PART ONE
– THE FOREGROUND:
PARTICULARLY
PIANISTIC PROBLEMS IN MUSICAL CRAFT
I. GETTING STARTED
1. INTRODUCTION
A NEW APPROACH
Natural, individual,
and systematic human activity
REDUCED PHYSICAL PROWESS
HAS LED TO HOMOGENIZED MUSICAL EXPRESSION
HOROWITZ: A BENCHMARK
IN ABILITY
Other movement disciplines
feed view of piano technique
BACK TO MOVEMENT BASICS
FOR FUNDAMENTAL, GLOBAL IMPROVEMENT
Primary focus on
the physical
2. HOW TO USE
THIS BOOK
Be flexible – adapt
the book to your own learning style
Conscious analysis
of normally automatic actions
Anatomical clarifications
3. BACKGROUND,
MIDDLEGROUND AND FOREGROUND: A PLAN FOR WORK
THE BACKGROUND: TELL
A STORY
THE MIDDLEGROUND: SOME
MUSICAL CRAFT ESSENTIALS
1) Expressive Strategies
in Rhetoric
Long notes longer,
short notes shorter
Entasis
Inflecting melodic
contour
Inflecting syncopations
2) Pulse
3) Basic sound:
orchestration
4) Basic sound:
legato
5) Orchestration
and sound image: experience leads to conception, conception to realization
THE FOREGROUND – CULTIVATING
PHYSICAL CAPABILITY
4. WHERE TO START?
Elements of the
foreground
The relationship
of movement to sound
Functional hand
strength - the hand’s power derives from function not force
Avoid injury by
maximizing not reducing functional options
II. GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF MOVEMENT AT THE PIANO
5. A MEDITATION
ON SOME INNER WORKINGS OF MOVEMENT
Habitual contraction
as a hindrance to movement
The benefits of
cultivating effective stillness
Reversible movements
are free of inhibitory habitual contractions
6. ‘SLOWING THE
KEY DOWN’
Hidden causes of
harsh tone
7. FORM FOLLOWS
FUNCTION
Aim for variety
of tone, not only beauty
Any tone, movement
or position can be correct, given the appropriate context
Correct positions,
movements become byproduct of appropriate musical activity
Use extremes effectively
– healthy finger curling
Dual muscular pull:
the effective balance of opposing forces
Hand-arm fixation
– a positive use of stiffness
8. ‘ARM WEIGHT’
More global understanding
of human movement needed
The nature of freedom
Muscles directing
the motion of arm mass
Arm weight never
the sole ingredient in a movement
Over-relaxation
leads to excess tension
Appropriate activity
leads to healthy tone
The problem of subjective
perception
Maintain global
view
Participation of
all muscles may not be perceived as such
The ultra-relaxed,
ultra-alive movement of Feldenkrais Method
Relaxation to facilitate
effective activity
9. MATTHAY, MOSHE
AND MOVEMENT
Upright stance an
imperfect evolutionary adaptation?
Feldenkrais to melt
‘immoveable’ structures
Rotation necessary
to lay hand palm down?
A new perception
of normal
III. HAND STRENGTH AND FUNCTION A: PERFECTING LEGATO
10. PHYSICAL LEGATO
IS THE FOUNDATION OF PIANO TECHNIQUE
A template for control
T’ai Chi walking
and legato
APPLICATION #1:
LEGATO I – T’AI CHI WALKING
APPLICATION #2:
LEGATO II – ‘FINGERSTANDS’: THE PIANISTIC EQUIVALENT OF HANDSTANDS
APPLICATION #3:
LEGATO III – WALKING ON THE KEYBOARD
Discrimination of
functions
11. THE TWO MAIN
COMPONENTS OF LEGATO
Arm facilitates
physical connection between keys
1) The similarity
between hand-finger, pelvis-leg
2) The role of the
arm related to hand function
Literal and inflected
legato
Chain of hummocks
APPLICATION #4:
STRUCTURAL FUNCTION I – FINGER PULL-UPS
Don’t confuse your
wrist and your second knuckle
APPLICATION #5:
LEGATO IV – OVERHOLDING I
Overholding, arm
freedom and finger insubordination
Overhold without
strangling the light breath movement of your arm
Differentiation
of arm and finger
Overhold even in
performance
No more ‘pianistic
polio’!
