i have thought of a thing to do : while away from the piano, read through the piece and imagine the piano, write in the fingerings, then imagine your fingers on the keys of the piano doing the sequence of fingerings that you have written.
bernhard you talk about learning the sequence of actual notes, but as i am a rather new to the piano, i cant automatically finger any sequence of notes immediately while at the piano so i have to write them in and plan ahead, will this 'crutch' gradually go away as i become more hanted with the piano itself, of is there any way to improve my way of choosing a fingering automatically like most people, without thinking?
and have you heard the john ogdon story, apparently he learnt franck's symphonic variations while on an aeroplane ride, and played it as soon as he got to the destination, without having played a note of it on the piano before the performance, he must have learnt the piece mentally, can you describe what he did or what is required to do this?
thanks, if you were a girl id kiss you! so what are the components? if you could outline each them briefly, and then go into detail if need be, that would be a great help.
so bernhard is there a mental practice 3?
First, I have realized that mental practice is to me like memorizing a story mentally before opening one's mouth to tell it. This way, when one strives to articulate the story, they have something to say.
"The idea here is to delay piano practice as much as possible. So get the score and take several photocopies of it (you will be doing cut and paste later on)."
I like to know something about the metod (i read about it in a Neuhaus book) and I tried it this afternoon. it was nice, but i had a problem (maybe because it's first time) but i was only able to read mentally one hand, not both. I'll try more to improve my mental tecnicBest wishes,Héctor
I have been doing it on and off for a few months, and I still can "only" do one hand at a time, except for simpler passages. I believe (and hope) that things will improve with time.
You don't have to answer me this... but I am simply curious about if one views the staves as a whole, "The Grand Staff", and their hands as one, if they would still have the challenge ?I do not consistently have this perception in my own playing, I have to work at it. But, it would just be interesting information if one does perceive the staff as a whole and one does feel the hands as one, but also works best with one hand at a time in mental practice.And it just seems like whenever I do what I described above, it helps to close the gap.
This makes wonderful sense to me -- thanks m1469! My teacher tells me not to listen to recordings because he doesn't want me to just regurgitate them; but it sure seems logical to know what you're trying to say before you say it. What if you can't get a recording of the score, though? Then what do I do?