What's "HT" and "HS" mean?
I have been reading posts in the forum tonight and came across one for scales and one with Bernard talking about finding Solutions to problems or something like that and it got me thinking about scales.I understand the need to teach and play them, but what purpose is there to play them HT.I have yet to see a piece that would do this. (I am problably wrong and there are tons of them)It makes it difficult to hear your mistakes in tone HT compared to HS so why do it?
I have yet to see a piece that would do this. (I am problably wrong and there are tons of them)
I have thought about the reasons you mentioned for HT, but would it not be more advantage to use Exercises by Czerny or even .....(I have to say it) Hanon to tackle these problems head on instead of you using scales to do it.I in fact have used scales HT to do most of the points made in the previous post, but now I wonder if I have not wasted valuable time using scales when there could be a better way to tackle these problems.Or do the simplicity of scales simply help you concentrate on the problems you are tackling, be it sound, coordination or other techniques instead of the exercise itself.
Just as when performing a scientific expiriment, you don't want to test out to many variables at once. Even written excercises will distract you slightly from a single specific goal - if you make a mistake, you'll be less certain of whether the mistake is from unfamiliarity with the piece, bad fingering, simply slipping, or whatever.
After a couple of years (or even less if you have a good teacher showing you the shortcuts) you should have mastered all the technique you will ever need.
Can you list the technique's that should be mastered? In a separate post, I will ask you how you advise that we go about teaching that. But for now, could you just list the techniques that should be mastered? Thanks!! -- Janice
Yes and no....ad infinitum
Hey Bernhard. You have too much time on your hands or what? I take back what I said last time. That wasn't your longest post this one is.I'm glad there's no limit to how long a post can be here, there is over on the cello board.
Actually, Denis Lee, this forum has a limit to the size of the posts it accepts (it is pretty big though). You may have noticed that in certain threads, I have posted my answers in two parts. Yes, I reached the limit and I had to break down the original post in two. Basically I do not have a life . (And I type fast, very fast). Best wishes,Bernhard.
I know this is off topic, but how fast do you type, Bernhard? If I typed as much as you, I would be at the computer for 4 or more hours everyday. How long does it take you? (pls dont say 4 or more hours). You also manage to state things like facts-even listing them. How many hours a day do you devote to piano forum?donjuanp.s. if you do type fast, can you suggest ways of improving typing speeds? I hope you do the listing thing...
Hmm, interesting. Ive never heard of "DVORAK". yes, I can type- you know, without looking at the keys- Im just really quite slow. It was interesting to know how one of the great minds of the forum works.. inspired as always,donjuan
If I do DVORAK, ill be screwed if I have to type on someone elses computer. unless, the whole world switches over...donjuan
To go back to the aikido analogy. If you follow Ueshiba’s logical system, you will be training for years – maybe the wrong thing – before you can try to apply that to any real situation – and as it happened recently to a friend of mine who proudly holds a 6th dan black belt in aikido – when in Morocco he was mugged by two 14 years old who proceeded to beat him up to a pulp. 35 years of Aikido training and there was nothing he could do. Because he was trained logically, not pragmatically. If he had been trained pragmatically, he would know the instant someone threw a punch at him if his defense was working or not.
But having said this, I do believe that your friend would have had a much better chance had he crosstrained but probably only slightly (going back to the unpredictable dynamics of a street fight--let alone a mugging).
In other words, there is absolutely no way that Hanon "got it wrong" if his exercises have long withstanded the test of time.
Irrelevant to the topic but it is something that I feel strongly about. Bernhard, I must say that I do have a serious problem with the contents of this example. It seems to be very unfair to your friend for you to have reached the shaking conclusion that you have, in the manner that you have, of your friend's situation. One thing that I want to point out that a one-on-one fight (as I'm sure you know) can be incredibly dynamic, explosive, and unpredictable. A two-on-one fight can be even worse.
Wow! This forum is awesome. Bernhard your two posts that I have read are very thoroughly written and informative. They are awesome. I read them last night and have been thinking about them since. I just had to register to this forum just respond to your post!
So my question to you is this... As a beginning piano student, I can at least surmise that there are many things in piano playing that are purely technical (and not exactly a fun learning process).
And technical exercises have a very obvious use in this area because they isolate a problem and attempt to solve it. I can understand a child not comprehending the purpose and value of any particular technical exercise but certainly not an adult.
It is on this note that I ask you -- Are there any technical exercises that you can think of that are "inherently pragmatic"?
My other completely seperate question is -- What technical exercises do you feel have helped you the most in your life at the piano? What rhythmic exercises do you feel are the MOST helpful and that any beginning pianist could use (and please keep in my that I am asking you this even if you feel that none of them are really helpful if they are not solving a piece-related problem)?
I also believe that technical exercises alone can not be defined as the study of an experienced person's logic system. I guess you could say what few Hanon exercises I have done have helped me enough for me to defend them! Certainly, some of the exercises you have done have helped you. Even if you can not clearly see the problem at hand, if you can not perform the exercise then that in itself could be argued an obvious problem that needs to be addressed. Bernhard, it just seems that you are turning a blind eye to the success of (for example) Hanon exercises--as if you have lost the sense of their use. In other words, there is absolutely no way that Hanon "got it wrong" if his exercises have long withstanded the test of time. It would be very hard to convince me of this. : )
Yes and no.But before, I go on, let me give you an analogy. Bear with me, there is a point to it. You may have heard of the Japanese martial art of Aikido.... Best wishes,Bernhard.
Bernhard,So, Hanon is for no use for pianists (since there are better stuff out there, according to you)... why don't you tell Rachmaninov that?
I heard that he could play any of them at double than Hanons highest recommended speed, in any tonality. And correct me if I'm wrong, but I think everyone in those conservatories in Russia at that time had to play them..
so if scales are good, then why not mechanical exercises? Hanon promotes coordination between fingers which is something that happens in all music.
then why scales? just work on them when you see them in music.
Bernie-Sempai, lemingues wa nani desu ka?
From time to time for reasons not yet clear whole populations run to the top of a cliff and throw themselves into the sea committing mass suicide. Cold they possibly be wrong? Nah. Let us join them!
Here is another thought. Hanon published his exercises in 1873. This means that keyboard virtuosos like Scarlatti, Haendel, J. S. Bach, C. P. E. Bach., W.F. Bach Mozart, Clementi, Dussek, Cramer, Field, Kalkbrenner, Weber, Moschelles, Beethoven, Chopin, Liszt, just to quote the most well known never had the benefit of learning Hanon by heart in all keys. What a terrible lack in their musical education! Just imagine how much better pianists they could have been if they had been born a century later! Best wishes,Bernhard.
Wakarimasu ka?
Best wishes,Bernhard.