‘If I hang on to
make a true legato, I’m stretched, tight.’
Compensate the tendency
to rush
APPLICATION #6:
LEGATO V – FEATHER-LIGHT LEGATO
Walking without
pressing
Melody not the metronome
APPLICATION #7:
LEGATO VI – T’AI CHI WALKING REVIEW
IV. HAND STRENGTH AND FUNCTION B – SPECIAL ROLE OF THE THUMB; RELATIONSHIP OF THUMB TO FOREFINGER
12. THE THUMB
AND GRASPING
Special structure
of the thumb
APPLICATION #9:
GRASPING I
Step 1: Grasp to
experience the innate strength of your hand
Role of the thumb
Step 2: Make this
radically new sensation familiar
Step 3: A simple
application of grasping in orchestration
13. ‘THUMB PUSHUPS’:
THE HAND AS SUSPENSION SPRING
APPLICATION #10:
THUMB I – THUMB PUSHUPS
Arm pressure imitates
body weight
Thumb-forefinger
isometrics
Pass fourth finger
over while thumb continues to push up
14. CLARIFICATION
OF THE THUMB-FOREFINGER RELATIONSHIP
Develop strength
while maintaining sensitivity
Mysterious inactivity
of the second finger in a Chopin figuration
APPLICATION #11:
THUMB II – THUMB AND FOREFINGER
Rigid strength inadequate
Anchor hand on heel,
freely swing second
Strong thumb muscle
does not rigidify second finger
Thumb can support
even when not standing: there’s more than one way to skin a cat!
APPLICATION #12:
THUMB III – OPPOSITE DIRECTION THUMB STROKE
Thumb often plays
by opening not closing
15. QUALITY OF
MOVEMENT IN THUMB PUSHUPS
Perceive every part
of every step
Uncovering the real
source of a problem in Italian Concerto
APPLICATION #13:
THUMB IV – SMOOTH MOVEMENT
Sudden movements
lack dimensionality
Find the thumb movement’s
three-dimensional path
Thumb stays resting
on key: contrary strategy gives further clarification of function
16. FOREFINGER
ARC SWINGS FOR THUMB FUNCTION
V. HAND STRENGTH AND FUNCTION C – SYNTHESIS OF HAND AND ARM FUNCTION IN OCTAVES
17. FROM THE THUMB
ACROSS TO THE FIFTH FINGER: HAND STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION IN OCTAVE PLAYING
APPLICATION #15:
THUMB V – REVIEW OF STRENGTH AND STRUCTURE
Open that space
Open and close thumb
to move hand right and left
Pushups
APPLICATION #16:
OCTAVES I – FIFTH FINGER PULL-UPS
APPLICATION #17:
OCTAVES II – THE ARCH FROM THUMB ACROSS TO FIFTH
Maintain at least
some small degree of arch in octave hand extension
Center of gravity
is over thumb not fifth
The bipartite hand;
ballet dancer-like turnout
Voicing the top
even when structure is centered over the lower voice
APPLICATION #18:
LEGATO IX – OVERHOLDING II, GRASPING II
Overholding in Hanon
Same structural
relationships empower passagework
Grasp to activate
your God-given strength!
18. FORTISSIMO
OCTAVES
APPLICATION #20:
OCTAVES IV – SHAKE THE PIANO
Drawing together
to consolidate hand strength
APPLICATION #21:
GRASPING III – SOFTEN FOR GREATER POWER
Towards healthy
rather than aggressive power – natural grasping
Hand activation
– for a free, soft forearm
Hand activation
– generates structural integrity
Hand activation
– sidesteps danger of tendonitis
APPLICATION #22:
OCTAVES V – FREELY VIBRATING OCTAVES
Whip hand back over
shoulder
Analogous to drumstick
on a drumhead
Same free attack,
but now stay on key
You must really
trick your mind!
