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I am having difficulty playing continuous multiple notes quietly.
For example, the left handās part of Chopin Prelude OP. No.4 is hard.
If I play very delicately, I miss some sound of the notes, or the volume of each note does not come out the same.
I wonder if there are any tips.
Eric Lu is doing a wonderful job on this video.
Eric Lu ā Chopin: Preludes, Op. 28: No. 4 in E Minor, Largo (youtube.com)
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Third movement of Beethovenās Appassionata. All the fast left hand work is pretty challenging for me although Iāve made great strides with my left hand in the past few years. The big thing that has helped me is symmetrical inversion (I think thatās the right term). It helps to train my left hand by showing me how the right hand would handle those passages. But the biggest thing is learning to rotate my left hand. For example, the last beats in measures 52, 56, and 62 are difficult for me to make clean as I want to rely too much on pushing my fingers down instead of rotating the wrist as my right hand would do it. Any and all tips are appreciated!
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Manyā¦ also, Jeez you guys, lots of really big handsful of notes here.
Prokofiev 8th Sonata, last 2 pages of first movement. Just in cleanup mode but it's been a long time coming. 3rd movement - not as hard and tons of fun. But there is a lot of it!
Beethoven Op 90, the stretchy Alberni bass bb 55-58 and similar. How to get that sounding like it isn't a huge lift?
Learning Rachmaninoff Op23 #8. Lovely piece, essentially an etude. One long passage. Lots of work for a guy without big mitts. Long process of refining the exact approach to each of the chords.
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I've been playing the piano since I was 5. I'm now 81 and I still haven't quite figured it out :-)
But I can share some things that took me too long to learn:
1. Relaxation! I first heard this from Mme. Lhevinne when I was about 17. It's a big part of the secret of what separates virtuosos from us ordinary mortals. Watch Martha Argerich play anything. Total relaxation. Of course, she's a genius, but that doesn't mean we can't learn something from her. Similarly, watch Rebecca Penneys play the last movement of the Chopin b-minor Sonata on youtube. This is a woman in her 70s (who was runnerup to Argerich at the Chopin Competition) and she plays this movement, which I consider one of the most physically demanding in the entire piano literature, with mind-boggling ease. She has one of the most efficient piano techniques I've ever encountered and I think observing how she plays can help the rest of us.
2. Fingering. Juana Zayas, who made a really masterful recording of all the Chopin Etudes (recall that even Rubinstein didn't tackle that project!), told an old and dear friend of mine who has occasional lessons with her, that many, if not most, technical problems are caused by bad fingering. Think about it -- there's wisdom in that remark.
3. Redistribution. Yes, it's true that Rudolf Serkin was opposed to redistribution. But none of us is Rudolf Serkin. I asked Marc-Andre Hamelin once about whether he redistributes, knowing Serkin's position on this matter, and he looked at me as if I had two heads. "Of course I do". I don't think it's possible to play much of Gaspard de la Nuit, particularly Ondine, without redistribution. Another example -- the Prokofiev 3rd Sonata. There are passages that are difficult to impossible to play as written that become possible with redistribution.
4. Slow practice. Rachmaninoff did it. Marc-Andre advocates it. Need I say more?
5. Memorizing. There is a great deal of piano music that requires marksmanship that simply cannot be achieved if you are not looking at the keyboard where you need to be looking! Watch Horowitz play the Scriabin Etude in d#-minor Op. 8, No. 12. He watches those left-hand leaps like a hawk. And he didn't miss. How does Sokolov play the Precipitato movement of the Prokofiev 7th Sonata so accurately, attacking so much of it from so far above the keyboard (which produces his uniquely thrilling sound)? It would be impossible to do what he does with eyes glued to the score. Ok, it's impossible for the rest of us to do what he does no matter where our eyes are, but that does not negate the fact that there is something to be learned from him.
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Thank you so much for your contribution to this broad question Don. I learnt the piano at a young age but my music had to take backstage as I approached 20 as I concentrated on my career. However, in the last 4 or 5 years I have rediscovered (so to speak) that music bug within me. Unfortunately I didnāt have a solid grounding in technique when I was young, until much later in my journey. By then I was tackling difficult works but the lack of a solid grounding hindered my true potential. My last two teachers (in my youth) took me right back to basics (Hanon, Czerny, scales etc). It was a good two or three years before could learn some challenging repertoire. I am now 70 and finding it enjoyable expanding my repertoire. I find that all of what you have written goes a long way to making difficult passages playable. I do however have trouble memorising. I know a lot more about the concept of memorisation. In my early days I depended almost entirely on muscle memory. Today of course that is hopelessly inadequate. As much as I try to use analytical skills, I still struggle hence end up playing wrong notes and patterns (memorising Bach is quite an experience. Easier to memorise a telephone directory).
I have written much about myself and I do apologise but thank you for making the effort to wade through my woes. The main point though is that just reading your comments has encouraged me to persist with what I am doing. Iām currently learning the prelude of the a minor English suite of Bach, tidying up the Chopin Op 48/1, and have just started learning the notes of the Beethoven Tempest sonata.
I find slow practice a challenge as I am by nature an impatient person. Therein lies another problem.