Group 2
Welcome to the NEW TWO WEEK INTENSIVE on tonebase!
Improving your Scales with Dominic Cheli
We will be working on different techniques on building speed, virtuosity, and confidence in our scales with assignments posted by Dominic!
Post your progress with videos and written commentary on how things are going for you!
- Course Period: May 13 - 25
- Class Size: ALL are welcome!
- Optional check-In via Zoom: May 22 at 11am PT
- ZOOM MEETING LINK:
https://us06web.zoom.us/j/87650346065?pwd=iNGsfHMSqMVopfHw3bnxalYfaDuwpe.1
Assignment #1
In this assignment Dominic discusses "grouping practice" for your scales. This is a great way to increase your speed, finger control and independence.
- Choose a scale to work on (could be C major, or a relevant scale from your repertoire)
- Let's work on "2 note groupings"
- Start slow, start hands separate, and increase to 4 octave scales with both hands together
- IMPORTANT: Remember to keep the proper fingering at all times for the scale! (The Standard fingering found in any technique book, or in your decided fingering for a scale passage).
- Between each grouping, take as much time as you like, and focus on fast movements
- If a group poses trouble, stop and work on that specific part of the scale!
Assignment #2
1. Focus on your thumb and (optional) take a video of it!
2. Choose a passage to apply grouping practice to, and share why!
3. Make sure to focus on your scales and practice hands separately, even just polishing/perfecting a few groups! Don't need to complete the whole scale!
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To help me do this exercise I noted the fingering at each stop, the third note, like this :
Octave 1 : C - left hand 1 - right hand 1 (The start)
F - 2 - 1
B - 2 - 4
Octave 2: E - 3 - 3
A - 3 - 3
Ocatve3 : D - 4 - 2
G - 1 - 2
Octave4: C - 1 - 1
F - 2 - 1
B - 2 - 4
Coming down :
Octave4 : A 3-3
E. 3-3
Octave3: B 2-4
F. 2-1
C 1-1
Octave2: G 1-2
D 4-2
Octave1: A 3-3
E 3-3
D 4-2
At this point D 4-2 to change the scale C in scale D I did
Ocatve 1 G 1-1
C Sharp 2-4
Octave 2 F Sharp 3 -3
B 3-3
I presume that I have to do this for each change of scale, D to E, to F, and to C,
Is the fingering for the scale change correct?
Nothing the figering helps me to do this exercise.
Do you agree with this Dominic ?
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I'm looking forward to putting more work into this TWI! I'll do C# minor, since it's featured in the Chopin etude I'm working on.
Impressions from the video and initial questions:
- It's just too cool that you learned grouping from Babayan.
- "Ability to stop on a dime is the essence of finger independence"--interesting, since I think we tend to think about finger independence as the ability to *start* a finger moving on a dime.
- "2 note grouping" -- terminology confuses me also, since it sounds like 3 notes. Aline Valade's comment from yesterday helped make sense of it (thanks!)
- Boris Berman recommends playing scales with fingers "living" at different "floors" above the keys (see image text below, from Notes from the Pianist's Bench), with higher floors being for passages with more active articulation. Would you recommend this? I guess the related question is about how much finger action we should "feel" when playing scales, or if each note should have some feeling of arm weight dropping on it, albeit super fast (I know some respected teachers would say the fingers should always start at the keys and arm weight should drive everything).
- It would also be helpful to see your thoughts on what the thumb should do during fast scales, particularly the amount of vertical thumb movement vs. arm dropping, and whether the thumb should be curled and if yes, how much.
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A question about finding just the right place to stop during grouping practice. I find that when the stopping point is a thumb, I'm stopping with my 3rd or 4th finger already in place above and across the thumb, ready for the next note. Typically the fingers will already be there by the time the thumb note is struck. Is that the position in which a person should be pausing the motion?
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Here's my week 1 video. C# minor. I stop and repeat sections here and there where I mix up fingerings or miss notes.
My left hand has always felt significantly more clunky and less accurate, and I'm trying to figure out what it's doing differently compared to my right hand--it feels less supported and the fingers are more inclined to buckle. I suspect it has something to do with the dome of the hand or how I extend my other fingers when playing, but it might be something else.
I took video at keybed level, figuring that would be a helpful perspective. Now that I look at it, I'm not sure if my wrists are at a good height.
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Looking forward to this so much, as it has arrived at a perfect time for me.
I have been so disabled by the wretched respiratory virus, which has plagued the world seemingly (another one!). I have only just shaken it off: yesterday was the first day that I felt that I was finally better!
I am on two TB platforms, flute as well as piano, and my plan for the coming week is to go back through missed flute assignments but concentrate on this scales one for the piano.
I did Dominic's scale course up to the lesson on three octaves, which included grouping. I find doing four octaves makes more sense, particularly for contrary motion, so the first course of action is to go back to DC's scales course and do the four octave lesson.
I promise to upload a video in before we reach Wk 2, which will inspire to work out how to use all the new recorder equipment that I have purchased/collected!