Week 2: Keep up the Great work!
Hello and welcome to the WEEK TWO Main Thread for this challenge!
Awesome job everyone! You are doing so great, and I am loving the videos + all the hard work! It is inspiring see the level of commitment/enthusiasm you all have for this music!
If you need some help with the piece, check out a livestream that goes INDEPTH with this piece!
https://app.tonebase.co/piano/live/player/liszt-schubert-community-challenge-indepth
Alright everyone - this is the thread where we'll all be posting our daily updates.
Make sure you've read the rules before replying (<- click)
Twice a week between August 23rd - August 30th I hope to be reading your daily updates in this very thread right here!
Download the music:
Download a CLEAN Copy of the score
Liszt's: Soirees De Vienne No.6
Download a score with section numbers for managing your practice!
Liszt's: Soirees De Vienne No.6
Please use the following format when commenting (feel free to copy & paste!):
- Section you worked on:
- One thing you found easy:
- One thing you found difficult:
- (Optional): a video of you performing it!
Sample daily update:
- Section you worked on: No. 1
- One thing you found easy: Learning the notes, and rhythms were rather straight-forward, and not challenging!
- One thing you found difficult: Playing the trills/ornaments in an elegant way was what challenged me the most.
Feel free to make these updates as short or long as you wish!
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Well I tried 1-4 and although the notes and rhythm weren’t difficult my swollen arthritic hands had difficulty reaching the right notes . I think I really messed up the first waltz and it sounded even worse because the piano is out of tune .
Anyway- Section you worked on: one
- One thing you found easy:The notes
- One thing you found difficult: The notes are easy to read but harder to play ! Making it sound like a dance rather than a funeral March . Every time I tried to play it faster I started missing the right notes and created quite a bit of dissonance.
- Section you worked on: Two
- One thing you found easy: The notes and the slower tempo.
- One thing you found difficult: Interpretation
- Section you worked on: Three
- One thing you found easy: Although it’s the same flavor as no 1 it seemed easier to play as the chords aren’t packed with as many notes
- One thing you found difficult: The last three bars of the section .
- Section you worked on: Four
- One thing you found easy: The notes are easy enough
- One thing you found difficult: Dealing with all the hair pins etc , adhering to all the different tempo and dynamic markings.
I listened to Dominic’s wonderful explanatory livestream and for some reason I couldn’t put his advice into my playing - https://youtu.be/PCPV4G5zGdo
Found this quote from Tom Waits tonight and it’s my excuse !
’The piano has been drinking , not me ! ‘
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Thanks for all your kind comments to my submissions 1-3 in the 1st week! That was the easy part! I’ve been working on 4-9, but have not had enough practicing time as I was waylaid by other pieces! My difficulty remains the triplets - my mind understands how they should be done, but the fingers are not cooperating as expected. I really enjoyed Dominic’s lesson, and I love his waltz ‘swing’ which I try to replicate but not succeeding very well - a complication is that with repeating passages, I get lost deciding when to go full ‘swing’ and when to pull badk.
Interestingly, I found a way of handling the sixths that feels more natural to me - using 131413141314 - that’s somehow more comfortable than the 142514251425. I started practising the descending running notes in the closing bars with only my RH. Dom’s 2-hand is really ingenious - but I’d to persist with my RH to see if it produces a different descending chromatic line accenting on the 4th finger.
Hopefully I should be able to post a video in the 3rd week. I’m looking forward to seeing other submissions . It’s so interesting to note that no 2 people play the same way. Diversity is the spice of life!
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Hello everyone!
My comment of this week:
- Section you worked on: the whole piece.
- One thing you found easy: as I said last week, you always know the formal harmonic plan and the main melodies to emphasize.
- One thing you found difficult: I think it is very complicated to play sections 5 and 7 with the same dancing feeling than the others.
After the great session of Dominic, I have a lot of information to put into practice, very much work to do. So, I hope to upload e video at the end of week 3.
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As promised, here is my video for the second week were I've focused on memorizing the piece.
Also, from yesterday I tried out Dominics fingerings for the sixth in section 5 and 7. For section 5, I like it, and it feels comfortable in my hand once I got used to the motion. For section 7 the sixth interval is a major sixth, and it switches a little back and forth witch made using the second finger a little harder. I know Dominic has a bigger hand than me, so I am not sure if this one is as well suited for me. If I only use the thumb it's pretty easy. What you gain by using the second finger (at least what I noticed), is that you get a little more feel for that lower note: When only using the thumb, it's more of a bouncing feeling, but with switching between thumb to second finger gives a little more control and attention for that lower note. I might try it a couple of more days, and then decide whether I keep it.
So the official lines:
What I found easy: Playing the cadenza using the left hand for the "bottom" note as Dominic suggested is pretty easy. But also more musical, so I like it!
What I found challenging: When the piece is just memorized, it takes a little more focus just to make sure the notes are correct, and since there are some similar parts with slight similarities one need to be little more alert.
For the coming week I will focus on getting the piece at a performance level, and focus more on the music.
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Hi everyone,
I started the challenge last week, but this is my first post. I am really loving reading everyone’s updates and comments. I also really appreciated Dominic's lesson on the piece; it gave me lots of ideas and some good technical pointers.
It's good to know that I'm not the only one challenged by the ascending 6ths in section 5. But my fingering solution seems different--I don't always change fingers when coming off black keys onto white keys. For example, in the ascending passage that begins with a G# and an E, I use 13-14-25-25-14-25. I find that this just feels much more comfortable, and I can still get a fine staccato even with keeping 25 between the 3rd and 4th chords.
Section you worked on:
I focused on section 4, 5, 7 and 8.
One thing you found easy:
For the most part, the left hand is straight-forward.
One thing you found difficult:
Memorizing. I am perennially challenged by memorizing music! And it does not get easier as I get older!
I recorded a video but the audio was just terrible. Once I figure that out, I’ll post a video.