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Topic: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers  (Read 20250 times)

Offline virtuosic1

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #100 on: March 30, 2007, 07:26:35 PM
Virtuosic, may I ask in which way your videos (and previously uploaded recordings) would contribute to this thread? I don't care about how fast you can play. This thread was created to generate ideas about a technical problem in piano playing, and unfortunately, only about 20% of the posts seem to discuss that.

That wasn't my intention. My intention was to assist you in your question, which I could have easily done. The arguing started when forum members decided to turn this thread into a forum for their slanderous accusations. They are the ones who decided, in true Kangaroo court manner, that I wasn't the one performing my sound files, some of which were recorded on cassette originally with obvious, prevalent room ambience. They also decided, based on these allegations, that I should not attempt to assist or elaborate further and proceeded to "shout me down" as a fake and not worthy to post anything here about technical information that you may find helpful. If you re-read the comments made to me as the thread progresses, you'll see this pattern emerge.

I won't post anything of a technical nature for now. I'll wait until I post Videos first so the geniuses can eat their own words and hopefully choke themselves on them. Then, once that's cleared up, unless I'm accused of faking videos too in almost each and every post, I'll attempt assisting you once again with sound advice that has helped most of my students and myself with technical execution for the past 35 years.

Offline m

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #101 on: March 30, 2007, 07:43:42 PM
Marik,
Good points, I would just like to add that Peter Orth in talking about Chopins etudes (in Dean Elders book "Pianists at play") says that one of the ways he usually practices this etude is with A LOT of finger pressure, slowly, forte every note. You have to be very careful when doing this of course, and some even say it is bad to practice it this way. Just wanted to mention it.

Everybody is very different and what works for one person doesn't necessarily good for another. That's why I always feel so hesitant about giving advices over internet, without actual seeing what is going on.

Yes, Richter for example, always practiced slowly, forte, and staccato. Gilels, on the other hand, mid tempo and mezzo forte. Many great pianist practice slowly and pianissimo. Some, don't practice at all... meaning, their mind is always working, they just don't have a need to sit at the piano. Feltsman is a good example, and he is always in top shape.

For me the fundamental of technique is a touch--something like balerina walking on the points, something which is in the middle of that very fine relationship between your brain and string.
In order to keep all those relationships fresh I need to practice slowly and quietly, but with with very active fingers and great deal of energy, which dissipates immediately, ones the finger touches the key-bed. It is like balerinas feel the floor.


Hopefully, it is not confusing.

Best, M

Offline m

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #102 on: March 30, 2007, 07:57:53 PM
In other words, my playing of Chopins op 10 no 2 will never get faster or more accurate?

Not true. Everything depends on you. The physical condition of your 3-4-5 won't change, but with practice, once you gain control over them, only the sky is the limit.
I always advocate the rule "hand teaches hand", meaning if something does not come out in your LH, try first to do it with your RH and analize exactly what you are doing. After that try to do EXACTLY the same, with the same feelings with your LH.
On the same manner, "fingers teach fingers", i.e. if something doesn't come out with your 3-4-5 fingers, first, try to play it with your 1-2-3, analyzing exactly all your senses, feelings in the hand, etc., and then try to do exactly the same with 3-4-5.

Best, M

Offline dnephi

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #103 on: March 30, 2007, 07:58:05 PM
Who RAN from the Chat room about 3 seconds after the log showed my name!  ::)
Actually, i initiated conversation with you, but decided to leave because you failed to respond.  I even created a special chat room where the two of us could talk.

???
For us musicians, the music of Beethoven is the pillar of fire and cloud of mist which guided the Israelites through the desert.  (Roughly quoted, Franz Liszt.)

Offline counterpoint

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #104 on: March 30, 2007, 08:08:03 PM
Back to the starting question of the thread

Lately, I've devoted some of my practicing to developing and strengthening the weaker fingers, and I'm just curious about if anyone else spends time with this and if you have some useful excercises that you'd like to share.

It is not needed to strengthen the fingers. You can play perfectly well with weak fingers and you can play very uneven and bumpy with strong fingers.

Not the weak fingers are the problem, but the combination of finger, hand and arm movement which fits exactly to the passage you want to play.
If it doesn't work - try something different!

Offline dnephi

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #105 on: March 30, 2007, 08:15:41 PM
Orttmann says that the weight school is important, but those who advocate only that fail to deal with finger speed issues which are of importance.  I think there's some truth to that. 
For us musicians, the music of Beethoven is the pillar of fire and cloud of mist which guided the Israelites through the desert.  (Roughly quoted, Franz Liszt.)

