As of late, I have become self-aware of my hand size. They're definitely not too small. Not that big, either, though. I can reach a 10th in both hands, but I really have to stretch for it.
I've read in other posts that Ashkenazy had small hands as well...and considering how famous he is, he's a really big inspiration right now. What is his span, anyway? I also read in an interview that he's "diminutive," is he really that short? Anyway...off topic.
The thing is, I haven't been playing very long. I have experience but not the scale of 10+ years or something. Will my hands get more flexible? Do I have to do exercises for that that don' tinvolve playing the piano?
Thanks
I saw Ashkenazy conducting and sat two rows back from the stage. He is definitely short, and shorter than the women who were playing first violin, first viola, etc! I do not know his span, but many pianists who are considered great pianists have over come small hand spans, the most famous example being Alica de Laroccha. In my opinion, Rachmaninoff overcome his
too large hand span by writing music of fast passages of notes that were very close together. So the problem can work both ways.
Your hands will become more flexible when you practice the piano in the true way, polyphonically (C.P.E. Bach complained that Italians merely "strummed" the instrument). In this way your hand is learning to adjust to every change in register, every change in rhythm, every shift in voicing, and is definitely the best way to become flexible. Do not attempt as Schumann did and destroy your piano playing with ridiculous stretching excercises. The true way of playing piano, the conception and execution of which will lead to the true piano technique, is the individual colorations of the notes. This is not my idea but it comes from Chopin, and can be studied also thoroughly in the music of Bach and Mozart, and yes also Rachmaninoff, who is so often misunderstood and derided for the overuse of the "grand sweep" in his music. No - it is not true. His music is full of hundreds, thousands, of intimate, beautiful details, that can only be achieved by not trying to play everything 10 damn times faster than somebody else. Even the fast passages in Rachmaninoff are based in the
bel canto conception of sound, not in this motoric irritating fashion so often performed today.
Walter Ramsey