Powerful octaves:
fewer movements for more sound – cut the classic ‘arm out to the side’
19. REPLACING
ARM SWOOP WITH COBRA STRIKE
APPLICATION #53:
ARM II – ARM AS WHIP
Freeing up your
arm throw
Use mind over matter
Fingers of steel
wrapped in velvet
20. BIG SOUND
FROM A SMALL HAND
APPLICATION #54:
STRUCTURAL FUNCTION VIII – MINIMAL MOVEMENT FOR MAXIMAL SOUND
Loosen all joints
for a new type of legato in Liszt’s Dante Sonata
Keep ‘re-minimizing’
your effort
Increase dynamic
power but stay on key, strangely motionless
21. TREMOLANDO OCTAVES
22. ‘TEUTONIC
BEEF’
APPLICATION #19:
OCTAVES III – MEATY TECHNIQUE FOR MEATY TONE
Thick, meaty tone
in Beethoven octaves
23. THE ‘OCTAVE
ARM-SWEEP’
APPLICATION #23:
OCTAVES VI: INFLECTED LEGATO OCTAVES
Clangorous leaping
octaves in Scriabin’s Etude Op. 42 #5
How to leave without
letting go…
Arm joins to make
two chords one event
Reverse direction
of circle
Draw thumb and fifth
together
Arm and hand must
be out of sync
VI. HAND STRENGTH AND FUNCTION D – MAXIMAL ARTICULATION OF THE FINGERS
24. ON FINGERTAPPING
Origins, definition
and description
Resulting deep,
resonant sound
Effortless accuracy
Quickly find ideal
hand shape
Cure old habits
Active hand clamps
passive finger
Stimulation to new
internal adjustment
Reorganization of
biceps-triceps activity
25. THE STRUCTURE-SUPPORTED SLAP
26. THE SOUND
OF ONE HAND CLAPPING
Arm pressure not
the path to big sound
APPLICATION #60:
STRUCTURAL FUNCTION IX – MAXIMIZE FINGER ARTICULATION, ELIMINATE ARM SHAKE
Negative effects
of your arm shaking in forte scales
Your arm is not
a finger!
Ultra-staccato finger
stroke
APPLICATION #60A:
STRUCTURAL FUNCTION X – ONE HAND CLAPPING
Horizontal hand/arm
carriage, active fingers
27. LEGATO VS.
FINGER ARTICULATION – THE COOPERATION OF TWO ANTITHETICAL ACTIVITIES
Confront a contradiction
for breakthrough in ability
APPLICATION #14:
LEGATO VIII – MAXIMAL ARTICULATION AND LEGATO
Individual finger
action within block chord practice in Beethoven’s Appassionata
Maintain structural
stability
Maintain maximum
finger stroke
Synthesis: maintain
both
VII. ABOVE THE HAND: THE ROLE OF THE WRIST AND ARM
28. ACTIVE HAND, PASSIVE ARM?
29. THE UNDERLYING
MUSICAL PURPOSE OF ARM MOVEMENT
APPLICATION #24:
OCTAVES VII – THE OBLIQUE WHOLE ARM
Economical octave
leaps
APPLICATION #25:
STRUCTURAL FUNCTION II – THE BIRD BEAK
Bird beak exercise
renders lateral arm movement superfluous
Classic ‘elbow out
to side’ movement creates two problems instead of solving one
Cure an unconscious
habit by consciously learning its opposite
The arm as phrase
generator
Even a pencil can
play legato if arm helps
Legato equals phrase:
only one arm movement per phrase
Professionals fall
into the same error
The transmission
of forces through the wrist
APPLICATION #26:
WRIST I – PHRASE SHAPE
Another phrasing
machine
Minimal movements
30. FUNCTIONALLY
SUPPORTED MOVEMENT: THE WHOLE ARM AS FINGER
APPLICATION #27:
STRUCTURAL FUNCTION III – WHOLE ARM AS A WHIP
APPLICATION #28:
STRUCTURAL FUNCTION IV – THE PHIL COHEN ARM-SWING EXERCISE
A cure for incapable
immobility
Primary movements
require correct supportive activity from the rest of your mechanism
APPLICATION #29:
STRUCTURAL FUNCTION V – ISOMETRIC ARM WRESTLING
Banded fingers for
ultra-lush cantabile
Ineffectual pulling,
curling
Flatten, reinforce
in order to feel
Grasping - review
Banded fingers,
neutral wrist position connect hand to arm
A 2-kg finger!
