Ben Laude: Ask Me Anything about Piano Technique!

We are kicking off this new Community feature with our own Ben Laude! You know him as an outstanding pianist and pedagogue, and, of course, as Head of Piano here at tonebase, where he has produced and appeared in countless video lessons and interviews with the many dozens of world class pianists on the Artist Roster!
As he'll be the first to tell you, Ben was no prodigy; and without proper technical training, he had to solve his physical problems at the instrument the hard way. A long-time student of piano technique, Ben has researched a variety of technical schools of thought developed over the past century and is always experimenting with them in practice.
For tonebase, he has collaborated on video courses with technique specialists from Penelope Roskell to Seymour Bernstein, and is currently in the process of releasing a multi-part video series on how to practice the Chopin Etudes with Marina Lomazov. This past spring, he released a series of master class sessions on the Taubman Approach with Golandsky Institute co-founder Robert Durso, and will be recording with Edna Golandsky herself this fall.
How to Participate
- Ask your questions right here until September 2nd!
- Ben will answer questions from September 5th - 9th!
153 replies
-
Dear all - happy September!!
I'm enjoying reading all of your questions and I'm excited to get to work answering them next week. Keep them coming!
Meanwhile, I'm going to go practice (next year is Rachmaninoff's 150th and I've told myself I should prepare of bunch of rep for it!)
-
Hello Ben, thankyou for taking the time to answer our questions. When studying a long and difficult set of etudes, if you can manage to play all of the etudes in the set but can only bring one or two of them 'to life' at any one time through several days of intense practice, how do you approach getting the entire set to a performance level all at the same time?
-
Hi Ben,
Have you ever thought about doing a lesson on Hanon Exercises? They’re not something my teacher ever covered in class. I just got the book as it was recommended, and I can just remember her saying you practice them legato, staccato, then with a dotted rhythm. I’d love a few lessons on them. I suffer with tendinitis from playing several other instruments, I’d like to use them to strengthen my hands, along with physiotherapy.
kind Regards,
Aoife
-
Hello Ben, my question is about Schubert Impromptu Op 90 No 3. How do you keep the melody sounding calm/unrushed while playing the piece at tempo? ie like Vladimir Horowitz in his beautiful recording on YouTube. Thanks!
-
Hi Ben! How do you manage to keep your repertoire fresh in your memory? I sometimes don’t even remember that I’ve learned a piece until I find the score with lots of my handwriting all over it, LOL!
-
Hi Ben! (Bringing this question out of the thread for visibility)
Rach 2 trouble spots — I’m finding the second Piu Mosso from Bar 141 to 144 very awkward and hard to play fast, lightly and accurately. It’s the twisty upward arpeggio bit in E-flat major when the music is beginning to transition to the Development section. I would also love to know what fingering you’re using in Bar 141 and Bar 144 (LH), as mine is probably suboptimal. This video shows what typically happens whenever I approach this section ….! It’s right at the end of this short video, the fast upward passage where I basically give up and toss my hands up in the air.
-
Dominic has mentioned something about practicing Scales in "groupings". Are you aware of this method? If so, can you elaborate what that is? Thanks
-
How do I play the double thirds (?) in the Brahms-Chopin etude? Also, How do I play the piece with correct technique?