Offline m

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #106 on: March 30, 2007, 08:21:45 PM
Hello Marik, if you are still around: is the piece really "finger based" - means, it's not a rolling motion (propably a combination) ? Therefore, Cortot's approach to optimize the individual finger stroke is right ?  

Daniel,

While rolling helps to some, it never worked for my hands, but I have very large ones.
I always "activate" my fingers, first. Even octaves--I need to feel 1st and 5th/4th fingers separately and independantly. After that I let my body deside the most natural way of combined fingers/hands motion.

In this etude,  my hand and fingers go together, when the hand goes evenly and linearly up and down, and fingers calmly lay on the keys, activating with very short and economical strokes.
The faster I play, the lighter and "lazier" the fingers should feel.

BTW, another method of practicing this etude, which helped to many people, esp. with smaller hands.
Our brain naturally groups this etude in "wide" position, i.e. C-G-C-E, C-G-C-E, etc.
Try to think in your mind about it regrouping in narrow positions, i.e. C, G-C-E-C, G-C-E-C, etc.
And similarly on the way down.
You even won't need to play like this later, but it can help just as a method of practicing.
And of course, any questions are always welcome.

Best, M  

Offline virtuosic1

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #107 on: March 30, 2007, 08:28:18 PM
Actually, i initiated conversation with you, but decided to leave because you failed to respond.  I even created a special chat room where the two of us could talk.

???

My PC is from '97, a Gateway GS-450 Pentium 2, running Windows 98. It's slow as molassess in the chat room. Even when I type words in the send bar, it takes minutes sometimes for them to show up, the PC freezing until I can hit the send.

Offline virtuosic1

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #108 on: March 30, 2007, 08:30:19 PM
Orttmann says that the weight school is important, but those who advocate only that fail to deal with finger speed issues which are of importance.  I think there's some truth to that. 

How unfortunate that I'm unwelcome to comment about Ortmann's ideas and anything I say will be met with adversity before it's even read and considered all the way through. Once I post videos to silence critics and trolls, and the ones that are actually adults line up to apologize, I'll publically advise them of where they can file their apologies, right before I depart permanently.

Offline danny elfboy

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #109 on: March 30, 2007, 08:37:03 PM
In other words, my playing of Chopins op 10 no 2 will never get faster or more accurate?

Of course it will ... but for different reasons than many people believe
If you lacked any speed and had to build it you wouldn't be able to even play two or three notes at the fastest speed possible ... and yet even non pianists can do this
This proves the point about speed. Speed is not something we lack and need to "develop" or "aquire". Speed is something we lose and need to maintain.
The contractions, the motions, the firming you do is accumulated
You can't accumulate it in just two or three notes that's why when you play such a short amount of music your natural intrinsic speed shows up.
But you accumulate them as those 4 notes become a flow of 30, 200, 500, 1000 notes
The point about maintaining speed is "resetting" periodically
When practice is making things faster you're not actually changing anything in your physiology and are not training the hypertrophy of your muscles, you're actually training your neurological resetting ... speed being the delay between contracting and resetting
Although practice itself works in this way focusing on the actual source of improvement, speed and the sources to obtain it helps with technique and control but especially with avoiding the accumulation of tension hence pain or injuries. As someone said accumulation of tension is the most detrimental thing against speed, it works like opposite friction. After all speed in piano playing is not due to bigger forearm muscles, to switching in type of fibers, to increased upregulation of concractile receptors, to stronger ligaments and muscles or faster/stronger fingers (whatever that is supposed to mean) Because these things are not happening in relation to play playing. Again it's not even slightly comparable to the effect of running on big muscles like quadriceps.
Speed is neurological and somehow illusory since again it's not something that we should "aquire" but "preserve" as the piece progresses
We have done already enough writing, grasping, picking up in our life to have already developed muscles (we are talking about small muscles and not big ones like quadriceps) already allowing the fastest speed possible.
Endurance works by the same principle
Endurance in relation to bigger muscles is the ability to use your fuel efficiently
Endurance in small muscles and in the kind of movements involved in piano playing is a matter of preventing accumulation i.e preventing opposite friction
Endurance in relation to piano playing is the difference between a ship going with the flow or going against the flow

Offline dnephi

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #110 on: March 30, 2007, 08:37:48 PM
Orttmann is considered definitive, but once again, I would have liked a response to the question, rather than the lengthy tangent which sounds so much like a bad guy's speech to the good guy before granting him a last request.  I would have certainly preferred a differing opinion than no opinion at all.

Dan
For us musicians, the music of Beethoven is the pillar of fire and cloud of mist which guided the Israelites through the desert.  (Roughly quoted, Franz Liszt.)