Constant physical
security to maintain phrase
31. EFICIENT FUNCTIONALITY: THE FOREARM AS LEVER
32. THE UNDERLYING MUSICAL PURPOSE OF ARM MOVEMENT
33. MINIMIZE AUXILIARY
MOVEMENTS TO MAXIMIZE EFFICIENCY
External body efforts
counterproductive
Even ‘arm swoops’
hurt more than help
Finger, arm involvement
both affect tone quality
Internal generation
of tone quality
APPLICATION #31:
GRASPING IV – PARTICIPATION OF HIGHER ARM MUSCLES IN FINGER MOVEMENT
Triceps’ stabilization
activity feels like active work
Grasp, monitor where
else contractions occur
Supportive muscular
activity is internal not external
‘Functional structure’
Minimize auxiliary
movements to maximize efficiency – internal moves should replace external
34. FURTHER MUSICAL
IMPLICATIONS OF PROPER ARM-HAND COOPERATION IN LEGATO
APPLICATION #8:
LEGATO VII – MUSICAL FLOW
Control of attacks
should not impede arm flow
Relearn the passage
with feeling of arm sculpting
VIII. ROTATION
35. FOREARM ROTATION
IN LISZT
Functional advantage
of upright human posture
Types of arm rotation
Negative consequences
of lateral wrist motion in ‘Jeux d’Eau’
APPLICATION #32
– ROTATION I – INGREDIENTS OF ROTATION
Inefficiency of
swivelling
Rotation necessitates
and facilitates some strange stretching
Keep your wrist
to the inside even as thumb rotates to the outside
1) Quick, efficient
thumb movement back to its note
2) Vertical finger
stretching more than doubles their span
Your fingers are
‘up’ and ‘down’ in relation to your hand not in their orientation in space
Similarity to doing
the splits in ballet
A little practice
Incorporation of
other fingers into this movement
Result: drastic
increase in wrist flexibility and function
Thumb moving to
the outside keeps ahead of fingers, lags behind them while moving to the
inside
Still swing your
thumb
Improve gradually,
master each individual component of the movement
Your wrist is not
your thumb!
Other instances
APPLICATION #33:
ROTATION II – LEAPS IN LA CAMPANELLA
APPLICATION # 34:
ROTATION III – FOREARM HAND-FLUTTER EXERCISE TO CLARIFY ROTATION IN LEAPING
IX. NATURAL FINGER SHAPE
36. THE NATURAL
HAND IN PASSAGEWORK
Chopin E major Scherzo
Op. 54
APPLICATION #35:
NATURAL SHAPE I – FINDING AND USING YOUR NATURAL FINGER SHAPE
Eliminate physical
spasm preparations – maintain neutrality
Lift your finger
still maintaining neutrality
Drop your finger
back in
APPLICATION #35A:
NATURAL SHAPE II – ROLE OF YOUR ARM
Inner activations
of the upper arm
Forearm rising to
lift your finger
APPLICATION #36:
NATURAL SHAPE III – HAND EXTENSION
Special role of
thumb
Extension without
deformation
Arm helps in this
APPLICATION #37:
NATURAL SHAPE IV – LEGATO REVIEW
Review legato to
increase dynamic volume
More weight pressure
while maintaining neutrality
Discrimination of
touches: simultaneous feather and pressure touches
Gradual increase,
decrease of pressure
Reversibility in
yin finger’s touch
Towards incorporation
into passagework
Transfer of pylon
function to the yin finger
Differentiation
of yin/yang energies between different voices
37. USING THE
YIN/YANG FINGER PHENOMENON IN ORCHESTRATION
Yin finger retains
all the structural qualities of a yang finger
APPLICATION #38:
NATURAL SHAPE V – SEPARATION OF YIN AND YANG IN LEGATO
Yin/yang contrast
easier to feel when no transition from one to the other required
Metacarpal-phalangeal
hummocks formed by function not force
Strange feeling
as if triceps activates finger
Yin/yang in Brahms
38. NATURAL FINGER
SHAPE AND TONUS IN CHORDS
Beethoven’s Sonata
in E flat major Opus 7
Natural finger function
leads to blossoming sound
Enlarged capacity
to sense
The strange phenomenon
of increased sustained-ness
Degree of sensitivity
corollary to degree of colour
Increased variety
of articulation
APPLICATION #39:
ARTICULATIONS I
Quality of playing
not hitting
Looseness prerequisite
to movement, fingers move in playing chords as well
APPLICATION #40:
NATURAL SHAPE VI – ORCHESTRATION OF CHORDAL TEXTURES
Absence of deformation
a prerequisite to effective movement
Arm aids the constant
miniscule shifting of the hand, increased amounts of tone
Dynamic shading
of chord for orchestral tone
Small differences
cannot be detected in the midst of a large effort
Minimize movement
to maximize sensitivity, exactitude
APPLICATION #41:
NATURAL SHAPE VII – FAST, EFFORTLESS PASSAGEWORK
Drum your fingers
on the desk
39. MAINTAINING
NATURAL FINGER SHAPE IN SCALES
‘Don’t swat!’
