Group 2

In this two-week initiative, weā€™re moving beyond the black and white of the keyboard and into the colorful spectrum of instrumental timbres.  In week one, you'll hone your skills in spotting orchestral writing in the works of the great composers.  Week two will focus on experimenting with a variety of tones and textures in your own playing to illustrate the qualities of the many varied orchestral instruments.

 

BYOP: Bring your own Piece! This challenge does not rely on specific repertoire, so feel free to pick any piece that best suits your current abilities. 

 

Pianists of all levels are welcome. You may choose how much of the piece you would like to work on. It can be a phrase or a page. 

 

More Detailed instructions coming soon!

  • Sign-Up : Monday January 16th at 10 am PST
  • Course Period: January 23 - February 6
  • Class Size: max. 4 Groups Ć” 10 Participants
  • Optional check-In via Zoom: February 2nd at 10:30am PT

Join Zoom Meeting

https://us06web.zoom.us/j/84808836865?pwd=dGhjYkRKRndhSFhvbU5RdUppaENIQT09

 

Assignment 1

Supplementary material: Beethoven Sonata Op.10 no.1

 

 

Part 2

 

 

Overview of Week 1: Spotting orchestral writing in your pieces!

Look out for the following:

1. Bass Octaves

2. Sudden shift of texutre

3. Stems of notes going in different directions

4. Melody in the middle of piano/middle voices?

5. Exact repetition (different instrument playing it?)

 

Assignment 2

Supplementary material: Beethoven Sonata Op.2 no.3

 

Part 1

https://youtu.be/3d585wc7nnw

 

Part 2

https://youtu.be/Ta9gohIufDs

 

Overview:

Put together a list of 5-10 descriptive words you can use to express the music you are playing. 

 

Upload a piece or excerpt of your piece where you discuss how you adjust your attack (finger/arm/pedal) to accommodate the instrumentation and expression you chose in video 1. 

 

Upload an excerpt of your piece where you CHANGE the instrumentation and/or expression and note what conscious changes you made in your attack to do so.  

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  • Hi Daniela,

     

    lā€™m not sure if I chose the right week intensive. Iā€™m a beginner, even though I already know a few things. The problem is that I also wear cochlear implants, therefore, itā€™s a little hard for me to get all the little nuances with my hearing. Since Iā€™m already there Iā€™m gonna try my best.

     I had in mind to work on Fur Elise. I discovered recently that it has more than part A & B. For the moment, I can only manage to play a not good rendition of part A & B. It lacks of many things. The sound isnā€™t right. I was hoping that this insensitive would help me get a rich sound, emotions, etc. which would give me, consequently, more joy playing it. Part A & B repeat themselves a lot. I though about playing them a little differently each time. How? I donā€™t know yet.

     

    For the first week exercise, is Fur Elise a good candidate or should I choose another one?

     

    Thanks in advance for your suggestions.

    šŸŽ¶Phara šŸŽ¶

    Like
      • Daniela
      • Daniela.2
      • 1 yr ago
      • Reported - view

      Phara Paula Jean Never hurts to give it a shot, and I'm happy you decided to join!  

      When you say part A and B, are you referring to the first 23 measure?  or beyond that?

       

      If I'm looking at the opening section of the piece I see that our two hands are playing really only one note at a time. The orchestra is really good at playing a lot of parts all at once since there are so many participants.  Since my left and right hands DO sound at the same time, I could say that this may be a duet of 2 instruments, which can serve you if you think about the dialogue between the right hand line and the interjecting left hand line.  If you thought about an instrument playing each hand, which would you chose?  And what type of sound do you think they're be creating?

       

      We will get more into how to produce different sounds next week so even if you picked a less-than-orchestral piece, there will probably be things that you can take away that you can apply elsewhere.

       

      Looking forward to hearing you

      Like
  • Hi Daniela,

    Thanks for your fast reply. 
    Yes, I was referring to the first 23 measures. 

    I will take a closer look at it and see what I can find. Will let you know.

    Thanks again. 

    Like
    • Hazel
    • Hazel
    • 1 yr ago
    • Reported - view

    Hi, Daniela

    Thanks so much for taking this course and sharing your expertise.  The piece I have chosen is June from The Seasons by Tchaikovsky.  Iā€™m planning to play it in an exam later in the year so Iā€™m hoping to learn how to vary the sound and bring out the mysterious character of the piece.  I hope you donā€™t mind but rather than submit a video at this stage, I found it easier to mark my thoughts on the suggested orchestration on the score. (please excuse the squiggly writing as Iā€™m new to using Forscore!!) Iā€™ve just done the first 3 pages of the piece.  I hope that is OK?   Best wishes - Hazel from Scotland

    Like
      • Daniela
      • Daniela.2
      • 1 yr ago
      • Reported - view

      Hazel Hi Hazel. Very clear vision and a great example too. I think your idea of violins in the beginning can really help with shaping that legato line. And the articulation at the bottom of the first page says ā€œwoodwindā€ to me too. Youā€™re the first one to mention mutes. FANTASTIC!  
       

