home
piano music
piano forum
chat
music dictionary
about
sign-up
login
search
composers a-k
composers l-z
complete list
free piano sheet music
recordings
latest additions
about us
news
faq
forum rules
links
mobile
contact
August 21, 2008, 10:52:23 PM
Welcome,
Guest
. Please
login
or
register
.
Forum Home
Help
Search
Piano Forum
>
Piano Board
>
Student's Corner
>
Bach Partita Question
Pages: [
1
]
Go Down
Print
Author
Topic: Bach Partita Question (Read 285 times)
minimozart007
Full Member
Offline
Posts: 144
Bach Partita Question
«
on:
April 01, 2005, 04:34:33 PM »
Dumb Question -
In the gigue of the 1st Partita by Bach, are the quarter notes played with the RH or LH?
Logged
You need more than a piano, two hands and a brain to play music. You also need hot sauce.
whynot
PS Gold Member
Sr. Member
Offline
Posts: 466
Re: Bach Partita Question
«
Reply #1 on:
April 01, 2005, 05:08:02 PM »
Well, this question made me curious so I tried it both ways just now. I thought it was slightly easier to organize with LH quarters, but certainly playable either way. I'd do left.
Logged
bernhard
PS Gold Member
Sr. Member
Offline
Posts: 5256
Re: Bach Partita Question
«
Reply #2 on:
April 01, 2005, 09:59:55 PM »
Left hand.
However as Whynot said, there is nothing to stop you playing it with the right hand (why not?
)
You may even not cross hands at all (although I believe that the crossing of hands is intended as an spectacular visual effect and one should cross them).
Here is something that Alexander Siloti said in an interview once:
I have a large hand, with a wide span, and do not need to resort to the necessities of small hands in playing. For instance, take the little Gigue in B flat, by Bach. It will be remembered that this short piece requires constant crossing of the left hand over the right, in order to bring out the melody. This effort is really not necessary, if one has a hand capable of reaching the intervals. I have altered the manner of performing the notes between the two hands, so there is seldom any crossing of hands necessary. In this way the piece is quite simple, and there is no change in the notes themselves. In fact the theme sings itself more connectedly through this manner of playing.
Best wishes,
Bernhard.
Logged
"A person who persists in believing what is not true or disbelieving what is true can waste a lifetime of effort on something that is without hope of success".
(E. Jayne)
Pages: [
1
]
Go Up
Print
Jump to:
Please select a destination:
-----------------------------
Piano Board
-----------------------------
=> Performance
=> Repertoire
=> Teaching
=> Student's Corner
=> Instruments
=> Miscellaneous
=> Audition Room
===> Sheet Music Requests
===> Teaching Resources
===> Music Theory
===> Polls etc.
-----------------------------
Non Piano Board
-----------------------------
=> Anything but piano
=> The PF website
Most popular classical piano composers:
Bach
-
Beethoven
-
Brahms
-
Chopin
-
Debussy
-
Grieg
-
Haydn
-
Mendelssohn
Mozart
-
Liszt
-
Rachmaninoff
-
Ravel
-
Schubert
-
Schumann
-
Scriabin
-
Tchaikowsky
Piano Street Sheet Music Library, complete list:
Albéniz - Beethoven
|
Beyer - Burgmüller
|
Chopin - Couperin
|
Couppey - Grieg
|
Gurlitt -Liszt
|
Löhlein - Mendelssohn
|
Mozart - Rachmaninoff
|
Rameau - Scarlatti
|
Schoenberg - Schumann
|
Schytte - Scriabin
|
Smetana -Türk
|
Verdi - Wieck Schumann
Loading...
o