I could use some help on getting certain long passages up to 1.5 times performance speed HS as anyone familiar with Chang's piece. I did the parallel sets with just two notes at a time, segment work with 5, then 9 notes, sometimes 17 notes(includes conjunction), but cannot string them together as tension builds and fingers stop after so many notes in a row. If I just do 8 notes in a row repeats, I can do it forever with no fatique. Is the process that I do as many notes as I start to feel fatigue as Chang states, then switch hands, or something else, as I was doing this for awhile, several days, and didn't see impovment. Could it be one should not feel any fatigue at all? Since my goal speed is 126, 1.5 HS is 189. Sure seems fast to play 195 notes in a row at that speed. Maybe not possible.Thanks for help in advance!Nick
Ok. Here's my question then. If tension is the ONLY reason one will tire for playing fast for so long, does that then stand to reason that as long I am playing relxed and "correctly" that I will be able to play as fast as I want for as long as I want?? I don't think that is a correct assumption. Playing the piano has to involve some tension. Otherwise we would just be laying in a big "blob" on the floor.
The next question is: Should you always practise relaxed, or will pushing it/tense up a bit develop your technice faster and thus enabling you to relax and play faster later on?
Staying "relaxed" does not apply to the body parts that are supposed to do work. It applies to those that are NOT supposed to do any work. Doing something fast for a long period of time requires power (strength), stamina, and excellent coordination (i.e technique, which means not wasting energy through superfluous movements). It's that simple! These three aspects will have to be maximized.