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Author Topic: Hanon or Liszt?  (Read 634 times)
tcovenent
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« on: January 05, 2008, 07:29:26 PM »

I want to start doing more technical exercises, and I'm torn between Hanon's "The Virtuoso Pianist In 60 Exercises" and Liszt's "Technical Excersizes" (Not the etudes). I've heard Hanon's book, which is a standard, has a better learning curve and can be picked up at my level. However I've heard people say that Liszt's book is far superior and shows results in playing a lot quicker (Rather than just being able to do the excersizes better) despite it's difficulty, I've also heard that it shouldn't be picked up at an early level.

I'd like to hear some opinions before making my decision
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chopinfan_22
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« Reply #1 on: January 06, 2008, 02:04:21 AM »

I've heard mixed things about both technical exercises. The biggest issue that many have with Hanon is that overuse and exension tend to create problems... such as tendonitis, carpel tunnel syndrome, etc. I have Hanon.

I only use the scale section of my Hanon exercises, really. If you're going to go through the whole book, I suggest, and I stress, playing the exercises slowly and accurately. Do not be in any hurry to play the exercises or to burn through the book. I think using Hanon has helped me, but you must be careful to use Hanon correctly. It's not for everybody.

As far as the Liszt Technical exercises go... I've seen a copy, but never bought it. I intend to, once I become a better pianist.
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"When I look around me, I must sigh, for what I see is contrary to my religion and I must despize the world which does not know that music is a higher revelation beyond all wisdom and philosophy."
Bob
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« Reply #2 on: January 06, 2008, 03:46:45 AM »

I haven't done Liszt, that I know of.  I found them but took a look and balked.  I'm not sure which ones I looked at.  It was many years ago

Hanon is easier I think.  Easy to read.  Easy to transpose.  It's just patterns. 

Start on Hanon.  Then add Liszt.

There are other exercises too.  Pischna, Schmitt, Brahms wrote some even... I can't remember them all. 

And then you can always make your own.  I think that's a very useful skill for working on lit, to be able to develop an exercise that will help you on a piece.  Or just to develop your own stuff that targets the skills you want.
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chopinfan_22
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« Reply #3 on: January 06, 2008, 05:39:45 PM »

Bob is right. Another view that others have is to completely abandon exercise books and focus completely on pieces. Then, once you come to a technical problem that you can't quite conquer, continually practice it or develop your own exercises to help with that problem.
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"When I look around me, I must sigh, for what I see is contrary to my religion and I must despize the world which does not know that music is a higher revelation beyond all wisdom and philosophy."
dan101
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« Reply #4 on: January 06, 2008, 06:13:44 PM »

I would go for Liszt over Hanon, although personally I like the Brahms' exercises even more.
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point of grace
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« Reply #5 on: January 19, 2008, 08:15:57 PM »

hanon first
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danny elfboy
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« Reply #6 on: January 19, 2008, 11:10:14 PM »

I'm surprised to read that people say that any of these "show results faster"
What results? When you can play a technical exercise you become able to play that exercise, perdio. There's very little to extrapolate to other pieces or piano skill in general.
When you are able to play 60 technical exercises, you're able to play those 60 exercises period. Doing exercises doesn't magically result in facility and coordination at the keyboard as far as other patterns, sounds and pieces are concerned. That's because piano playing has little to do with exercising the hands and almost everything to do with mental coordination.
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gerryjay
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« Reply #7 on: January 19, 2008, 11:22:06 PM »

