optional check-In via Zoom: March 2nd from 11am-12pm
Join Zoom Meeting
https://us06web.zoom.us/j/81723841404?pwd=N0phNUxDVytMRUt2UGNFOUt5R3BxQT09Passcode: 837385
Assignment 1
Description:
Explore the pulse strategies introduced in the demonstration video. Choose 2 strategies (your favorites, or the ones you find most challenging/rewarding/interesting) and record yourself demonstrating two passages in your choice of repertoireâone passage per strategy. Please include a PDF of the score and the title of the piece.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UMe8_QeNIV4
Assignment 2:
Description:
Choose a passage of a piece from the nineteenth-century repertoire. Practice singing the melody or leading line (yes, out loud), marking points where gestures or phrases end and where you choose (or need!) to breathe before the next musical idea. Next, sing or speak subdivisions at the smallest rhythmic level youâre playing, or next smallest (e.g., if youâre playing a passage thatâs all eighth-notes, your sung or spoken subdivisions will be no slower than eighths, and likely sixteenths). I suggest using a neutral syllable such as âbumâ or âta.â
Record yourself doing two things:
1) Physically breathing, while you play, at the places youâve identified as ending points, paying attention to the speed of your breath and the time it takes to accommodate a natural inhale; and separately,
2) Speaking subdivisions aloud on a neutral syllable as you playâyour goal is to use these subdivisions to drive rubato intentionally and expressively. Extra imaginary internet points if you sing with your subdivisions! Please include a PDF of the score and the title of the piece.
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Hi everyone! Very interesting. Normally I donât work with the metronome. Maybe I should. I am working on Beethoven Sonata
op. 31/2 so I choose this one. Yesterday I try ,the walking, on the 1. movement, but I didnât feel so good with it. I had the feeling to loose my ground, because the feet were not on it. So I choose the metronome on the 3. movement - one hit each bar- and that was very good. Find out that I rush sometimes. And with only one hit is not so fixed. On the 2. movement I choose the ,bum, or something like that. Really difficult to give the sixteenth and play. But there was a good feeling, that a rhythms goes through the whole piece. Learnt something.
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Hi Everyone, this is Gary playing from Puerto Vallarta, MX.
I am working on Chopin's Ballad in g minor.
First exercise I did was walking, measures 150 to 154. So far I find it to be a very effective practice tool - playing it slowly felt a bit more challenging than fast, in the video I played on the eight note, and then immediately played on the quarter. The walking and playing felt like I was getting a bit more grounded in the notes, if that makes sense. A bit cumbersome at this point, with with some practice will become more refined.
The second video is using the metronome on the offbeat. Also using Chopins ballad, measures 228 to 242. As this section in the Presto con fuoco, I found this will really be helpful in this section to get the rhythmic impulse. I have a ways to go, but this will help a lot to get on track.