Offline m

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #111 on: March 30, 2007, 08:39:10 PM
Dear Dnephi and Virtuosic1.

It is very unfortunate you chose for your duel this very fine thread and it becomes extremely annoying for participants.
If you have something to contribute to the topic, welcome. Otherwise, could you please do all of us a huge favour and move your meaningful conversations elsewhere, i.e. create a dedicated thread, chat room, or PM, if the connections are not fast enough, or just talk over the phone.

  
No need to reply to this one.

I appreciate your understanding.

M

Offline Mozartian

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #112 on: March 30, 2007, 09:28:42 PM
Not true. Everything depends on you. The physical condition of your 3-4-5 won't change, but with practice, once you gain control over them, only the sky is the limit.
I always advocate the rule "hand teaches hand", meaning if something does not come out in your LH, try first to do it with your RH and analize exactly what you are doing. After that try to do EXACTLY the same, with the same feelings with your LH.
On the same manner, "fingers teach fingers", i.e. if something doesn't come out with your 3-4-5 fingers, first, try to play it with your 1-2-3, analyzing exactly all your senses, feelings in the hand, etc., and then try to do exactly the same with 3-4-5.

Best, M

Wow, that sounds like it would really work- thanks for the tip, I'm going to try that out!
[lau] 10:01 pm: like in 10/4 i think those little slurs everywhere are pointless for the music, but I understand if it was for improving technique

Offline m

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #113 on: March 30, 2007, 10:05:44 PM

For me the fundamental of technique is a touch--something like balerina walking on the points, something which is in the middle of that very fine relationship between your brain and string.
In order to keep all those relationships fresh I need to practice slowly and quietly, but with with very active fingers and great deal of energy, which dissipates immediately, ones the finger touches the key-bed. It is like balerinas feel the floor.


To illustrate what I mean here is a recording of IMO, utmost technical mastery, which should not neccessarily be fast.
To avoid any confusions, no it is not me playing ;):



While you are there, don't forget to hit Stravinsky-Sokolov file.

Enjoy.

Offline virtuosic1

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #114 on: March 30, 2007, 11:54:45 PM
Dear Dnephi and Virtuosic1.

It is very unfortunate you chose for your duel this very fine thread and it becomes extremely annoying for participants.
If you have something to contribute to the topic, welcome. Otherwise, could you please do all of us a huge favour and move your meaningful conversations elsewhere, i.e. create a dedicated thread, chat room, or PM, if the connections are not fast enough, or just talk over the phone.

  
No need to reply to this one.

I appreciate your understanding.

M

Ironic. Haven't me not involved in a discussion on acheiving maximum technical velocity, a main pursuit of my past 45 years or so, is like asking the Devil to remain silent on a discussion about heat.  ::)

Offline rc

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #115 on: March 31, 2007, 12:06:04 AM
It's too bad you've decided to withdraw your contribution virtuosic.  I'm not too concerned what you are or aren't able to do, but I'm always glad to see someone around trying to help people with their learning.

I think more than anything it's the conceit in your claims that makes some want to challenge them.  I figured you might be used to getting that kind of response. 

Offline daniel patschan

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #116 on: March 31, 2007, 01:00:51 AM
Seconded, please, come back. Some people need you here.

Offline cloches_de_geneve

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #117 on: March 31, 2007, 05:54:54 AM
Since this thread was created, I have tried to apply some of the ideas and suggestions to my playing. Here is what I observed quite instantly:

First, removing tension from my fingers made me feel like I could seep up my playing almost endlessly. That is the good news. However, I also noticed that I made more mistakes. Am I erring in the opposite direction now? How can I maintain high speed AND play accurately?

A second observation relates to hand rotation. This is not in relation to Chopin's 10/1, which scares the hell out of me, more than any other etude of the set. Rather, I noticed that applying a little dose of hand-rotation vastly improved my mordents and thrills. While I was never an enthusiast of ornamentations, I am now almost looking forward to them as I play. Curious.
"It's true that I've driven through a number of red lights on occasion, but on the other hand I've stopped at a lot of green ones but never gotten credit for it." -- Glenn Gould

Offline virtuosic1

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #118 on: March 31, 2007, 08:44:57 AM
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Offline danny elfboy

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #119 on: March 31, 2007, 12:00:34 PM
Since this thread was created, I have tried to apply some of the ideas and suggestions to my playing. Here is what I observed quite instantly:

First, removing tension from my fingers made me feel like I could seep up my playing almost endlessly. That is the good news. However, I also noticed that I made more mistakes. Am I erring in the opposite direction now? How can I maintain high speed AND play accurately?