I'm surprised to read that people say that any of these "show results faster"
What results? When you can play a technical exercise you become able to play that exercise, perdio. There's very little to extrapolate to other pieces or piano skill in general.
When you are able to play 60 technical exercises, you're able to play those 60 exercises period. Doing exercises doesn't magically result in facility and coordination at the keyboard as far as other patterns, sounds and pieces are concerned. That's because piano playing has little to do with exercising the hands and almost everything to do with mental coordination.
seconded!
 i did lots of hanon and the like, and yet it probably have influenced to some point my technique, its results are very narrow. much better to work directly on the repertory, exploring movimentation and coordination and solving to the most high possible level every issue.
 anyway, from hanon-lovers to hanonlessness there are all conceivable opinions.
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current repertory:
mozart: sonata k.332;
chopin: ballade opus 38;
brahms: rhapsodies opus 79;
debussy: children's corner suite.
faulty_damper
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« Reply #8 on: January 20, 2008, 08:18:57 AM »

seconded!
 i did lots of hanon and the like, and yet it probably have influenced to some point my technique, its results are very narrow. much better to work directly on the repertory, exploring movimentation and coordination and solving to the most high possible level every issue.
 anyway, from hanon-lovers to hanonlessness there are all conceivable opinions.

I have to disagree.  Working on repertory actually requires you to think about what you are doing.  This is dangerous to both mind and spirit.  It's so much easier exercising the fingers and only the fingers.  Once the mind is involved, everything become difficult.  So Charles had it right when he wrote these finger exercises: they are exercises for the fingers!  God forbid those who actually think they can play the piano without having done these 60 exercises - they are the 60 Commandments of the Piano.
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thierry13
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« Reply #9 on: January 20, 2008, 08:54:38 AM »

What results?

Maybe they DO see more results than YOU decided they would have ? If they said they saw results, maybe they DID have more facility than before to play harder things, didn't that occur to you ? Piano playing is mostly mental, I can't agree more, but to make your fingers answer the brain they need exercising. You can not lift 300 pounds because you just know how to do it. You must both know how to do it without hurting yourself andddd exercise ... same at the piano, i'm only talking about the technical aspect there. Now, I do NOT think Hanon has the best exercises, and doing the exercises as hanon suggests is wrong, too. The best exercise book is Pischna I think, under direction from a good teacher of course.
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thalbergmad
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« Reply #10 on: January 20, 2008, 12:14:25 PM »

I never understood the immense amount of Hanon bashing that used to exist on this forum.

To me, it is useful because you are solving mechanical problems via exercise before you encounter difficulties in repetoire.

For instance, if you work on your 3rds and 6ths with Hanon, when you come to Brahms Paganini Variations, you have prepared well to play it. If you do not, you are simply using a great piece of music as an exercise.

Thal
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gerryjay
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« Reply #11 on: January 20, 2008, 01:28:04 PM »

I have to disagree.  Working on repertory actually requires you to think about what you are doing.  This is dangerous to both mind and spirit.  It's so much easier exercising the fingers and only the fingers.  Once the mind is involved, everything become difficult.  So Charles had it right when he wrote these finger exercises: they are exercises for the fingers!  God forbid those who actually think they can play the piano without having done these 60 exercises - they are the 60 Commandments of the Piano.
hey faulty!
no problem.  Smiley however, notice that you misunderstood a bit my point.
i agree with you that when you're concerned with a whole piece, you can't appropriately work on your technique. what i was talking about is somewhat different: when you hit something difficult on a music, isolate that part and work on it until it is perfect (HS, HT, whatever it needs). when playing like this, you have almost nothing to concern but your fingers, so it works. i can assure.  Cool
however, it's only my experience getting better results this way than hanon way. in the end, what matters is to evolve, have a light that leads the path.  Wink
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current repertory:
mozart: sonata k.332;
chopin: ballade opus 38;
brahms: rhapsodies opus 79;
debussy: children's corner suite.
gerryjay
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« Reply #12 on: January 20, 2008, 01:39:24 PM »

I never understood the immense amount of Hanon bashing that used to exist on this forum.
hey thal!
i read a lot of old posts and noticed the same. i think it's due to a reaction against a "hanon-must" that seems to did spread along the years. to be honest, i don't know since when and where it's a rule, but in my experience, all teachers used hanon and only hanon (pischna seemed already a "detour"). does it work? many people would say yes, but a lot of other won't. so, it's a matter of try hanon and see what happens, but to know that's not the only way.
the problem is, when someone try to work hard on this exercises without proper guidance, it can be very harmful, and hanon don't have a warning sign in its cover.  Grin
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current repertory:
mozart: sonata k.332;
chopin: ballade opus 38;
brahms: rhapsodies opus 79;
debussy: children's corner suite.
swim4ever_22
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« Reply #13 on: January 20, 2008, 06:46:46 PM »

