“Music is a moral law. It gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination, a charm to sadness, and life to everything. It is the essence of order, and leads to all that is good, just and beautiful, of which it is the invisible, but nevertheless dazzling, passionate, and eternal form.”
Plato

The Pianist's Guide to Practical Technique

The "Look Inside" feature will be "available by April 3rd, no later than April 10th," according to the nice folks at Amazon. Apparently, something fell through the cracks and the job didn't get done in the usual amount of time. But people have been enjoying the book anyway.

Piano Technique Demystified, the Book, Second Edition

Some readers have asked about the video demonstrations (iDemos) for Piano Technique Demystified: Insights into Problem Solving, 2nd Edition. They are now located in the tabs at the top of this page at the right.






New technology—new to me technology—gave rise to the inspiration to invest the time and energy into revising "Technique Demystified." It now has more information on fingering and expansions in other chapters. It also has a new chapter on geography for pianists, links to iDemos and a nifty index. The technology made it possible to clarify and unify musical examples throughout, but I think the changes are particularly effective in the teaching moments section. When you get a
chance, have a "look inside" at the second edition of Piano Technique Demystified at Amazon.  I'd be glad to know what you think.

Chopin Etude Op. 10, No. 3

       A pianist writes complaining of problems of stretching and discomfort in the middle section of this otherwise quite playable etude. It seems at first to be a problem of fingering, but it turns out to be more one of technical approach.






Click on score to make it larger.
Note: In the left hand, the 4th interval of a sixth
 should be 5-2, not 4-2. Also, the tempo should be eighth-note = 100.




The Pianist's Guide to Practical Technique


All three volumes are now available: Complete or in two parts. The "Look Inside" features should appear sometime after March 15th at Amazon. Let me know what you think...

Toss Out Your Czerny Studies














     My new collection of studies based on music you want to play by master composers is now available at CreateSpace.com and Amazon. In a week or so you will be able to thumb through the volumes at Amazon and have a look. These are technical studies drawn from standard repertoire, vehicles for technical exploration and repertoire building that do away with mindless rote forever. You can read an excerpt from the introduction in the post of February 12th. Here is the publication blurb:           
 Put away studies by Czerny. Put him and the others into a closet and turn the key. Instead, use these passages from music you intend to play—music by master composers—as building blocks for technique and musicianship. Suppose for a moment that we don’t accept the notion that a good piano technique requires strength training, or that it is even really possible to “strengthen” the fingers to any noticeable degree, in the way that authors of yore would have us believe. Those concepts indeed have long ago been discredited. Suppose, too, we discard the notion that independence of fingers is a physical action and not instead a musical objective. Well, you might ask, for what then do we train? Let's use our knowledge of how the hand was designed to work in order to train for refined coordination. In these volumes you will find ample material for just such a study. Here are threads of Bach Inventions, early Haydn episodes and mainstream Mozart. Here are passages from the grandeur of late Beethoven and the Romantic exuberance of Schumann and Chopin. Here are morsels from standard repertoire that, if used as part of your daily regimen, will at the very least provide a colossal head start on the building of skills, musicianship and a catalog of music you want to perform.



        

Piano Keyboard Geography

You can choose?
    A student recently looked up at me from the piano in a momentary pause, her face a puzzle of disappointment and delight. "No one ever told me," she said, "that you could choose where on the key to play." We had been discussing how to get to the black keys in time to play with the thumb, walking in in order to avoid a sudden lurch. 

     This references the larger issue of where to be on the keys at any given time. String players are locked in, of necessity, to a perfect spot, one perfect spot where the correct pitch is located on the string.  Keyboard players have the advantage of being able to press down a key virtually anywhere on its surface and still produce the correct note. We do have to avoid playing in the cracks, though. As a matter of physics, the most control of the key is at the point farthest from its fulcrum because, as we know, the keys are levers. Still, even allowing for this principle of physics, we can find even more optimal spots for depressing the keys when we want to consider how to move laterally up and down the keyboard quickly and efficiently. 
     One of the topics I describe in this context is shaping, of which there are several types: under, over, in and out. As a child I learned that "every little finger lives in its own little house." This, sadly, is not true. The fingers are at best itinerant and the thumb is virtually homeless. We do not place all of the fingers and the thumb
Dont!
automatically on all of the keys in a so-called "five-finger position" because this requires a curling in of the fingers, making the hand into a ball shape. Have you heard that expression? Don't do it. It creates extra work. Instead, allow the thumb to dangle, yes, dangle, freely near the edge of the keyboard—not over it—until it is needed, at which time it likes—loves—to play in the direction of in, toward the fall board. Notice I said "in the direction of." It does not particularly want to play in among the black keys. It can still land at the outer edge of the key as it moves inward. When approaching a thumb "crossing," allow the thumb to be approximately behind the finger that is playing so that as the thumb nears its objective it won't have far to go in order to play, which is achieved by means of a rotational movement. (Rotation is another topic, one dear to my heart.).
     
Where do you want to go and how and
 when do you want to get there?
The keyboard geography consists of plains and mountains, white keys and black keys, which to a large extent is what governs the placement of our hands on the keys. Long fingers on short keys and short fingers on long keys is a good general rule. But obviously we can play virtually anywhere in the landscape, including climbing mountains with short fingers. Shaping under (ascending right hand) and shaping over (descending right hand) can help us establish where on the keys to be, relative to each other and to the plains and mountains. Moving in or out can help us arrive in time to play with short fingers on black keys. Avoid sudden lurches at all  costs, as you might fall off a high peak or crash into the fall board.