My piano teacher's teacher had the privilege of living around the same place Rachmaninoff was living. He went to the door of his place to listen to see if he could learn something from the great rachmaninoff. To his surprise Rachmaninoff was playing pathetically slow. so slow that he couldn't recognzie the piece.
Rachmaninov was practising Chopin's Study in thirds and spending around 15 seconds on every note!
hmmm maybe i'll try that 15sec per note thing today...
(she learned with ARRAU, so i guess there should be some useful advice here )
Here's a trick:Group the arpeggios into chords, and each chord group going up and down, without dropping you wrist. Try to get a strict horizontal motion with as little vertical motion as possible. Then, once that happens, simply play like your splitting chords, while keeping the same technique like while you were playing chords, and your arpeggios will be faster and cleaner.
Really? You mean playing as fast as possible and don't worry about technique? My piano teacher's teacher had the privilege of living around the same place Rachmaninoff was living. He went to the door of his place to listen to see if he could learn something from the great rachmaninoff. To his surprise Rachmaninoff was playing pathetically slow. so slow that he couldn't recognzie the piece.I myself find that playing slower has enabled me to be surer on my notes, timing, and hence causes better playing. I play half speed or slower 3-5 times then 1 time fast.boliver
Mental practice is invaluable. I heard of some great pianist (can't remember his name) that practiced only 3 hrs. a day and the rest was spent on mental practice. I myself find that the best way to conquer something on the piano is through my mind.boliver
I can't believe no one's mentioned Thumb Over yet,
hmm i tried it... i realized i have a fat thumb.
To be able to play really fast arpeggios, there is really one piece that is outstanding for practise which of course is Chopin op.10 no.1. 6 pages of different harmony arpeggios (well some patterns will come back but very little repeating). Learn this piece by heart, which actually is not very hard if you are used to chord harmonies and begin to play bar by bar, slowly. Much slower than you need until fingering and technique is perfect. Then twice the tempo.Though perfect this piece is b=176 is not something that the common piano player really can aim for. Even Horowitz stated that is was not possible to perfect in b=176.My arpeggio playing speed has increased rapidly after learning this piece.
Huh? This study (op. 10 no. 1) requires neither thumb over, nor thumb under, since the arpeggios do not follow each other, but overlap to a large extent.Bernhard.
Huh? This study (op. 10 no. 1) requires neither thumb over, nor thumb under, since the arpeggios do not follow each other, but overlap to a large extent.
Robert, you are here!!!YOu play by Thumb Under in this etude right?I would be upriesd if you achieve such cohesiveness if youuse thumb over.
argerich's arpeggios arent that fast
And the Pope is Jewish,Ed
argerich's arpeggios arent that fast, ive only been playing a couple years and i can play almost as fast cleanly, and just as fast if i want to risk a slight loss of accuracy, argerich-speed isnt the holy grail,
Isome artists may seem like godlike creatures or something but they are just human beings and we can all compare ourselves with them, we should look to them as examples of what we want to be, not what we will NEVER be.
who r u kidding noah, and about that ark of yours....why did you only take 2 of each animal with you on your ark? that would mean every single animal on the planet today is a product of inbreeding, and all that time on that boat! jeez lets hope your wife wasnt frigid.
Lol, vent. I only made my post to get a form of "hailing" from Ed, but he missed it completely.