Clearly your problem is that:
You need muscular contraction to play
You need your fingers to be firm not mellow ... think of like hitting a ball with a golf club
The club needs to be firm ... if it was jelly-like you would be not able to his the ball

You had problem with speed and tension because you contracted your muscles as the fingers depress the keys (hence alllowing accuracy) but didn't release the contraction aftwards hence accumulating tension and more likely to contract an opposite set of muscle before resetting the previous contraction

Now you have found a solution by removing tension ... but it seems like you removed tension by removing any contraction ... hence not firming your fingers and missing the target and loosing the accuracy

The point is that removing tension is no acquired by removing contraction but by resetting contractions periodically so that tension is not accumulated and co-contractions are avoided
Any contraction after the notes has been depressed is just useless and a waste of energy but contracted at the moment of impact with the keys is necessary to firm the fingers

Think of contracting-resetting, contracting-resetting and so on as breathing
Eventually speed is determined by the delay between contraction and release

https://www.pianostreet.com/smf/index.php/topic,24219.msg271405.html#msg271405



Offline rc

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #120 on: March 31, 2007, 08:29:38 PM
Stop looking at the keyboard for starters! Seriously. Relax your playing mechanism but DON'T relax your mind. Think the notes. Know where you are going with each note, then forget about each note, forget about visual targeting and play the phrases.

Do you mean like visual targeting in the head (closed eyes imagining the keyboard), imagining the sound of the phrases, some kind of synthesis?

It's the thinking of the notes where I'm trying to find the best approach

edit:  I've just answered my question in practice - Though our hands may be trained to properly execute a passage, if our mental image of the passage isn't accurate then when we think of what we're playing it will screw up.  Eyes closed is a good way to develop this, the mind naturally wants to fill in the visual void of what's going on.

From the purely technical standpoint, what's needed is the kinesthetic feel of the passage which can be developed through drilling (to the point where it seems we can jsut shake our arms and the notes come out), and an accurate mental visualization of the notes being played on the keyboard to prevent brain farts.

I presume that as we properly take care of these details and develop confidence in them, we become more free to focus on the sound.  The whole process: kinesthetic, visual and aural becomes more fluent and natural - what we want is the synthesis.

Offline virtuosic1

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #121 on: April 02, 2007, 12:21:10 AM
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Offline daniel patschan

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #122 on: April 02, 2007, 12:36:03 AM
Hello virtuosic, who, after your opinion are the pianists with the best playing mechanism (technique)today ? Propably a stupid question, but i would like to know what you think about that - regarding the fact that you can obviously play Opus 10-2 at 200/minute. I doubt that Hamelin, Libetta, Sokolov, or Volodos could do that.  ::)

Offline virtuosic1

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #123 on: April 02, 2007, 01:14:40 AM
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Offline daniel patschan

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #124 on: April 02, 2007, 02:25:18 AM
Thank you very much - i guess i will have to listen to some Tristano recordings, never heard
any of them so far.  :-\

Offline virtuosic1

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #125 on: April 02, 2007, 02:49:57 AM
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Offline m

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #126 on: April 02, 2007, 06:46:59 AM

First, removing tension from my fingers made me feel like I could seep up my playing almost endlessly. That is the good news. However, I also noticed that I made more mistakes. Am I erring in the opposite direction now? How can I maintain high speed AND play accurately?

A second observation relates to hand rotation. This is not in relation to Chopin's 10/1, which scares the hell out of me, more than any other etude of the set. Rather, I noticed that applying a little dose of hand-rotation vastly improved my mordents and thrills. While I was never an enthusiast of ornamentations, I am now almost looking forward to them as I play. Curious.

The tension removing and "finger firmness" can be quite confusing and it takes patience and practice to find a right balance and coordination between two.
You should give a very good, energetic, but still light and short impulse into the finger. And indeed, the finger for a split moment becomes firm, but once it hits the key-bed all the energy dissipates instantly. Basically, the moment of hitting the key-bed and relaxing are so close in time that they almost become the same motion.

Re: Ornaments. You should not be scared of them, as the only way to learn how to play them is to play as much as it is possible. The hand rotation can be of great help here. Try first doing it in the air. Put your hand down hanging from the shoulder completely relaxed and then start slightly vibrating. Little by little increase the amplitude, still maintaining relaxed feel. At some point you will feel the "resonance" and everything start vibrating around 3rd finger as a center. Then try to trill with exactly the same feeling.

This vibration/resonance in fact, is one of fundamental basics of piano technique. Once you find the right "wave" together with the "feel" of the key-bed, you are the pianist. 