Because of this post I've decided to give hanon an actual shot. I never really used the exercises aside from scale work. But right now I'm learning the first ten patterns, first hands separate, and I'm doing them fairly slowly (it takes about a minute per exercise). I would feel tightness in the forearms around exercise 4 or 5 but it would eventually go away after exercise 7 or 8. If I ever encountered pain, I would do the exercises so slowly that I would hit a note, then 5 - 10 seconds later, hit the next note. I've done that everyday for the past week, and I feel that after I have done just those ten exercises, I can play my scales much faster. I also feel no more pain when doing the exercises... at least, not yet. I will still be keeping a close watch on them.
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swim4ever_22
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« Reply #14 on: January 20, 2008, 06:55:26 PM »

And would anyone happen to have the Pischna exercises? I'd like to take a look at them.
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danny elfboy
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« Reply #15 on: January 20, 2008, 08:49:47 PM »

I have to disagree.  Working on repertory actually requires you to think about what you are doing.  This is dangerous to both mind and spirit.  It's so much easier exercising the fingers and only the fingers. 

There's nothing to exercise that's the problem.
Piano playing has nothing to do with finger strength, muscular strength or working out the fingers. It's all about training your ability to know what to do before you do it.
Otherwise devices that "strengthen" the muscles of the hands and the arms would be of benefit to pianists ... while they are not.

This is my only problem with technical exercises, that they all have been created in a period in which we were so naive to believe that the issues of piano were physical.
The only difference between a pianist and non-pianist is having learned how to control quickly the response of contraction and release of the muscles. Now if we could download such neuromuscular programming from a pianist to a 10 year old skinny non pianist the 10 year old would suddenly become a virtuoso pianist overnight because the condition of his muscles has nothing to do with how cordinately or properly he plays the piano.
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danny elfboy
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« Reply #16 on: January 20, 2008, 08:51:30 PM »

Maybe they DO see more results than YOU decided they would have ? If they said they saw results, maybe they DID have more facility than before to play harder things, didn't that occur to you ? Piano playing is mostly mental, I can't agree more, but to make your fingers answer the brain they need exercising.

It's the opposite.
To make your fingers answer the brain you BRAIN needs exercising.
All the hours are practiced have the effect of training a neuromuscular coordinative response ... they have nothing to do with working out the non-existant muscles of the fingers and the small muscles of the hand.
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faulty_damper
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« Reply #17 on: January 20, 2008, 09:31:40 PM »

The sarcasm of my previous post was noted.

In truth, Hanon has done nothing to advance my abilities to play the piano but it wasn't entirely useless: it advanced my understanding of piano playing.  I understand now why I didn't become a better pianist doing those mindless exercises: they were fundamentally flawed to begin with.

I would practice them tirelessly for 3 hours a day thinking I'll be a "virtuoso pianist in 60 easy exercises".  It didn't take a genius to realize that they didn't work!  I had pain in my left hand and thought I just needed to practice more to strengthen them up so it wouldn't hurt.  It didn't take a genius to realize the reason it hurt was because I was doing the exercises.

And what pieces of music could I play that suddenly became better as a result of these exercises?  None.  They were all as difficult before the exercises.
----------------

I couldn't tell you at the time that Hanon was actually making my piano playing worse.  I was naive and really taken in by the "Virtuso pianist" claim on the cover.  But I can tell you now that all of that effort and time (and pain) caused me to defend it.  It's like betting a lot of money on a team and the team is losing.  Are you going to stop supporting the team?  Of course not!  You are still going to hope they will win because you already invested a lot of your money on it.  This is the mindset those who defend Hanon have.  They defend it because they have invested hundreds of hours on it and don't want to think they wasted their time and energy on someting so fruitless.  They want to think they recieved a return on their investment. Roll Eyes
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danny elfboy
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« Reply #18 on: January 21, 2008, 01:34:27 AM »

The sarcasm of my previous post was noted.

