When playing these, just listen to the sound you're making, and not to how they sound. Make sure it sounds even and stuff, try to work towards a "perfect technique", not only in the fingers, but also tone-wise. This makes them a bit more bareable .It helps if you get good at them, when you feel they do really work, you'll want to play.. practice, I mean, them more .
Hi....I have studyed the "Dohnanyi-Essential Finger Exercises" (found on the forum here, many thanks for that). But my question is: how do you practise that? -One exercise the whole week?-Some exercises 10 minutes every day....-Until you master one...What is the best way to do that?Thx...!
There is no need to “exercise” the fingers. Working correctly in any piece of music will do that naturally and safely.
How do you practise the Dohnanyi exercises?You don´t.They are unnecessary at best, and dangerous at worst.I have said it many times and I will say it again: There is no need to “exercise” the fingers. Working correctly in any piece of music will do that naturally and safely. How do you work correctly on a´piece of music? If you don´t know what I am talking about, this will be a long post. So start by having a look here:https://pianoforum.net/smf/index.php/topic,5767.msg56133.html#msg56133(huge collection of links)Please don´t misunderstand me: Dohnanyi (like Cortot) was a great pianist. However his ideas on how one gets to be a great pianist are so off the mark and so wrong as to be scary (same applies to Cortot). And yet, you will find no shortage of pianists of the highest caliber attributing their success to following their precepts (they usually don´t mention their injuries either). The fact is, conditioning - especially early age conditioning – is very difficult to get rid of.Best wishes,Bernhard.
Bernhard,1) I make finger exercises a part of my daily practice routine along with scales. My teacher wants me to do them and they warm up my fingers. I agree with what you because I found that as a result of the pieces I have been learning my left hand is now "stronger" than my right even though I am right handed. I discovered this whilst practising a Schmitt exercise. I was practising hands together and gradually increased the tempo and my Right hand always gave up before my Left. This puzzled me until I looked over the pieces I have been studying over the last year, Attwood No1 and Burgmuller Op100 and they seem to work the Left hand more than the right. So now I'm afraid my Right hand is falling behind and I need the exercises to bring it up to speed.2) I have read in other threads that inexperienced players should NOT attempt some pieces because they are so difficult that an injury can be sustained if played with incorrect technique. Can you please qualify your statement "Working correctly in any piece of music will do that naturally and safely"? Basically, what I am asking is: If a complete novice started with Scmitt/Hanon will they be less likely to injure themselves than if they chose a piece that may be beyond them? (My question is from the perspective of a person who has never read a thread from this forum)
I firmly believe that if you can't play at least the first two Dohnanyi exercises very well then you cannot be a good pianist.
Some exercises are ridiculous yes, but some exercises are just a matter of flexibility and yes, strength and control.
The analogy that I would give is a martial artist with poor groin flexibility attempting high kicks. There's no point in learning high kicks without having the proper flexibility, in fact that's a good way to get injured.
Now let us shake this firm belief a bit, shall we? Dohnanyi – one of the greatest virtuoso pianists (and superb composer) of his generation was born in 1877 and died in 1960. His set of exercises was first published in 1929. Hey, wait a minute! Liszt was born in 1811 and died in 1886. So, according to your firm beliefs, Liszt´s palying must have sucked, after all, he didn´t have the opportunity to pracitse Dohnayi´s exercises 1 and 2! Come to think of it, Chopin was born in 1810 and died in 1849, almost 30 years before Dohnanyi was born. Hence he could not have been a good pianist.
Er… People firmly believe all sorts of things. For a long time people firmly believed the earth was flat and the Sun revolved around it. Many members of this forum believe that dinosaurs do not exist and the earth is 6000 years old. Some people believed not long ago that UFOs would come to take them to a better planet, and they all committed mass suicide to that end. So, how exactly does your firm belief makes any difference to the case in question?
But there is something else one should keep in mind. I believe in the practice of martial arts for the purpose of self-defence, not as a sport, not as acrobatics and not as a way to get a role in a martial arts movie. And for self-defence you don’t really need extreme, or even above average flexibility. Again I do not need to firmly believe in this statement. I can provide evidence for it. Consider a sidekick to the throat or to the face. Get a tape measure and measure yourself from the nose down. In my case, (I am 1.80m), 1.63m will get the tip of my nose. Now mark this distance on the floor, stand up and stretch your legs so that they cover that span. I am prepared to bet that 99% of unfit people will be able to stretch that distance without great effort. This means that I should be able to side kick anyone my size on the nose without any special flexibility training. Moreover, if I decide to kill them by sidekicking them on the throat, the stretch is even less, since my throat is at a meager 1.46m.
No, finger exercises are to be shunned altogether, because what one wants to develop is not isolated finger whatever (independence, strength, flexibility) but total co-ordination of the playing apparatus which in its most restricted sense goes from the shoulder girdle to the fingertips, but in its most general sense must necessarily involve the whole body (as Richter is reputed to have said: “I played that note with my big toe”). And if the only reason Dohnanyi can think of for preferring finger exercises is facility of memory, think again.
Wow Bernhard... I really disagree with you. Pieces shouldn't really be used to teach technique. Not all technique at least... It seriously detracts from the musicality to have to focus that much on technique. That alone warrants the use of un-musical technical exercises to develop technique. Plus, technical exercises help develop a uniform approach to a problem that can be used again and again. Very helpful in sightreading. I disagree with you wholeheartedly. And yes... Technical exercises are annoying.
Let us know how Bernhard rebuts your disagreement!Walter Ramsey