Piano Forum

Piano Board => Performance => Topic started by: frederic on July 07, 2005, 09:04:37 AM

Title: Easiest Technique
Post by: frederic on July 07, 2005, 09:04:37 AM
Which one do find the easiest?
Title: Re: Easiest Technique
Post by: Waldszenen on July 07, 2005, 01:44:14 PM
Trills, because on a practise/time measure, they're easiest to master.

But still by no means easy.
Title: Re: Easiest Technique
Post by: Bouter Boogie on July 07, 2005, 02:04:20 PM
I think I would also go for trills  :) Although I don't mind playing big chords  ;)
Title: Re: Easiest Technique
Post by: BoliverAllmon on July 07, 2005, 03:02:36 PM
I suck at most of those, but I will say trills also.
Title: Re: Easiest Technique
Post by: vaiva on July 07, 2005, 07:31:05 PM
OMG! I hate thrills, I can't stand them at all!!!

Arpeggios not make me a lot of trouble........
Title: Re: Easiest Technique
Post by: pseudopianist on July 08, 2005, 11:58:21 AM
Trills or Octaves... I think  :P
Title: Re: Easiest Technique
Post by: Waldszenen on July 08, 2005, 01:53:43 PM
Octaves can be easy, but try playing them at Cziffra/Hamelin speed ;)
Title: Re: Easiest Technique
Post by: jeremyjchilds on July 09, 2005, 02:08:16 AM
big chords are easy due to my big hands and the fact that I play a lot of fake book stuff, so my left hand is fairly nimble, all the other "easy stuff" GOOD LUCK :-[
Title: Re: Easiest Technique
Post by: musicsdarkangel on July 09, 2005, 03:15:53 PM
I have fast fingers, so semiquaver passages and arpeggios are usually easy as hell for me.


Octaves, however, are another story.


They are my weakness, and I don't know why.

It has nothing to do with strength, because I used to work out a lot, but maybe lack of wrist action?  Anyway, the Liszt technical excersizes are quickly fixing that.

Anyhew, screw 3rds, 6ths, 7ths lol.  I hate them.
Title: Re: Easiest Technique
Post by: Etude on July 09, 2005, 04:29:39 PM
Big chords.  They don't really demand a lot of technical work like 4-5 or double trills or rapid/legato 3rds, they don't usually get much bigger than 6 notes to a hand, and fingering need not be as strict as in semiquaver passages or in legato octaves etc.
Title: Re: Easiest Technique
Post by: frederic on July 10, 2005, 12:25:23 PM
I have fast fingers, so semiquaver passages and arpeggios are usually easy as hell for me.


Octaves, however, are another story.


They are my weakness, and I don't know why.

It has nothing to do with strength, because I used to work out a lot, but maybe lack of wrist action? Anyway, the Liszt technical excersizes are quickly fixing that.

Anyhew, screw 3rds, 6ths, 7ths lol. I hate them.

its interesting to note that Horowitz had the most famous double octaves, playing them at incredible speeds, and can play big works like Rach3 and Tchaikovsky Concerto effortlessly, yet he claimed that the 1st Chopin Etude of the Op.10 set the hardest piece he had to learn.
maybe it is a weakness thing.....
Title: Re: Easiest Technique
Post by: thalberg on July 10, 2005, 01:49:47 PM
I said arpeggios.  For some freakish reason, those just fly out of my hands as fast as I can think them.  End of third movement of Wanderer Fantasie?  No problem!!

Double octaves?  Those are super hard--I can't believe how many people voted those as easiest.  What tempo are you thinking?  Sure they're easy if you play them slow--are you playing them fast?  If so, where did you learn this and can you teach me?
Title: Re: Easiest Technique
Post by: frederic on July 11, 2005, 11:22:22 AM
double octaves at tchaikovsky speed.
no problem at all. if u want to get rapid and very accurate double octaves, try practicing with pinkies only, then thumbs only. then pink and thumb etc.. helps teach the thumb and pinky independence
Title: Re: Easiest Technique
Post by: musicsdarkangel on July 11, 2005, 10:18:38 PM
its interesting to note that Horowitz had the most famous double octaves, playing them at incredible speeds, and can play big works like Rach3 and Tchaikovsky Concerto effortlessly, yet he claimed that the 1st Chopin Etude of the Op.10 set the hardest piece he had to learn.
maybe it is a weakness thing.....

hah, yeah, Horowitz and I are oppisites I suppose.


That's so interesting, op 10 no 1 was easy for me, but I bet the octave etude would give me hell.
Title: Re: Easiest Technique
Post by: gee on July 12, 2005, 03:03:47 AM
trills with which fingers? It's generally pretty easy unless your using the 4th and 5th
Title: Re: Easiest Technique
Post by: i_m_robot on July 12, 2005, 03:05:12 AM
Octaves are easy fun and a good stress reliever
Title: Re: Easiest Technique
Post by: barbosa-piano on July 12, 2005, 03:49:42 AM
Octaves are easy fun and a good stress reliever
I agree.  ;) They make the arms feel stronger...
Title: Re: Easiest Technique
Post by: keys on July 14, 2005, 04:49:21 AM
Octaves and trills are the easiest for me. I voted trills, they are very easy for me to play -but octaves are much more fun.

Big chords hurt my tiny bones :P