You have to find ways to simplify one hand.
37 times harder?
Scientifically calculated.I am sure he could explain it to you, but he would need charts and stuff.
Didn't follow that, how is HT 37 times more difficult than HS?
Hands together is actually 37 times more difficult than hands separate.
In average. You can give or take 3. That is: 37+-3.
Does it really matter?
Not really. Good teachers recommend practicing hands together from scratch.
Yes. Teachers recommend all sorts of things. I would not rush to call them good though.You should play hands together from scratch if you are practising sight reading. Otherwise practising hands together from scratch is pretty disastrous. Students who do it do it motivated by impatience. Teachers who actively support it are just misguided (and maybe bored and impatient too).However, there is no reason to take issue here. Just try this:Get two pieces/passages of similar difficulty that you are unable to play at this moment in time, since you have not yet acquired the technique to do so. Practise one with hands together from scratch. Practise the other hands separate first. Compare what you have achieved with each after a couple of weeks. Come back here and report the results.And Janice's suggestion above is also excellent. Best wishes,Bernhard.
I´ll try that. Thanks!But when you say you have mastered one hand, you have to get it memorized too or just by reading it?
Case 1, 51 year old adult beginner. Can play C, G, D scales at quarter = 80 MM, sixteenth notes, HS. Can play scales at 80, half notes, HT. Scales therefore would be 8 times as hard HT. If I could really do the half notes without getting off, most of the time I don't make it all the way through without a stumble. . Yeah, this one is me. Case 2, 14 year old beginner. Plays her C scale apparently just as well HT as HS and perceives no particular difficulty. This drives me nuts. Yeah, that one would be my daughter. I think the trick is, she is left handed.
Usually I do not learn a whole piece hands separate (one exception are Bach pieces and counterpoint in general when I learn – and memorise - not only each hand, but each voice separately).What I do is I learn a very small passage (say, a bar or two) hands separate and then join them. Being such a small passage, after 2 or 3 repeats it is memorised anyway. Then I learn the next passage the same way.
However, when I join the passages, I do it hands together straightaway. There is no reason to do it hands separate because the technique has been already acquired.