Should we raise fingers in slow playing? How should be done the finger stroke? What is the russian school approach or Neuhaus approach should I say? I'd like to have Marik's advice because he studied with Lev Naumov.
Dear Paul,
I did not follow this board for quite awhile... since my last fight here.
Anyway, this is a very good question, and is much more interesting than to know who had better technique--Liszt or modern pianists, or whether Glenn Gould was the best pianist...
First of all, why would you need to raise your fingers? Is it something that your teacher told you, or did you read it in books? What is the purpose? What would it serve?
For now let's forget about Russian, or any other schools.
Our main object is musical image. That is what you should have in your head first--emotional context of the piece, dynamics, phrasing, sound and its place in the musical context, and how the sound would reveal all the emotional and musical subtleties of particular piece.
Let’s say, this image already exists in your head and now should get materialized (i.e. translated into some kind of pianistic motion). The most important is not to waste any energy on the way, and translate it as close to the image you have, as it is possible.
That’s it—it is like to carry a basket topped with water, without spilling even a little drop.
Would you start jumping, while delivering that?
Of course, you will need to find the most efficient way of doing that.
So let’s see what is the mechanism of piano playing is all about.
You have the image—your head sends impulse to your finger-tip—you hear produced sound—like a feedback your brain compares this sound to the musical image you have, deciding what is the place in the music context it has—and next impulse is the one of correction, deciding how the next sound should be adjusted to fit into the whole picture.
If on the way there is any physical tension whatsoever (in your shoulders, arms, palms, or even in finger joints) it blocks this impulse. Since your brain sends the next signal of correction (feedback) but the impulse does not reach the destination (finger tip), either, the whole mechanism gets completely mixed up, and all these impulses get clashed in your body, without any way out, disturbing your musical image.
So the usual “relaxation approach” is not about injuries (although directly related), but about music itself—how your brain translates the music into the fingers. The funny stuff is that all this process is so natural (if you do it right), that music comes the most natural way, and actually is part of your body. The injuries are irrelevant in this case.
And now let’s think about it—all this energy, this impulse should go straight INTO THE KEY. Why would you want to waist even an ounce of it? If you raise your fingers, the energy is actually going OUT THE KEY. Instead of one task (directly translating the energy), you actually do three jobs here--first, you accumulate the energy; second, you go up, dissipating this energy; then finally third--you are trying to catch up, going down, but the energy of your image is already gone. The sound you produce is already not connected to the context of the previous one—you have already lost this energy of CONNECTION of musical image by disconnecting it with UNNECCESSARY PHYSICAL work.
Fingers should penetrate into the keys, closely following the musical image of the sound. They should not strike the keys, but follow the musical image in the most natural way, with motions suitable only to particular piece of music, directly translating the image into the sound. Any physical motion, which is out of the musical context is a WASTE—HUGE WASTE.
On the other hand, it is impossible to give general advice over internet. In fact, I strongly believe it might be rather harmful. Half an hour next to a piano can explain more than hundreds of books, which anyway have no any connection with music and can create even more confusion.