Best regards, M

Offline daniel patschan

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #127 on: April 02, 2007, 03:35:19 PM
Marik - thank you for four suggestions on 10-1. I practised it over the weekend like you said (or at least i think i practised as you told me) and i realized an important point: the relaxation factor !!! Slowly, precisely and relaxed - that´s the way to proceed. Another thing which was very helpful to me was your advice on playing with minimal possible motion, this idea can be adapted to all playing. I don´t know who invented the old strategy of lifting the fingers as high as possible ? It´s not very use- bu painful.

Offline dnephi

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #128 on: April 02, 2007, 04:07:08 PM
As you are familiar, we practice ways different from how we perform.  In the same way, we staccato in legato pieces, legato in staccato pieces, and other such things.  I was not advocating performing this etude with high finger action- just the physiological practicing.  Just like athletes have exercises based on instantaneous contraction and relaxation, so should pianists.  Thus what I said is to be seen as an exercise and a practice technique, not performance practice.

Thanks,

Dan
For us musicians, the music of Beethoven is the pillar of fire and cloud of mist which guided the Israelites through the desert.  (Roughly quoted, Franz Liszt.)

Offline danny elfboy

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #129 on: April 02, 2007, 07:55:35 PM
As you are familiar, we practice ways different from how we perform.  In the same way, we staccato in legato pieces, legato in staccato pieces, and other such things.  I was not advocating performing this etude with high finger action- just the physiological practicing.  Just like athletes have exercises based on instantaneous contraction and relaxation, so should pianists.  Thus what I said is to be seen as an exercise and a practice technique, not performance practice.

Thanks,

Dan

I practice the way I perform
I practice everything performance speed immediately
I do this but practicing fragments small enough that even at the fastest speed possible no tension is accumulated (accumulation being a long-term process not occurring short-term)
At the end of each small fragment practice with the exact same coordination I will use for performance I bring my hands to my lap and rest totally, release any contraction and check my body for sign of disalignment and unecessary tension
The instantaneous resetting after each fragment allows me to practice instantaneous contraction and instantaneous relaxation
As I join fragments together and patchwork the piece the sensation of instantaneous contraction and relaxation practiced with rests keep underlying the piece even without the rests. In order words I've mastered very fast contractions and releases that "breath" and "flow" with the rhythm. The forearm keep resetting themselves every small amount of notes and tension accumulation becomes impossible.
But since I've already practiced and ingrained the same coordination I will use at performance I don't need lot of work to put the piece up to tempo (always meaning hitting a speed wall because slow speed practiced uses an enterely different set of coordination compared to what is necessary for high speed performance)

Offline danny elfboy

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #130 on: April 02, 2007, 10:55:08 PM
Orttmann says that the weight school is important, but those who advocate only that fail to deal with finger speed issues which are of importance.  I think there's some truth to that. 

This is a stement which is open to misunderstanding
First of all advocating only "weight" may result in ignoring the importance of instantaneous and well timed contractions (as we have already seen)
This is also a misunderstanding steaming from the "relaxation school"

On the second place the term "finger speed" is very ambiguous
The kind of speed we require at the piano is more ephemeral than concrete
This is because it doesn't depend (as it is the case with other bigger muscles) on amount of concractile tissue, fiber type and oxidation
The kind of speed we talk about is the ability to move not just the fingers but mostly the hand, wrist and forearm (especially in lifting and falling motions) periodically resetting previous contractions. Speed is already there from day one, it's not something aquired ... what we aquire is the ability to inhibit the accumulation of static impulses of contractions by resetting old impulses before imprinting new fast and well timed impulses

Indeed talking about "fast fingers" seems to suggest there's something at the phalangeous level wich allows physical speed, while it is actually just a matter of impulses, their timing and resetting.

So it's not the fingers that are fast, the only fast thing is contractile impulses and instanentous release impulses. Fast motor cortex impulses not fast fingers

Offline virtuosic1

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #131 on: April 03, 2007, 12:40:25 AM
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Offline virtuosic1

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #132 on: April 03, 2007, 12:45:00 AM
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Offline daniel patschan

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #133 on: April 03, 2007, 01:42:01 AM
But how to train speed in practice ? Your words make so much sense (as usual), but how to proceed on an everyday basis ?

Offline daniel patschan

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #134 on: April 03, 2007, 01:43:25 AM
One more question: do you think scale speed can be improved by performing certain types of exercises for individual fingers ?