The system of air
circulation in ‘Chi Gung’
APPLICATION #42:
NATURAL SHAPE VIII – CHI GUNG AT THE PIANO
Subtle body involvement
in ‘arm breathing’
APPLICATION #43:
NATURAL SHAPE IX – EXTENSION WITHOUT DEFORMATION
Proximal interphalangeal
joint reaches for the sky
Opening up without
‘reaching’ – no deformation of natural shape
APPLICATION #44:
NATURAL SHAPE X – FLUTTER-FLIP EXERCISE
APPLICATION #43A:
NATURAL SHAPE XI: DON’T SWIVEL IN SCALES
APPLICATION #45:
NATURAL SHAPE XII – ARPEGGIOS
Some swivelling
now allowed
Arm begins shift
as soon as possible
X. SOME OTHER TOUCH STRATEGIES AND COMBINATIONS
40. SYNTHESIS
OF VARIOUS STRANDS OF THOUGHT
towards exceptional
power, accuracy and colour
41. PRESSING AND
HOLDING IN LEGATO
APPLICATION #46:
LEGATO X – PRESSING IN ‘AU BORD D’UNE SOURCE’
Proper pressing
can strengthen structure
Arm continues to
move even while generating pressure down through hand into keys
Applied to double
notes in ‘Au Bord d’une Source’
Use the graphic
sensory image
42. THE HIDDEN
PROBLEM IN DOUBLE NOTES – FEUX FOLLETS
APPLICATION #47:
STRUCTURAL FUNCTION VI – INTERNAL FINGER ACTIVITY IN LISZT’S ‘FEUX FOLLETS’
Play the right hand’s
lower voice separately
Natural shape –
a review
APPLICATION #48:
LEGATO XI – NON-LEGATO SOUND, LEGATO TOUCH
Fast changing-note
exercise – legato with no pressure gives special result
APPLICATION #49:
THUMB VI – INTERDEPENDENCE OF THUMB AND FINGERS
Uniqueness of the
thumb
Thumb as platform
or support pylon
String lifts fingers
– minimal effort as if from external source
Discrimination can
transform conflict of intentions into cooperation: thumb strength can aid
finger lightness, freedom
No stopping – not
even in reversals of direction
Everything must
sound – dynamics as well as notes
43. CHOPIN’S B
FLAT MINOR SCHERZO: TWO FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES REVIEWED
Hand structure plus
arm function to freely ‘bong’ the soundboard
APPLICATION #50:
OCTAVES VIII – ARCH FUNCTION REVIEW
Self-generating
arch for better tone
Once more, grasping
review
APPLICATION #51:
OCTAVES IX – COBRA-STRIKE REVIEW
Cobra-strike octaves
for power
APPLICATION #52:
STRUCTURAL FUNCTION VII – LEGATO REVIEW
Maintaining the
sense of hand strength in passagework.
Just enough wrist
movement
44. MUTUAL AID
BETWEEN THUMB AND FOREFINGER IN THE SCRIABIN CONCERTO
Do not use editor’s
hand substitutions!
