Group 2
Improve your Chopin Ornaments in Two Weeks with Jarred Dunn!
When playing Chopin, we face a tremendous challenge in using ornamentation to enhance musical expression. In this two-week intensive, we will learn how to make Chopin ornaments easier to play by targeting technical skills used in effortless trills, turns, grace notes, and arpeggiated chords. We will look at specific examples in Chopin's Mazurkas
Assignments
Your videos should show all three assignments!
- Learn over snap movement: practice for five mins per day on arpeggiated chords in Mazurka op.50 no.1
- Trills : the one I show is a preparatory step, because it’s a short trill. Try this movement of changing the key place with fingers 2-4-3 on many different locations/keys. Do this also for five mins per day.
- Grace notes: same as above, try grace notes on different keys, with forward arm movement.
Fellow Participants in Group 2:
AJ
Juan Carlos Olite
Susan Rogers
Angela Fogg
Jeff
Patrick Wong
Carol Chua
Leanne
Harriet Kaplan
Andrea Buckland
Some tonebase productions to get you started
Penelope Roskell on Developing Cantabile Playing
Course: Jarred Dunn on Crafting Scales
Wrist Movement: A Pianist's Secret Weapon with Norman Krieger
Arpeggios Regiment with Jeffrey Biegel
How to get the most out of this course
- Start by watching the introduction video and practice the passages given in the video.
- Write a post where you have been struggling with ornaments in Chopin's music!
- Share two videos per week and help your course partners through feedback on their submissions!
Zoom Check-In: Tuesday July 26 10:00 PST (13:00 EST/19:00 CEST)
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Follow this link for the second week's assignments with Jarred Dunn!
https://piano-community.tonebase.co/t/x2hww25/week-2-new-applications
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Hi Jared,
Thank you for the intro lesson on the ornaments. I find the lifting on the hand very helpful in producing a much clearer sound in playing the ornaments. I applied the same principles from op. 50 to op 48, no 1, where as before I tend to play the ornaments slower and blended them into the melody. I hadn't realise when I changed my expression of the ornaments, it felt like I was learning to play it for the first time, again! The new approach produced a more heightened emotional angst in the melodic line. Is this what Chopin had intended? or have I missed the mark completely? Could you please share your thoughts on this ? Thank you.
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Hi Jarred,
Thank you so much for explaining in such details. I'm a beginner with less than 2 years of learning. I'm currently working on my first Chopin piece - Waltz in A Minor, B.150 posthumous, and found the ornaments very challenging for me. So I'm hoping that I could improve with the 2-week intensive.
Here is my video:
0:00 - Arpeggiated chords in Mazurka op.50 no.1. Since my hands are pretty small, the C-A# still feels quite a stretch. It feels hard to stay relaxed when I do this.
0:24 - Trills and grace notes. Looking at the video, I feel that I might be exaggerating the arm forward motion too much?
0:43 - Ornaments from Waltz in A minor. They just don't sound as light and fast as I'd like.
Thank you for your time!