Offline virtuosic1

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #135 on: April 03, 2007, 04:57:35 AM
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Offline virtuosic1

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #136 on: April 03, 2007, 07:07:09 AM
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Offline danny elfboy

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #137 on: April 03, 2007, 07:13:06 AM
But how to train speed in practice ? Your words make so much sense (as usual), but how to proceed on an everyday basis ?

Train fast reflexes and instantaneous resetting after a series of notes have been played
As I have said I don't train speed at all because I practice small fragments of the piece the kind of speed I want to play the piece at. This means I use in my practice the same exact coordination I will use at performance

So speed is a given, it doesn't become a matter of "if" or "how" but when
I keep working till all fragments are mastered
I keep working till groups of fragments are mastered
I keep working til the largest groups of fragment are mastered

When the last fragment is the whole piece it is already at the speed it is supposed to be since the fragment the piece is comprised of were at the speed they were supposed to be
There's nothing more time-consuming and inefficiently than starting slow and gradually increase the metronome speed.

It is just usefull once the piece has been mastered and one needs to focus on dynamics, interpretation and expression and other nuances. There slower speeds are useful
They are not useful to learn the coordination required to play the pieces

Anyway since the fragment are very small I don't accumulate tension as I play them and physically rest after each of them. When the fragments become larger and larger the neuromuscular controls are faced with the dilemma of rest-impulses in the face of less or no delay between each fragment (since they have been linked) and the result is fast-impulses

resetting/contracting impulses in the face of long rest periods: slow impulses
resetting/contracting impulses in the face of short/no rest periods: fast impulses

Offline daniel patschan

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #138 on: April 03, 2007, 12:15:01 PM
Train fast reflexes and instantaneous resetting after a series of notes have been played
As I have said I don't train speed at all because I practice small fragments of the piece the kind of speed I want to play the piece at. This means I use in my practice the same exact coordination I will use at performance

So speed is a given, it doesn't become a matter of "if" or "how" but when
I keep working till all fragments are mastered
I keep working till groups of fragments are mastered
I keep working til the largest groups of fragment are mastered

When the last fragment is the whole piece it is already at the speed it is supposed to be since the fragment the piece is comprised of were at the speed they were supposed to be
There's nothing more time-consuming and inefficiently than starting slow and gradually increase the metronome speed.

It is just usefull once the piece has been mastered and one needs to focus on dynamics, interpretation and expression and other nuances. There slower speeds are useful
They are not useful to learn the coordination required to play the pieces

Anyway since the fragment are very small I don't accumulate tension as I play them and physically rest after each of them. When the fragments become larger and larger the neuromuscular controls are faced with the dilemma of rest-impulses in the face of less or no delay between each fragment (since they have been linked) and the result is fast-impulses

resetting/contracting impulses in the face of long rest periods: slow impulses
resetting/contracting impulses in the face of short/no rest periods: fast impulses

Thanks. Do you also train purely mechanical aspects away from individual pieces ?

Offline danny elfboy

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #139 on: April 03, 2007, 01:56:55 PM
Thanks. Do you also train purely mechanical aspects away from individual pieces ?

I do 5-10 minutes of scale patterns exercises to train my ability to contract and reset almost at the same time first contraction/release on just one note, then on two notes groups, then on the three notes group and then on four notes groups

Offline darla

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #140 on: April 03, 2007, 03:52:12 PM
Thanks for all of the great ideas on this thread!

After watching the Tristano video, I had a question on playing without looking at the keys. I started a new thread in the student's corner and would appreciate any feedback anyone has to offer.

Offline danny elfboy

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #141 on: April 06, 2007, 02:14:48 PM
Or just do Hanon? Most of the excersizes strengthen the 4th finger, and Hanon has strongly improved my 3-4 trill, and hopefully my 4-5 when I finish the book.
Quote
STOP. Everything and anything but that.

Hanon is not bad at all !!
To say Hanon is bad because it is used in the wrong way is like saying that all knives are bad because they can be used to kill, no matter they can be used for cooking too.

Many people see improvements with Hanon ... so that would be impossible if Hanon was that bad. The reason why they see improvemet is not because Hanon develops finger strenght of other amenities. Neither one see improvements if one follows the suggestion to lift the fingers high, that way one's more likely to see an hand doctor soon.

