Jeffrey Biegel: Ask me anything!
Jeffrey IS HERE AS OUR NEXT FEATURED "ASK ME ANYTHING" GUEST!
An heir to the legacy of Josef Lhevinne and Adele Marcus, Jeffrey Biegel has garnered a reputation as a prolific pianist and sought-after teacher.
Considered the most prolific artist of his generation, Moravian College in Bethlehem, PA, conferred the Honorary Degree of Doctor of Humane Letters upon Mr. Biegel, for his achievements in performance, recordings, chamber music, champion of new music, composer, arranger and educator.
It should be noted that Jeffrey is particularly a master of double notes, one of the more frightening technical challenges in the piano literature! If you have questions regarding this, be sure to ask!
WATCH His EXCLUSIVE TONEBASE LESSONS HERE:
9 Practice Tips on Liszt's Feux Follets
HOW TO PARTICIPATE
- Ask your questions right here until November 11th!
- Jeffrey will answer questions from November 14-18th!
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Your brilliant and powerful technique, and the training method you demonstrate on Tonebase, appears to be driven by force and motion at the level of the digits. Your fingers appear to make wide excursions up and down as you play each note. The sound you get is amazing.
The exercises in your Tonebase regimen strengthen the force that can be generated by each digit independently, and increase the range of motion of each digit. In passing, you mention the goal of learning to âplay to the bottom of the keyâ. You also demonstrate (octave exercises, some double note examples) exertion of force and wide range of motion (flexion/extension) from the wrist.
Some other teachers espouse a very different technique, argued to avoid injury, in which force is said to be generated by âgravityâ, or by ârotationâ (pronation/supination) of the hand. For them, the fingers serve a more passive role of directing the force from the arm to the correct keys, minimizing motion of the wrist and fingers, and avoiding positioning at the extremes. There is talk of depressing each key by a separate release of the forearm so that its weight is transferred through stiffened fingers. Some suggest that âplaying to the bottom of the keyâ is an invitation to injury by exerting unnecessary force without sonic effect. Others suggest that the âweaknessâ of the 4th and 5th fingers is corrected simply by a reorientation of the hand and wrist without the need for strengthening.
Iâm perplexed by the diversity of these (in some respects mutually exclusive) approaches.
In your experience, can this digitally-driven approach be accomplished by most people without injury? In performance (rather than just when training technically or exaggerating for the purposes of demonstration) do you still focus on the digital technique, or do the other approaches play an equally important role?
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Hi Jeffrey! Nice to meet you and thank you for giving us this opportunity to ask you questions. My question is about the descending double thirds passage in the first movement of the Grieg piano concerto â it happens twice, in both expo and recap sections marked Animato.
Here is a photo of that passage. I find that sometimes, I break down in the middle of the passage and I would love to be able to play it with 100% confidence, without fear of any mishaps! You can see the fingering Iâm using in the photo.
Would love to hear any advice you have on this. Thank you!
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Hi Jeffrey! I LOVED all of your videos so far!!!
My question is about piano practice in general. Iâm a conservatory student and I sometimes struggle with my organization. How do you organize your own practice sessions? Do you plan it in a journal and, if so, how precise is your plan?Thank you!!!
PS : maybe you knew my own teacher? His name is Michel Franck and he studied with Adele Marcus as well :)
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Hi Jeffrey. Me and my students loved all of your videos, it's has been very helpful for the students who are currently struggling about techniques.
My question is , is it true that you can't have artistic freedom if you don't have technical freedom? What if students between 16 - 20 years old who doesn't have perfect technique, but nearly perfect sense of articulation and story telling want's to pursuing piano performance as a career, would you still be encouraging them to go on this path , or give them other relative options for their career? Since there are age physical limitation on piano study.
Thank you very much for you time.
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I would like to know how you personally approach and learn a new piece of music. If relevant perhaps you could go into any differences due to time pressure (if you have to learn it really fast, for example), memorization (or not), chamber music vs solo, recording vs live, etc. Mostly, however, what is the best way to create a thorough, secure knowledge of the piece so as to feel free in performance. Thank you.
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Dear Jeffrey, Thank you for sharing your expertise with us at Tonebase. I am an adult beginner (started since the pandemic). I have two questions:
1. Timing/rhythm is a huge challenge for me in both singing and playing piano. I do better on sub-divisions but not on a steady pulse. What would be your specific suggestions to consistently improve this area? My teacher tells me to use metronome to start the beat and then turns it off, to not to play mechanically.
2. The technique my teacher teaches me is arm and wrist motions (rotation, lateral motion etc), but never any finger exercise (except scales/arps) such as Hanon. Your technique series shows your emphasis on finger strength. I'm curious how you would modify your teaching to a mid-life adult beginner. Do you think the Hanon exercise/finger development still important?
Appreciate your feedback!
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Hi Jeffrey! I have a few questions for you.
1. I'm interested in learning "Sleigh Ride" by Leroy Anderson and arranged for piano by Andrew Gentile. I was wondering if you could provide me with any suggestions/techniques/tricks on how to go about learning this particular piece?
2. I would like to get more comfortable with playing octaves, especially in pieces like Chopin's Scherzo No. 3 in c-sharp minor and Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody No. 6. Any specific drills I could be doing?
3. Speaking about Chopin's Scherzo No. 3, to this day I've always had difficulty playing both hands together and it sounding effortlessly beginning at the cascading arpeggio sections. I've attached a picture to show you one of the spots where the piece has these figures. My left hand always seems to get tripped up and it feels awkward. Your advice would be greatly appreciated on how to tackle these sections.
Thank you very much for your time and expertise!
Take care,
Ben