APPLICATION #55:
THUMB VII – MUTUALLY SUPPORTIVE PLATFORMS; ROTATION
Thumb, forefinger
act as mutually supportive platforms
Rotation
45. ARTICULATIONS
APPLICATION #56:
ARTICULATION II – FEEL THE MASS AND VIBRATION OF THE KEY
Increased richness
of sensation leads to improved ability control
Partial or complete
control of the hammer - both have their useful application
Jog one arm with
the other
Jogging the key
to sense hammer weight
Grasp and jiggle
– control descent as well as ascent
Sensing in actuality
allows absolute control
APPLICATION #57:
STACCATO I – THICK-TONED, BEEFY BEETHOVEN STACCATOS
APPLICATION #58:
STACCATO II – ‘ARM DOWN - HAND UP’ OCTAVE STACCATOS
Mendelssohn’s Scherzo
Capriccioso
APPLICATION #59:
STACCATO III – HARMONIC STACCATO TOUCH
Arm does have a
supportive role in finger staccato
Arm moves not to
produce sound but to balance internal forces
Stopping the rebound
of the key gives you control over staccato’s exact duration
‘Cat-scratch’ and
feel the weight of the hammers
Intention to do
a movement can be more effective than movement itself
46. THE FELDENKRAIS
- HOROWITZ CONNECTION
Genesis of a method
Vladimir Horowitz
His posture reflects
quality of movement 1
His hand structure
and function
How this cultivates
finger independence
Internal arm contractions
replace external movements to generate tone
Great playing despite
overmoving
47. FLAT FINGERS
The intention to
curl is still present in a flat finger attack
Capable karate chops
APPLICATION #61:
STRUCTURAL FUNCTION XI – FLAT FINGERS TO INCREASE CONTACT WITH THE KEY
Flat-fingered octaves,
chords
Radical reorganization!
Area of contact
fifteen times greater
Towards healthy
pianistic sound for all
‘Oh, you mean like
Horowitz’
A basic premise
the more you can do, the more fun you have!
48. PEDALLING
Radical voicing needed
to improve colour of concert grand
APPLICATION #62:
PEDAL ‘UP’ NOT DOWN
Lighten your pedal
to open your sound, increase variety of colour
Horowitz’s pedal
technique
49. TOGETHER!
APPLICATION #63:
HANDS TOGETHER
Increase togetherness
of hands to improve your sound
Trying for togetherness
uncovers insidious habits of overmoving
Develop your powers
of observation
50. QUESTIONABLE CONTRADICTIONS
PART TWO
– THE MIDDLEGROUND:
SOME
ASPECTS OF MUSICAL CRAFT
XI. RHYTHM
51. HIERARCHY
OF RHYTHMIC VALUES IS A PRACTICAL REALITY
The three beats
of a waltz are by nature unequal
Phrase entrance,
exit are also components of rhythm
We might even say
that pulse equals phrase, phrase equals pulse
Pulse will not be
felt unless notes in between are phrased
52. A PRACTICAL
EXERCISE IN RHYTHM
APPLICATION #64:
PULSE I – DIVIDE HANDS TO EXERCISE BRAIN
Alberti bass split
between the hands to increase brain flexibility
Increase dynamic
without increasing speed
Micropauses for
graphic, tangible pulse
Pulse: precise muscular
control of the moment of attack
Distort pulse proportions
(a la Parthenon) for an even more visceral rhythmic feel
Cross hands over
Master more variations
for more brain flexibility
Vary not only the
note sequences but which hand takes what notes
53. CREATIVE WORK
WITH THE METRONOME – PULSE
APPLICATION #65:
PULSE II – MASTERING THE METRONOME
Become the master,
not the slave of the metronome
Mentally, physically
relax prior to pulse note
XII. PHRASING
54. CREATIVE WORK
WITH THE METRONOME – MELODIC INFLECTION
Slower tempo lends
tragic emotional tone to Rachmaninoff’s Second Concerto, first movement
APPLICATION #66:
PHRASING I – THE METRONOME AND FLEXIBILITY IN PHRASING
Ahead of or behind
the beat while nevertheless always tied to it
55. PLASTICITY
IN PHRASING: EXPRESSION WITHOUT BOMBAST
Repeated agogic
accents an unevolved expressive strategy
APPLICATION #67:
PHRASING II – DON’T CUT PHRASES, COMPLETE THEM
Rachmaninoff’s Etude
in E flat minor Op. 39 #5
Cut it or care for
it – what is your relationship to the life of a melody?
Sing to create pure
musical image, then translate it to piano
Dynamic and rhythmic
direction for phrase life
Cut neither the
phrase nor the actual physical forces coming down through your arm
Soloistic expressive
rubato – for the accompanying orchestra: verboten!
