In measure 48, we begin a fioritura group of notes, and my RH has been having problems in getting tense when using the fingering provided in my score, so I went ahead and changed it to what felt more comfortable to me and made much more sense to me (considering the passage work that comes before it).
Let me tell you what I came up with :
f#b ebef# ef# bf#
RH (ascending) -- 3 5 3134 13 14
After hearing so many people rave about exercises and technical development in general, I went back to the books. I slowly played through scales, arpeggios, octaves, thirds, sixths, chromatic scales, Pischna, Hanon, Schmitt, Czerny vol I and II of his selected piano studies, and then also Czerny's School of velocity, Op 299, various other people's works who are less known (why not ?) and then Brahms 51 exercises. I also decided to play through some Bach just to see if I could find this precise figuration and fingering to go with it, but I just couldn't -- I couldn't find it anywhere except for in this precise piece and in this precise place within the piece, and to fit my specific hand and personal needs, too.
Am I missing something ?
What should I do ? I mean, I could just practice that specific place in the Rach's music, but I feel pretty naughty doing that since I have obviously missed the boat somewhere else
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Any help you can give me is greatly appreciated
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m1469,
At the moment I am travelling and don't have the score in front of me to check original fingering.
From the pics it seems you "block out" the pattern, preparing the hand for three notes, so the hand is in a "wide open" position and of course it creates tension. The trick is to "think" of it as of narrow position, where you stretch only for one interval and once you play the note the previous finger immediately releases the previous note and hand is in the "closed" position.
The closest technique I can think of is Chopin Etude Op.10/1.
The short "rotation" and your fingering could probably work for some certain short runs, but I feel they are out of context of this long melodic line.
In other words, your fingering and the way you move your hand creates very short lengths of phrasing, which is contrary to the musical and pianistical content of this passage, where the physical motion should be "circle like" or infinite one, rather than "rolled", where the motion stops every two-three notes and since it is out of musical context, the passage becomes much harder than it actually is.
Another thing, you play "all the notes", where each one is equally important. As a result, the really important ones (obviously top ones) get bured, your fingers get stuck in the keys, pushing too hard and creating lots of unneccessary tension, and most important, the passage loses its musical meaning. It should be played on "one".
But, before you start I'd suggest forget motion, fingering, your instrument, just close your eyes and feel and see not even the sound, but musical wave of this passage.
Most likely you will see something where the intensity reaches its peak on the top of the passage, and then like a baloon loses the air when going down... Or like a birst of wind, immediately calming down just to get another burst again... Or... whatever your fantasy pleased...
After that, pretend that you are trying to conduct it. Remember, that invisable orchestra consists of people who have no idea what music is, so in order them understand what to do in every little detail you will need to show with your hand in the most expressive way. Most likely, that will be the most natural pianistic motion you've found.
After that you will find that the reason you got tension is just as simple as you were playing the "bottom" part of the passage too loud and it should be lighten up SIGNIFICANTLY, so you leave space for creschendo on the top few notes. Together with your newly found breathing pianistic motion it will help the music to get that neccessary momentum.
And after that you already won't need me to tell you what fingering to use

Best, M