A piece that I really really want to learn is the Liszt Mazeppa, and I've been working on it for a while now, and I still don't have the main theme vesrions 1 and 2 solid at full speed.
Now for fingering-do you adhere to Liszt's suggestion as we are told by Cortot, or do we facilitate it as Berezovsky does? The facilitation seems awkward but would probably be easier after I practice it.
And finally, what practice techniques do you think would be most efficacious for this kind of figuration?
Thanks for your help! This is still my favorite musical work after about 8000 hearings and messing with it for months
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Your questions about fingering were already answered, I think the most important answers being that fingering has to feel natural, but still achieve the musical result. It doesn't matter what fingering you use if it sounds like porridge.
For this kind of music which depends so much on the athletic, I would practice "in the Zone," haha I just thought of that, what I mean to say is I would practice in "stages." The difficulty here is just one thing, the complicated series of movements, the hands crossing each other at a very fast rate, and making big leaps. The notes are supremely easy to learn, and the difference between melody and accompaniment could not be more brutally lined out for you. Therefore practice in stages, that is, you play the first chord (on the second page, where the melody begins); then you play the first chord, and the next (left hand g# and e), then add the third, and so on and so forth. If you ever mess up in any of these stages, just practice it until you get it right. The trick is to visualize what you are going to play before you play it, and when you break it up into small digestable portions, you can visualize it without problems.
I used to believe with all my heart, to endless frustration, that there was some alchemy of motions that would render all things easy, and technical thoughts superfluous. To play chromatic scales in minor thirds, I thought, no, I
knew, there was just a universal combination of movements that, once learned, never had to be studied again. How stupid I was! Sometimes there is no magick movement that will solve all the problems. Sometimes, one just has to practice, and practice, and practice. This Mazeppa is such a piece. It simply has to be practiced all the time, and that is the only way to succeed at it. I actually think it is worth it - the exhiliration you can feel from a succesful performance of this is just unparalleled. But be prepared to shove a lot of other things out the door, because this is just making insane demands.
Walter Ramsey