      Did you notice as you went further your directions got less matter of fact ā€œviolin-clarinetā€ and more expressive ā€œpastorale-fullā€?  I think you started to get in the mindset of a conductor. I think if you go back to the first page now you can fill in some of those more expressive words as well. 

      Like
      • Hazel
      • Hazel
      • 1 yr ago
      • Reported - view

      Daniela Thanks for your earlier feedback. My list of words describing my piece are: Mysterious, enigmatic, ethereal, reminiscence, eerie, calm, dramatic, shimmering, ringing, longing.  Iā€™ve divided the piece into 2 clips. The first is the opening with cellos, basses and then upper strings. I tried to make the melody flowing and not too pointed a sound. The next section with the woodwind, Iā€™m playing with flatter fingers in the right hand and a more pointed quiet sound for the muted horns in the left hand.

      The 2nd clip starts with the rustic dance section so I tried to play again with flatter fingers for RH for the flutes with a more connected line in contrast to a more rhythmic short sound in the left hand. (I think maybe I should use less or no pedal here?)

      The next section is the fuller orchestral bit so I used a bit more arm and weight and more contact with the keys. For the arpeggiated bit, I decided that I probably need to play that with more relaxed fingers otherwise it can sound a bit harsh. I also thought that too about the last section with the descending chromatic passage ( which reminds me of something sinking in water!). The last few bars also I think remind me of bells or a clock chiming in the distance. That was the effect I was after anyway. Iā€™m not sure that Iā€™ve totally managed yet to capture the mood of the piece and maybe need to work on varying the dynamics more as well as the different tonal sounds? Here are my clips https://youtu.be/zi8I67dM00M https://youtu.be/Us5EdRkZM2c

      Like
      • Daniela
      • Daniela.2
      • 1 yr ago
      • Reported - view

      Hazel Hi Hazel.  The flatter fingers are bringing out a beautiful legato in the opening. You mention mysterious.  That to me usually screams "dark" which may mean that you need to recruit the lower registers a bit more to capture not just the beauty of the piece but also the mood you're after? (just a thought).  

      Interesting that it's a barcarolle in 2/4.  Most barcarolles (or Gondolier songs are in 6/8).  Harder to make it sound lilting in 2/4 but still possible if you feel stronger strong beats and weaker weak beats.  And then any time a composer switches meter our audience is instantly lost, unless we make it really clear what our new time signature is, so going into the 3/4, I'd be really clear about the dance rhythm, with not just absolutely precise rhythm, but also metric accents.  (This is beyond orchestral instruction, but it's the coach in me).  So in the folk dance, make sure you RH feels like the strong beat, LF against that on the off-beat.  With Tchaikovsky, no pedal would be considered very dry, but to highlight the rhythmic dialogue I made change it every beat?

       

      When you get to the arpeggios, keep your eighth note constant, again, I know, much harder, but if you use your wrists and arms to swoop you through those arpeggios, they will flow much more freely and actually much faster.  If you need a recording example, just message me.  

       

      Bells to me always imply ringing, which makes me think pedal automatically, so might use a bit more pedal to bring out those bell sounds you hear in the bass towards the end, but really well done throughout.  I love the thought you put into this.  I hope you take my suggesting as just that, suggestions.  Your vision is perfect as-is.

      Like
      • Hazel
      • Hazel
      • 1 yr ago
      • Reported - view

      Daniela Hi, thanks so much for your comments and help with this.  I thought that maybe my rhythm in the dance section had gone a bit wrong but wasnā€™t sure how. I will look at that and sort it out.  If you have time could you send me a quick demo of how to do the arpeggiated chords? I would really appreciate it.  I searched online but could not find a decent explanation of the technique. Just to say also that Iā€™ve really enjoyed this little course and I think it has really helped me and will change how I approach my piano playing in the future.

      Like
      • Daniela
      • Daniela.2
      • 1 yr ago
      • Reported - view

      Hazel My dynamic is not ff because itā€™s late here but you can at least see the wrist flexibility as I roll the chord

      • Hazel
      • Hazel
      • 1 yr ago
      • Reported - view

      Daniela Thanks so much. That is really helpful. šŸ™‚

      Like
  • Hello Daniela,

    I started to work on another piece (Minuet in G Major), but in the end I decided to come back to Fur Elise because I already had something in my head for it.  You will probably find it strange, but here we go. Itā€™s mesures 1 to 24. Please remember that Iā€™m still a beginner. Sorry for the audio. I recorded it in silence, but I have background sound and I donā€™t know how to get rid of it.  Do you know an application that could help for the audio? Thanks. Phara

      • Daniela
      • Daniela.2
      • 1 yr ago
      • Reported - view

      Phara Paula Jean That's so cool. I never thought of it as inherently orchestral, but hearing it in this way is a very fresh take.

