As A Intermediate Pianist Playing For 3 Years Up To The Standard Of ABRSM Grade 5 I'm Beginning To Wonder If Scales Are Necessary For Improving Performance As I've Only Learnt Basic Major And Minor Scales and have Reached Grade 5 Input Would Be Appreciated
A good guide is the grade 8 scales for ABRSM . If you can play them all at those speeds with accuracy, musical shape and dynamics, you will be well positioned to tackle almost all classical sonatas, alot of bach and the fast sections in romantic music.Bottom line - Scales and Arpeggios = ESSENTIAL
I find myself unable to agree with that statement. I can do all those scales even faster than the required speed, with accuracy, "musical shape" and dynamics, even with mixed articulation, yet I still cannot play piano to save my life.My contention is that playing scales and arpeggios in a vacuum is not going to do much to your technique.
What's up with the attitude? =/We can argue forever if scales are necessary or not. However, they are real, and every major work has them. Either you practise them, so you know them before they show up, or you practise them when they show up.
My point is simple: why bothering to know things beforehand, if they probably will never show up the way you studied them? Of course, you must do whatever you feel best, provided the result is good enough.
Most of the time, scales in music are played the way you study them. For example, the cromatic scale is in the piece fur elise by Beethoven. wouldn't practicing the cromatic scale help you be able to play it at the right tempo when it came up in the music? yes it would help. All the scales on the piano have different figerings unlike playing scales on the guitar.
Scales can actually be transposed WAY easier on a guitar than on a piano. The basic pattern for a major scale can be moved up one fret, and voila, you now have the major scale a semitone higher. Guitarists don't have "black and white" frets creating different fingerings, they just have to deal with smaller frets further up the neck. A scale starting on an open fret obviously can't be transposed down a step without altering a different string. If a guitarist can play a 2 octave scale starting on the A string, then he can probably play that same scale, shifted one step higher, just as easily.
I think you are using way too specific of examples though... a scale is very different than a scale etude. The Chopin Op 10 #8 combines scale and arpeggio technique, and the Villa Lobos, by the looks of the score, has scales among many other techniques. The scale parts (E major at the beginning) wouldn't be out of the ordinary... most of the second and third page are broken or larger chords. The two are too varied to compare 'difficulty'.
I'm talking about regular scales. I don't know how a major scale suddenly becomes a 'pop' scale, when it is the same major scale that comes up in classical music. What about an octatonic scale or a whole tone scale? The T-S-T-S-T-S pattern going up can be used starting on any fret, and going from there (without using an open string)... obviously the right hand has to pluck/pick or whatever but the actual pattern itself is visually easier to retain than on the piano (for me at least).If you give a piano student with one years experience the C blues scale, then ask him to play it on F# just as quickly without mistakes, then give a guitarist the same task, I don't see how the pianist would have an easier time.