Home
Piano Music
Piano Music Library
Top composers »
Bach
Beethoven
Brahms
Chopin
Debussy
Grieg
Haydn
Mendelssohn
Mozart
Liszt
Prokofiev
Rachmaninoff
Ravel
Schubert
Schumann
Scriabin
All composers »
All composers
All pieces
Search pieces
Recommended Pieces
Audiovisual Study Tool
Instructive Editions
Recordings
PS Editions
Recent additions
Free piano sheet music
News & Articles
PS Magazine
News flash
New albums
Livestreams
Article index
Piano Forum
Resources
Music dictionary
E-books
Manuscripts
Links
Mobile
About
About PS
Help & FAQ
Contact
Forum rules
Pricing
Log in
Sign up
Piano Forum
Home
Help
Search
Piano Forum
»
Piano Board
»
Student's Corner
»
staccato double octaves
Print
Pages: [
1
]
Go Down
Topic: staccato double octaves
(Read 6966 times)
spaciiey
PS Silver Member
Jr. Member
Posts: 47
staccato double octaves
on: January 15, 2008, 11:39:26 AM
I have really tiny hands, even for my age - I can only JUST reach an octave, but it hasn't bothered me much until now; I cannot play staccato octaves without hitting extra notes in the middle. It is a requirement in the technical work for my exam... so I cannot really disguise this like I would if I had to play big chords in my pieces. Aside from hoping my hands are going to grow bigger, how else can I avoid hitting extra notes? Thanks.
Logged
gerryjay
PS Silver Member
Sr. Member
Posts: 828
Re: staccato double octaves
Reply #1 on: January 16, 2008, 01:27:55 AM
there are two simple and effective exercises that might help:
- to improve your octave position: RH first. place your thumb on middle-C (for example) and play a fifth (5th finger). then, play an octave (5th finger as well). switch from other to another without looking at your hand. feel what your doing, and if you hit a key by mistake, guess what it is by movement and by sound, not looking at it. do the same with your left hand, and in another places of the keyboard (including black keys).
- when you absolutely confident with that (i mean 100 times right in 100 attempts), procede to octave changing. start with c-c and d-d. change from one to another until it cause you no problem. then, you develop this exercise twofold: 1) changing the position at the keyboard (d-d to e-e, g-g to aflat-aflat); 2) changing the gap. this last procedure is the final goal HS. start c-c to d-d, then c-c to e-e, and so forth.
of course, after you can do it HS, it's a cool idea play it HT. then you're done. just have some patience. i use a metronome when i practice this kind of stuff, controling my speed development.
good luck, and hope that helps!
btw how old are you?
Logged
spaciiey
PS Silver Member
Jr. Member
Posts: 47
Re: staccato double octaves
Reply #2 on: January 16, 2008, 03:24:28 AM
Thankyou... I will try it out later when I practice piano. I'd try it now but I don't want to wake my dog up lol.
For the record, I am fifteen. I am probably not going to grow too much more as well.
Thanks again.
Logged
amelialw
PS Silver Member
Sr. Member
Posts: 1106
Re: staccato double octaves
Reply #3 on: January 16, 2008, 07:21:17 AM
i'm pretty sure that you can play broken octaves instead, they just have to be faster.
I did that for my RCM gr 10 exam and it is acceptable
Logged
J.S Bach Italian Concerto,Beethoven Sonata op.2 no.2,Mozart Sonatas K.330&333,Chopin Scherzo no.2,Etude op.10 no.12&Fantasie Impromptu
Sign-up to post reply
Print
Pages: [
1
]
Go Up
For more information about this topic, click search below!
Search on Piano Street