God forbid those who actually think they can make sarcasm without having used these 17 emoticons  Wink
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swim4ever_22
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« Reply #19 on: January 21, 2008, 03:22:28 AM »

Perhaps there are some of the exercises that are useful? What about the scale work? Not only is every scale in the book, but also different ways of playing them, such as octaves in broken chords, or scales in thirds, fifths, sixths, octaves, chromatic scales. Then you have the arpeggios for each scale done in four octaves. I personally find those exercises to be useful. What about those?
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faulty_damper
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« Reply #20 on: January 21, 2008, 08:39:20 AM »

Perhaps there are some of the exercises that are useful? What about the scale work? Not only is every scale in the book, but also different ways of playing them, such as octaves in broken chords, or scales in thirds, fifths, sixths, octaves, chromatic scales. Then you have the arpeggios for each scale done in four octaves. I personally find those exercises to be useful. What about those?

Are the first things you say in the morning "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ"?  Then is it followed in the reverse "ZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA"?  Then do you do arpeggios "ACEGIKMOQSUWY"?  Then do you start on B "BDFHJLNPRTVXZ"? And don't forget to reverse it "ZXVTRPNLJHFDB"!  And then for more advanced patterns "ACBDCEDF...."

Does this even remotely seem rediculous to you?  And yet this is exactly what Hanon wants you to do.

There is a world of difference between learning how to play scales, arpegios, etc. and using them as finger exercises.  The learning part requires intelligent practice just like learnig repertoire.  Once they are learned, they require no more practice because they have served their purpose.

Yet Hanon wants you to practice your alphabets for 45 minutes every day for the rest of your life so that you will be a virtuoso pianist in only 60 easy exercises.  But wait, there's more!  Call within the next 5 mintues and you'll automatically recieve tendonitis absolutely FREE!  And as a special one-time offer you'll get a bonus two tendonitises in both hands, just pay shipping and handling.
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gerryjay
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« Reply #21 on: January 21, 2008, 03:03:57 PM »

Are the first things you say in the morning "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ"?  Then is it followed in the reverse "ZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA"?  Then do you do arpeggios "ACEGIKMOQSUWY"?  Then do you start on B "BDFHJLNPRTVXZ"? And don't forget to reverse it "ZXVTRPNLJHFDB"!  And then for more advanced patterns "ACBDCEDF...."

Yet Hanon wants you to practice your alphabets for 45 minutes every day for the rest of your life so that you will be a virtuoso pianist in only 60 easy exercises.  But wait, there's more!  Call within the next 5 mintues and you'll automatically recieve tendonitis absolutely FREE!  And as a special one-time offer you'll get a bonus two tendonitises in both hands, just pay shipping and handling.
  Grin
 that is first in my top ten posts in this forum!
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current repertory:
mozart: sonata k.332;
chopin: ballade opus 38;
brahms: rhapsodies opus 79;
debussy: children's corner suite.
swim4ever_22
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« Reply #22 on: January 21, 2008, 03:10:26 PM »

Are the first things you say in the morning "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ"?  Then is it followed in the reverse "ZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA"?  Then do you do arpeggios "ACEGIKMOQSUWY"?  Then do you start on B "BDFHJLNPRTVXZ"? And don't forget to reverse it "ZXVTRPNLJHFDB"!  And then for more advanced patterns "ACBDCEDF...."

Does this even remotely seem rediculous to you?  And yet this is exactly what Hanon wants you to do.

There is a world of difference between learning how to play scales, arpegios, etc. and using them as finger exercises.  The learning part requires intelligent practice just like learnig repertoire.  Once they are learned, they require no more practice because they have served their purpose.

Yet Hanon wants you to practice your alphabets for 45 minutes every day for the rest of your life so that you will be a virtuoso pianist in only 60 easy exercises.  But wait, there's more!  Call within the next 5 mintues and you'll automatically recieve tendonitis absolutely FREE!  And as a special one-time offer you'll get a bonus two tendonitises in both hands, just pay shipping and handling.



