Finger consciousness per se is risky. Think of them as spokes on an imaginary
wheel, and play mainly through them, not so much with them. Just make sure that
there is always a sense of strong physical grounding, that the keyboard is an
active participant whose leverage is always being respected and exploited. Try
a low wrist (Horowitz). Think of your wrist as a baffle reference against which
you feel each and every note (Bolet, R. Casadesus), as if it were the hub of your
imaginary wheel. It is not the only such hub. The elbow will do, and the shoulder.
But a little dab'l do you. Don't overdo with any of this. Don't believe what does
not work. Don't breach your range of comfort.
Explore Feldenkrais. If nothing else, one learns from Feldenkrais
that when it comes to doing things with the body, there is always an easier, 'less is more'
way.
Liszt and Rachmaninov were big men with huge hands. Vladimir de Pachmann and
Alicia de la Rocha could barely reach an octave. They all played fairly well. De Pachmann,
once asked how he could play with such tiny hands, answered, "What makes you think
I play with my hands?"
O.K. All shapes and sizes. That's us. We get to choose for us as we are. It's
a tough assignment, and everybody--just like me today, on this website for the first time--is ready with advice. "You are doing it wrong." We are all doing it wrong. But it gets better, it does. Even a blind pig sometimes finds an acorn.
John Dinwiddie
Santa Rosa, Ca
USA