Hello, welcome to the forums. Awww, why did you only address Marik? Well, personally, I am pretty tall for my age, so obviously I set my bench lower.There are obviously pros and cons to having high seats or low seats.This is it summed up as far as I know:Low Seat:Can feel the keys more (know when there is the bottom etc)hence, more controlIf improper, shoulders can be tensed up.High Seat:More strength, power, force. Less control over keys as it is harder to feel the bottom of the key.That's just what i feel personally, so you don't have to take it seriously or whatever.
So does this mean that different pieces of music require sitting at different heights on the bench. If you say that both levels of sitting have there advantages/disadvantages, wouldnt you then want to adjust the bench to each individual piece you play? Gaining most out of whatever the piece may require. Is this what you are getting at? I want to make sure I understand. If that is correct then is there somewhere in between sitting both low or high that one can gain both advantages?
Especially Marik who hasnt commented yet
Marik,I was wondering what your thoughts are about sitting at the piano. Sitting Low vs sitting High or is it somewhere inbetween. This is a topic that I have been discussing with fellow pianists and have come up with conflicting ideas. Is it purely preference or is there a correct way so one can gain the most out of ones playing? To me sitting low seems to cut off the ability to use ones arm weight. I could be wrong I just wanted to see how you feel about this topic. ThanksJerry
From my experience, it's too much to say that different pieces of music require different heights. If I may generalize, i think the Classical composers can be played from any height, comfortably. I don't think it is possible to play many Chopin Etudes from a low seat, unless your body in particular, in exception to the rule in other words, allows it. The reason is the weight can't be engaged, and engaging the weight of the body is essential for playing Chopin and most piano composers after him.Walter RamseyWalter, when you said sitting low won't allow the weight to be engaged by the body to play Chopin as well, did you mean more volume is needed than the weight of the arms can accomplish? I know sitting low from my experience produces more volume, weight, than sitting higher. Easy to see this by just letting arm weight be supported by a finger on table top at one sitting height, then try putting finger on something higher up (or lower seat) and you can feel the difference. Gould played very loud at times with low seat. I cannot play this way as arms get too tired. So I am not sure what you meant. Please clarify that. ThanksNick
Walter, when you said sitting low won't allow the weight to be engaged by the body to play Chopin as well, did you mean more volume is needed than the weight of the arms can accomplish? I know sitting low from my experience produces more volume, weight, than sitting higher. Easy to see this by just letting arm weight be supported by a finger on table top at one sitting height, then try putting finger on something higher up (or lower seat) and you can feel the difference. Gould played very loud at times with low seat. I cannot play this way as arms get too tired. So I am not sure what you meant. Please clarify that. ThanksNick
Sitting high gives actually much more power and you can use much more the power and weight of your back to play. Weight of the arm is pointless and will leed to injury. The weight comes from the back. I recommend switching teacher if he tells you to use the weight of the arm.
I recommend switching teacher if he tells you to use the weight of the arm.
I think this kind of statement is very narrow minded. Moreover, potentially it can be quite harmful--you are judging the teacher without knowing particular situation or context. You are questioning the authority of the teacher, undermining his/hers professional competence, without having any idea what you are talking about. You are giving very wrong message to people here. In my opinion, it is unethical, to say the least. You should be much more careful and think before you say something like this.M
I'm not sure I understand you here. Sitting high is apt to produce a bangy sound. Sitting low engages the weight of the body just as much as sitting high. Notice videos of Horowitz, for one, who uses low seating. Watch how he leans his whole body into the keyboard when he wants a powerful, full sound. What you want is the whole body behind your fingers -- body weight channelled through the arms to the hands. Using arm weight won't injure you, either. It's unrelenting tension that causes injury. Arm weight is how a beautiful, rounded tone is produced and it's not just the arms -- it's the body weight behind the arms.Just leaning forward into the keyboard will transfer this body weight at whatever height you use. Many great pianists use high seating, but still produce a beautiful tone. This is because they manage body weight with their arms and employ micro-bursts of weight through quick muscular contractions that immediately "de-contract" after each effort. Sort of like, muscularly speaking, catching one's breath. This allows tension to dissipate and relaxation to enter. This is confusing, isn't it? Hard to explain, easier to demonstrate.
I was obviously joking. Maybe it was not that obvious ... oops. Sorry about that. Of course using only the weight of the arm and forgetting the rest is harmful to you, but I was joking about switching teacher ... of course I can't judge with only that information ...