      I may suggest in m. 15-16, it seems as though Beethoven transitions back to the main theme in a seamless type of fashion with the repeated Es and then the D#-E.  By switching instruments here, that flow feels a little interrupted.  Unless you are purposefully going for an effect, I might suggest keeping the same instrument through these two measures.

      This will be a good example for you to work on sound, even as a beginner, as you can focus on one "instrument" at a time and creating a contrast between the hands.

      Like
  • Hello Daniela,

    Thanks for your comments. I have chosen an instrument for measure 15-16.

     

    I really love your last 2 videos.  They are great for beginners like me. I will re-watch them often. I think Tonebase should offer a course on the topic of how to produce different sounds on the piano for beginners. I think that you should be giving it. Tonebase already offers some courses on the subject, but I think your explanations are clearer.

     

    Regarding the homework, I have come up with those words and adjectives:

    Joy, Hope, romantic, cuddly, energetic, fire, cold, harsh, sadness and [thunderstorm & rain] (Chopin op 10 no 1).

     

    Have a nice day

    šŸŽ¶šŸŽ¶PharašŸŽ¶šŸŽ¶

    Like
    • Daniela
    • Daniela.2
    • 1 yr ago
    • Reported - view

    I am so happy to hear that.  And your vocabulary words are contributing to everyone's sounds over this intensive so thank you for that! Which instrument have you chosen?  And what have you found thus far in your attempts to experiment with sounds/attacks/voices?

    Like
  • Hello Daniela,

     

    I have chosen the tubular bells for measures 15-16.

     

    Truthfully, itā€™s not going very well because I have many questions in my head. 

     

    Since the pedals are a huge part of the colours we want to give to the piece, it would be good to know how to use them properly. There are different versions on YouTube (press the pedal before or after playing the note). Can I press simultaneously the note and the pedal? Itā€™s easier, but Iā€™m not sure itā€™s the right way to do it. You can easily guess that Iā€™ve never really used pedals before. Do I use the left foot for the left pedal or the right foot? Is it ok to use Una corda and sustain pedals at the same time (It implies using both feet)? I donā€™t want to start with a bad habit with the pedals.

     

    For bar #1, I wanted to get a dreamy sound by using the Una corda  pedal and the pad of my fingers going towards me. I have in mind to press the Una corda pedal before I press the first note. However, I have to switch to the sustain pedal when I start the A minor chord (bar #2) and should switch back to Una corda pedal in the same bar (#2). The same process would be repeated for bars 3, 4, 6, 7 & 8 until I start with the violin (a cuddly sound) in measures  9-12. However, Iā€™m not sure of how to make it cuddly. This is where I had in mind to press both pedals together and using flat fingers going towards me.  For the bassoon I could use half pedalling instead of full. 

     

    Regarding measures 13-16, the vibraphone and the tubular bells are part of the percussion family and you didnā€™t mentioned how to reproduce them. Maybe using the tips of the fingers for a little hedge, but with the sustain pedal to keep it smooth (bars 13-14).  Not sure how to do it for bars 14 to 16 (tubular bells start in bar 14).

     

    Itā€™s really an interesting two weeks intensives. Itā€™s my first and Iā€™m glad I applied for it. It really makes me pay attention to how I play and how I can vary and improve the sound I produce.

     

    Sorry for all the questions..

     

    Thanks in advance.

    šŸŽ¶šŸŽ¶PharašŸŽ¶šŸŽ¶

    Like
      • Daniela
      • Daniela.2
      • 1 yr ago
      • Reported - view

      Phara Paula Jean So, ideally the pedal should come a millisecond after the note, so that you don't get a break, and you make sure you have a completely clear sound for the new harmony.  Left foot for left pedal, right foot for right pedal and yes, they can be used in conjunction.  Left pedal does not need to be changed, so your pedaling at the opening can be done quite easily.  I like the word "hedge" and I think the tip will help get the ping-i-ness of percussion.  The bells seem brighter, so maybe a faster attack.  BTW, the questions are all good.  It's the whole point.  The exploration is what leads to new ways of creating sound.  Happy you decided to join!

      Like
  • Hello Daniela,

    Thanks for your answers and this two weeks intensives.

    Have a nice day.

    šŸŽ¶šŸŽ¶PharašŸŽ¶šŸŽ¶

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