READ ME and POST HERE!
WELCOME TO OUR LATEST TONEBASE PIANO COMMUNITY PRACTICE CHALLENGE:
Mini Challenge: Finding Colors in your Sound!
We invite you to participate in this mini challenge leading up to a livestream on
March 8th at 11am PT with Boris Giltburg
Enter a World of Color with Boris Giltburg
Get started in this challenge by:
1. Picking a piece of music!
2. Posting an excerpt of the piece, and describe the color that YOU feel in the music.
3. (optional) tell us how you are trying to achieve this color!
Example:
1. Debussy: Prelude (Bruyeres)
2. I am trying to capture a "sky blue" color in the beginning! Because I find the music to have such an open quality (plus I am imagining an open plain, without a cloud in the sky!)
3. I am trying to achieve this by focusing on a slow attack, and washy pedal (but not muddy!)
When does this take place?
Challenge start: February 27th
Challenge days: February 27th - March 8th!
Why are we doing this?
Because we want to challenge ourselves to practice every day
Because learning together is more fun than learning alone
Because we get to share our progress with others (whether video or just text)
Because new music is wonderful and these pieces were written especially for us!
Because we want to meet our fellow tonebase community members
Because we get to hear new music which we might not play ourselves
ASK ANY QUESTIONS YOU MIGHT HAVE BELOW!
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,What a great idea, Dominic Cheli . I will certainly watch the recorded Livestream as well.
The excerpt I picked is from the development of the 1st movement of LV Beethoven's Piano Sonata Opus 14., no. 1. I am trying to imagine broad velvety swirls of purple and burgundy as this section contrasts in texture with the rest of the piece. I hope to achieve this by working on making the melody sing out as much and as expressively as possible, while still working out the pedalling changes so they don't break up the melody.
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Firstly, I had to drop out of the live session yesterday because we received a phone call about one of her friends being in hospital as an emergency. He’s surviving, but it was a tough time for him and his family.
I think the different colours in the sound come from the key that is chosen and the chords and additional notes: 7ths, 9ths, 6ths, chord substitutions, say ii instead of IV, giving a minor colour instead of the major.
This is not to say that we can’t colour the sound additionally from the key touch and the pedal.
I plan to use this challenge to explore different harmonies and the emotions that are created from the colours in the palette.
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A pensive Chopin in Paris is thinking in his beloved country. Two emotions arise gently succeeding each other: one is a pure nostalgic sentiment (a bit dark purple horizon; touching softly and deeply the keys with generous pedal) the other put a slight smile in his face, when he remembers the movements of the dancing mazurka (golden shades make their way in the purple horizon; rhythmic and bouncy touch and less pedal).
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Here’s a practice video of Rachmaninoff’s Prelude opus 32 no. 12. I’m trying to capture the beauty of varying shades of gray with occasional splashes of brighter colors, only very momentarily. The mood is a bit like the ebb and flow of a tide, with lots of smaller ripples in between. Another image I have is a gray, misty night with a lighthouse, sometimes crashing waves, and the distant call of sirens.
The two things I want to work on — more rhythmic precision, and clearer pedaling.