Of course Hanon can't be used to improve musicality.
But Hanon can be used to specifically practice the piano aspect we have been talking about on this thread: well timed short contraction and instantenous resetting

It's easy to see why.
Hanon uses exercise in patterns.
So each bar is a repetition of the previous pattern.
Each patter is rhythmically simple so the division of the notes is even.
That means that Hanon is perfectly divided into muscle impulses (contraction-resetting) by:

4 notes - reset - 4 notes - reset - 4 notes - reset - 4 notes - reset

The fact that after that the pattern is repeated stimulates the neurological pathway to find each new bar a way to play the same pattern but with more "control" over the impulses of contraction and release. That wouldn't be so straightforward with a piece because the piece keep changing so there's not this natural impulses of "again, but better"

It is also impossible to "playing mechanically without thinking" because after each bar the purpose is contractions more efficiently than be previous bar, so you don't go in autopilot because you focus on the fact that there's a next identical pattern to play with even better use of contraction and release.

Many people ignore the suggestion to lift their fingers high as they practice Hanon and end up unawaressly practicing this very natural coordinative aspect steaming from the structure of Hanon studies. That's why even though Hanon is useless in developing non-existent finger-strength it does indeed help many to improve, especially in the control of the 4th and 5th fingers which as said depends mostly on well timed contraction and release.

Hanon can be a good exercise to keep practicing this aspects of efficient coordination and motor cortext impulses control.

Daniel Patschan, fnork, cloche have said something like "all of this makes sense, but how do you practice for it?"

Well ... using Hanon the correct way would be a start.

Offline m

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #142 on: April 06, 2007, 04:14:41 PM
I practice the way I perform
I practice everything performance speed immediately


My take on this is quite different.

I need to practice slowly, so it is like a magnifying glass showing every little detail, which I need to feel and get identified with.
I need to find phrasing--that unique shape of musical line into which you put the melody or passage.
I need to find the "hand wave" into which I put that phrasing.
I need to find "intonation" of each melody curve.
I need to make thousands of other technical and musical decisions.
This all is way too detailed work, to be able to do in a fast tempo.

I knew MANY great pianists, including some super stars. Most of them, as well as such pianists as Richter, Gilels, Rachmaninov, and many more practiced slow. Some of them would play up to a tempo on stage, only. Horowitz practiced slowly, repeating some passages hundreds, thousands times. The same did Friedman.

I know one thing, if I practice everything performance speed only, the performance itself is going to be a disaster.

Best, M

Offline danny elfboy

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #143 on: April 06, 2007, 04:49:36 PM
My take on this is quite different.

I need to practice slowly, so it is like a magnifying glass showing every little detail, which I need to feel and get identified with.
I need to find phrasing--that unique shape of musical line into which you put the melody or passage.
I need to find the "hand wave" into which I put that phrasing.
I need to find "intonation" of each melody curve.
I need to make thousands of other technical and musical decisions.
This all is way too detailed work, to be able to do in a fast tempo.

I knew MANY great pianists, including some super stars. Most of them, as well as such pianists as Richter, Gilels, Rachmaninov, and many more practiced slow. Some of them would play up to a tempo on stage, only. Horowitz practiced slowly, repeating some passages hundreds, thousands times. The same did Friedman.

I know one thing, if I practice everything performance speed only, the performance itself is going to be a disaster.

Best, M

I explained myself the wrong way.
I don't practice everything performance speed only, I practiced up to speed immediately.
To explain why and what I mean with this:

Fast Speed Practice is used to:

1) Figure out what fingering works with full speed and what doesn't
2) Figure out how to use the arms to quicky move the hands to different zones
3) To figure out the "dancing" aspect of the music
4) To figure out movements that are efficient at fast speed and not just at slow one
5) To figure out what elements need to be added to make the piece "musical"

Slow Speed Practice is used to:

1) Practicing accuracy
2) Indentify the feeling of each note and chord under the fingers (kinesthetic sense)
3) Practicing the most "relaxed" (non tensed) but firm way to play "each note"
4) Practicing the interpretative aspects of volume, dynamics and articulation
5) Practicing the use of the pedal in the piece
6) Figure out how to syncrozine right hand and left hand in the early stages
7) Practice memory

Both are useful.
My problem is that slow speed practice is "useless" in figuring out the right coordination you will use at performance. So I always learn the piece linking small fragments learned at performance speed. When I'm over the initial scratch phases and I have the gist of the right coordination (as I haven't ingrained motions and coordintion which may work at slow speed but will never work at performance speed) I DO use slow speed practice for the reasons mentioned above.