Breaths between
phrases counterproductive
APPLICATION #68:
PHRASING III – CONNECTIONS BETWEEN PHRASES
Liszt’s ‘Jeux d’Eau’
Lengthen long notes
Soft wrists for
limpid staccatos in Jeux d’Eau
A higher type of
control
Melody in octaves:
wrist flexibility while maintaining finger contact
APPLICATION #67A:
ORCHESTRATION II – ACCOMPANIMENT TAKES LEAD ROLE IN CREATING OVERALL DYNAMIC
LEVELS
A few further pointers
56. GESTURE IN
PHRASING: A DETAILED EXAMINATION
Other elements in
legato besides the physical
1: Dynamic inflection
Clues: violin bowings
and vocal phrasing
2: Refinement of
physical movements
Stop wrong moves,
not all moves!
Replace generic
moves with exact melodic choreography
Do your sigh motives
really sigh?
57. TOWARDS A NEW MODE OF AWARENESS IN PLAYING
XIII. ORCHESTRATION
58. ORCHESTRATION: THE HEART OF THE PIANIST'S ART
PART THREE: THE BACKGROUND
59. EMOTIONAL
CONTENT IN COUNTERPOINT? YOU BET!
Bach Prelude in
B minor, WTC Book 1
Do not neglect subsidiary
voices
Inflecting melodic
structure makes it speak
It even speaks with
emotion!
APPLICATION #69:
MUSICAL STRUCTURE AND EMOTIONAL CONTENT
A melody’s emotion
is inherent in its structure
Detach leap to better
articulate syncopation
Second voice is
doing something else – that’s why we hear it as a different voice!
Constant fluctuation
of structural intensities
Strategies to inflect
counterpoint
Left hand ‘bowings’
60. YOU MUST BE
WILLING AND ABLE TO LIVE EMOTIONALLY WHEN YOU PLAY.
Access the same
archetypes that moved composer to create masterworks
Conceive a program
to activate archetype
A new view of art
and emotions
61. THE MASTERWORKS
AS EXPRESSIONS OF OBJECTIVE KNOWLEDGE
The nature of actions
derived from being
Masterworks derived
from being
Similarity to prayer
– leading one towards being
An interpretive
process at the piano that accesses being
62. REAL PIANO
SOUND CAN GENERATE EMOTIONAL CONTENT
Aspects of Liszt’s
personal life expressed in composition
A FEW LAST THOUGHTS
63. TALENT AND CRAFTSMANSHIP
64. PROFESSIONAL DEFORMATIONS
65. RECORDING
Raise exactitude
of hearing and execution
Necessity to formulate
conception in advance
66. PLAYING AN ACOUSTIC
67. FEELING EMOTION
IN PERFORMANCE
EMOTION AND PHYSICAL
TENSION
STATIC INTERFERENCE
FEAR OF FEELING
APPENDICES
I: EXCERPTS FROM
FELDENKRAIS’ BOOK AWARENESS THROUGH MOVEMENT – A THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK.
‘The difficulty
of changing an earlier pattern
‘There is no awareness
of many parts of the body
‘A complete self-image
is a rare and ideal state
‘Individuals act
in accordance with their subjective image
‘Systematic correction
of the system is more useful than correction of single actions
‘Correction of movement
is the best means for human self-improvement’
‘Ability and willpower
‘To understand movement
we must feel, not strain
‘Sharpened discrimination
‘The force of habit
‘Freeing an action
of wasted energy
II: FELDENKRAIS AND THE MUSICIAN
III: THE PIANIST'S
PROGRESS: A MINI-AUTOBIOGRAPHY (WRITTEN 1993)
ALAN BELKIN - THE ORCHESTRATING
HAND
LAURETTA MILKMAN -
THE CHOREOGRAPHING HAND
APPLICATION #70:
THE HAND-FLIP ‘CATCHING’ TECHNIQUE
PHIL COHEN - THE MINDFUL
HAND
TOM PLAUNT - THE PHRASEFUL
HAND
FELDENKRAIS - THE MINDFUL
BODY
KEMAL GEKICH - THE
MASTERFUL HAND
Content
Nuts And Bolts:
Rhythm
Meter
Pulse
Phrase Inflection
Sound
APPLICATION #71:
'GRAB AND SHAKE' TO REALLY JOIN WITH THE PIANO
Conception
Alchemy
Artistic striving
gives rise to sophisticated physical organization – not vice versa
Physical ability
only a tool for the artist
Synthesis
ALAN FRASER - THE ACTIVATED
HAND
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX
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