Week 2: Share your progress - get feedback!
Week 2 Assignment: Make a short video. First, discuss what voicing and tone you are aiming for in the passage. Second, state the practice technique/techniques you used to achieve your goal. Then, perform for us to receive feedback on your progress.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iTPM8TylNBc
32 replies
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Hello everyone. Sorry, I am a little bit late. Here my practicing.
https://youtube.com/shorts/v7BzxvoRhHU?si=P0gN0ZkLMzEhfH0A
And now it sounds better.https://youtube.com/shorts/fd9bS9YKHWs?si=DSwLpzgVpMPz6LiR
These TWI always pushes me forward. Thank you. 🙋♀️
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Hello Dr. Osterkamp and everyone.
Here is my video, a bit late, but yesterday it was impossible to upload it because it seems that the Tonebase page wasn't working properly.
This course has been very helpful in improving my chords. During the second week, I managed to play the beautiful first bars of Schubert's Sonata D960 better, but I know they are still far from being played well.
Thank you so much!
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Hi Leann. regarding the rapid chord passage in bars 93–102 of Chopin's Barcarolle, I have recorded my practice feedback for the second week.
1. My goal is to play the right-hand chords fluently and legato, with a tone as bright as the sun, while minimizing mistakes in the left hand during fast passages and achieving a balanced volume between both hands.
2. The approach I adopted involves:
· For the right hand: striving to connect the melody smoothly, using the pedal where legato cannot be achieved by fingers alone, and expressing continuity through dynamic shaping such as crescendo and decrescendo. However, I am uncertain to what extent I have succeeded in this.
· For the left hand, which I find more challenging, I mainly used three methods:
· Practicing left-hand chords by grouping them into smaller subsets and treating them as an independent melody to sing along with. I found that this helps me recognize the connections between chords and execute them with less physical effort by utilizing arm movement and rotation.
· Drilling transitions between two lower-position chords, which has been helpful for managing large leaps.
· Practicing arpeggiated (rolled) chords, which allows me to play four- or even five-note chords with a more relaxed wrist and firmer fingers.I would appreciate it if you could provide feedback on my second-week video and suggest ways to help me refine my approach and address any shortcomings.I've noticed that I still sometimes miss notes in the left hand, especially in passages that involve playing an octave followed by a large leap to a chord requiring the fourth and fifth fingers—or when the fifth finger lands on a black key. For example, in the left-hand large leap on the last beat of measures 96 and 97... This is also related to me playing a bit too fast at the moment.