But there you are wrong. You assume I use them as exercises, when actually I use that section of the book to learn the scales and arpeggios. I don't sit there for an hour mindlessly running through drills. If I want to do something different than the single-note  parallel runs, then I do something different. Thirds. Sixths. Octaves, and so on, and there's nothing wrong with that.
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danny elfboy
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« Reply #23 on: January 22, 2008, 12:08:26 AM »


But there you are wrong. You assume I use them as exercises, when actually I use that section of the book to learn the scales and arpeggios. I don't sit there for an hour mindlessly running through drills. If I want to do something different than the single-note  parallel runs, then I do something different. Thirds. Sixths. Octaves, and so on, and there's nothing wrong with that.

But why bying the Hanon and spending the full price of the book to just use a small section of it. There are very complete and affordable books on scales and arpeggios out there covering everything (in larger characters too) from contrary motions to sixth and arpeggios and chords.
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swim4ever_22
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« Reply #24 on: January 22, 2008, 01:49:49 AM »

But why bying the Hanon and spending the full price of the book to just use a small section of it. There are very complete and affordable books on scales and arpeggios out there covering everything (in larger characters too) from contrary motions to sixth and arpeggios and chords.

My edition of Hanon was a hand-me-down from my sisters, and it was given to them by our instructor who has taught all of us. Our instructor was a Hanonite, and still is to this day, and I used to have to do the exercises when I was little. The beginning exercises she uses for the younger students... the older students focus on the scale/arpeggio sections. So... I never really bought it... I'm not saying her way is right or that her way is wrong.

This past week, I decided to give Hanon the benefit of the doubt and try it again to see if there would be an effective approach to the exercises. I can't say that there is, but since I have the book, I don't need another book on scale work. It's already in Hanon. Smiley

Personally, I think there must be some merit to technical exercises, perhaps NOT Hanon... but maybe Pischna, Schmitt, or Liszt's technical exercises? There must be a reason that so many exercise books exist, and there must be some use. I don't agree with just fully using repertoire as "technical exercises" because in so doing you force pieces to become exercises... tools to serve your purpose... no longer music.
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faulty_damper
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« Reply #25 on: January 22, 2008, 03:49:10 AM »


But there you are wrong. You assume I use them as exercises, when actually I use that section of the book to learn the scales and arpeggios. I don't sit there for an hour mindlessly running through drills. If I want to do something different than the single-note  parallel runs, then I do something different. Thirds. Sixths. Octaves, and so on, and there's nothing wrong with that.

So in other words, you are not actually doing what Charles has asked you to do.  Which means you are not actually taking Charles's advice.  Which means you are actual NOT a Hanonitee.

Believe it or not, the most effective way to learn scales and arpeggios is by rote and NOT by reading.  After learning a couple of scales and arpeggios, the next thing to do is to learn HOW scales and arpeggios are constructed and then to learn more scales and arpeggios using that knowledge.  You don't need a book to do that and you could easily learn to write down scales so you are familiar with how they look like on page.
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swim4ever_22
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« Reply #26 on: January 22, 2008, 04:06:02 AM »

Quote from: faulty_damper
So in other words, you are not actually doing what Charles has asked you to do.  Which means you are not actually taking Charles's advice.  Which means you are actual NOT a Hanonitee.[\quote]

Correct. I just use the book of Hanon because it is what I have as a resource. Though I have given the exercises countless shots in the past... I can't say I'm convinced that they work.

Quote from: faulty_damper
Believe it or not, the most effective way to learn scales and arpeggios is by rote and NOT by reading.  After learning a couple of scales and arpeggios, the next thing to do is to learn HOW scales and arpeggios are constructed and then to learn more scales and arpeggios using that knowledge.  You don't need a book to do that and you could easily learn to write down scales so you are familiar with how they look like on page.