Offline dabbler

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #144 on: April 07, 2007, 02:12:58 AM
Regarding the slow- vs. fast-practice issue, I remember an old posting (I think it was from Bernard) which distinguished slow practice from slow-motion practice. First I didn't believe there was a difference, but now I think that the distinction might be useful (well, it may be still a personal thing or only a psychological trick, but for me it seems to help): In "slow practice" you simply reduce the tempo of the music, but not necessarily that of your motion. This gives you effectively more time to accomplish what you want to do. As a negative point this means you may use different kinds of motion if you have more time (this is probably what danny elfboy hints to when saying that slow is useless for figuring out the right coordination). In contrast, in "slow-motion" practice, you try to reduce not only the tempo of the music but also the tempo of your motion -- the goal is to perform exactly the same motion as in fast speed, only you have more time to practice coordination and watch/adjust your movements under control (I don't know if that's what marik meant but nevertheless his magnifying glass metaphor would fit well for this). Again, maybe this is not a real difference, but for me thinking of practicing slow (e.g. when learning the notes, working out interpretative decisions) vs. slow-motion (when fine-tuning my coordination) really seems to help. Do other people think so, too, or do you think this is just psychological nonsense? Btw, I don't think that such a distinction would make sense in every coordinative task, e.g. ice skating, ballet dancing etc.

Offline dabbler

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #145 on: April 07, 2007, 02:22:27 AM
sorry, this is slightly off-topic, but marik, regarding the Sokolov-Couperin video that you linked to some posts ago: do you know from which edition he played? Is it a normal two-manual harpsichord edition and he simply relies on his repetition technique to play it on one manual? Or is it some dedicated piano transcription which is available somewhere? I would love to give it a try.

Offline prongated

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #146 on: April 07, 2007, 04:24:00 AM
...mmm I must say this has been a very enlightening thread. Also, from what I remember, what virtuosic1 had said are generally valid, even though I'm also quite sceptic about his recordings...pity he's decided to remove his comments from this forum.

...I've been trying to find a relaxed way of playing for almost two years, and now I think I'll be a big step or two further than before...much thanks to all involved in this thread!

Offline danny elfboy

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #147 on: April 07, 2007, 11:39:27 AM
In "slow practice" you simply reduce the tempo of the music, but not necessarily that of your motion. This gives you effectively more time to accomplish what you want to do. As a negative point this means you may use different kinds of motion if you have more time (this is probably what danny elfboy hints to when saying that slow is useless for figuring out the right coordination).

Exactly. But it's also more than that.
Biomechanically many motions used to activate and bear faster speed are also intrinsincally different than motions that allow and bear slower speed, and they not just a "faster" version of motions used a slow speed, they're totally different.
A good examples is running (especially the running mechanism of felines).
If you could slow down the same movement done by someone as he runs he would just stumble and fall on the ground. And the same applies for many other coordinative activities.
In fact ballet is a good example where you can't just "speed up" motions required for fast speed and "slow down" motions required for slow speed. They're intrinsically different.

Offline fnork

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #148 on: April 07, 2007, 11:17:26 PM
I agree with Danny, mostly. Personally, I sometimes use slow practice but with fast fingers, for example in order to control the thumb under movement when playing scales I put it under the next note RIGHT AFTER I've played with it, rather than the "slow-motion" approach where you would make this movement slower.


However, I know a violinist who studied with Dorothy Lane at Julliard in New York a long time ago, and she once told him that he was doing the "position change" (which is basically the same as the thumb under movement for us pianists) as fast as possible, but that this was wrong. When performing, the position changes should ALWAYS be AS SLOW AS POSSIBLE, she said, and that's what this violinist tells all of his students ever since. According to Dorothy Lane, that's the way all of the great violinists (Heifetz, Oistrakh, Perlman etc) did, and I guess it could be applied to piano too. However, in slow tempo I often practice these thumb under movements as fast as possible and then in performance tempo only as fast as necessary for the passage.

Offline phil39

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Re: Developing the 4th and 5th fingers
Reply #149 on: April 08, 2007, 12:41:33 AM
i made up my own exercise based on a scale (any major or minor scale, but i would use the simpler major ones to begin with to get used to the the idea). 
use fingers 3,4,5 all the time. the idea is to play triplets continuously:
start on top C and play 5,4,3 (which will be notes c,b,a), then move 5th finger down to b and play 5,4,3 again (b,a,g). carry on like this down the scale until you finish up on bottom c.
you can finish up anywhere you like really but it rounds things off nicely to finish on the tonic note.
then you can work up in reverse: 3,4,5 (c,d,e) (d,e,f) e,f,g) and so on.
you could even go right from one of the piano to the other doing it, a nice work out but not a great thrill for anyone listening!
to make the exercise purposeful (and hopefully not boring) you should be concentrating on every note to make sure you have evenness of weight/tone on each one.
bonus: it's a great way to get to know all your scales even better than if you just play straight scales. it gets nice and challenging doing the exercise when more black notes are involved, or you have to think way up and down a melodic minor.
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