While I can't say I agree or disagree on this issue, simply because I haven't done it, wouldn't one need a prior knowledge of each scale before being able to pull it from memory? How can you pull from memory something which you had no prior knowledge of. All I know about scales is that there are 36 of them, including major and both types of minor. I know the basic rules of scale construction are that the harmonic minor has a raised seventh, and the melodic minor has a raised 6th and 7th ascending, and a lowered 6th and 7th descending, or natural minor. That is all I know. So you are saying that with only this as my prior knowledge, I can construct all 36 scales?
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thierry13
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« Reply #27 on: January 22, 2008, 04:46:59 AM »

It's the opposite.
To make your fingers answer the brain you BRAIN needs exercising.
All the hours are practiced have the effect of training a neuromuscular coordinative response ... they have nothing to do with working out the non-existant muscles of the fingers and the small muscles of the hand.

It's not about developping muscles, developing the muscles of the hand only makes it stiffer and less flexible. You simply actually got to take conscience of the difference between the nerves of each finger, and accentuating that difference. You CAN think about it ... but it's only with dumb repetition you will see any durable and safe result.
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Jazz is to classical what Mcdonald's is to great restaurants. It's trash and will allways be even if lots of people like it.
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« Reply #28 on: January 22, 2008, 06:18:04 AM »

It's not about developping muscles, developing the muscles of the hand only makes it stiffer and less flexible. You simply actually got to take conscience of the difference between the nerves of each finger, and accentuating that difference. You CAN think about it ... but it's only with dumb repetition you will see any durable and safe result.


Correct me if I'm mistaken... but isn't that what D_E is saying?
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faulty_damper
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« Reply #29 on: January 22, 2008, 09:56:55 AM »

All I know about scales is that there are 36 of them, including major and both types of minor. I know the basic rules of scale construction are that the harmonic minor has a raised seventh, and the melodic minor has a raised 6th and 7th ascending, and a lowered 6th and 7th descending, or natural minor. That is all I know. So you are saying that with only this as my prior knowledge, I can construct all 36 scales?
Yes.  What you are describing about scale degrees and scale construction are exactly what you can use to form all common Western scales.  You just apply it to any note on the keyboard and lay it out from there.  It's easy and I can show an absolute beginner how to play a scale just by teaching them the major and minor steps patterns and they can then play all of the major scales on each of the 12 different notes.  All this can be in learned in the very first lesson; it doesn't take months and it doesn't take a book.

Quote
While I can't say I agree or disagree on this issue, simply because I haven't done it, wouldn't one need a prior knowledge of each scale before being able to pull it from memory? How can you pull from memory something which you had no prior knowledge of.
Can you say a something that you have never ever said before in your life?  Of course, you do it all the time.  You couldn't hold a conversation without it.  Noam Chomsky calls this generative grammar.  You already know the rules of grammar and you can say anything you want and will be understood as long as you follow the rules of grammar.  You can play any scale starting on any note as long as you follow the "grammar" of the scale.  But this requires you know the "grammar".  For a major scale it is: WWHWWWH.
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danny elfboy
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« Reply #30 on: January 22, 2008, 12:48:16 PM »

Personally, I think there must be some merit to technical exercises, perhaps NOT Hanon... but maybe Pischna, Schmitt, or Liszt's technical exercises? There must be a reason that so many exercise books exist, and there must be some use. I don't agree with just fully using repertoire as "technical exercises" because in so doing you force pieces to become exercises... tools to serve your purpose... no longer music.

Exercises have been invented because it was thought that to play the piano one must have strong fingers. Hence they were used as finger workouts before playing the real pieces. The truth is that finger strength has nothing to do with the ability to play the piano and better knowledge in functional anatomy shows us which is a matter of neuromuscular control not of strength, hence there's no finger muscles to train but coordination and reflexes to develop and this doesn't require exercises just music.
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« Reply #31 on: January 22, 2008, 07:59:25 PM »

as a special one-time offer you'll get a bonus two tendonitises in both hands

If you have a faulty playing mechanism, you could get tendonitis from scratching your butt.

Hanon won't give it to you.

Thal
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Jazz is great - millions of people cannot be wrong
Eat crap - millions of flies cannot be wrong