I think I've answered my own question!
Mechanically, the pinky is not similar to the other inside fingers because of its outside location, i.e. it closes inward. (Turn your fingers toward you and open and close them. Do you see how the pinky connects to the thumb at a more oblique angle than the other three fingers?) This is the reason why she uses her 4 because it is more mechanically efficient and also because of the mass of the 4th finger.When there is a genuine need to use a finger, including the 5, she will use it. She just hasn't come across a piece that requires it yet.
Then why is she avoiding its use? Everyone's hands are differently shaped even as young children. The mass of the pinky is usually the smallest and there is a big difference between the 5 and the 4. It's not negligible considering the weight necessary to depress the keys on most pianos.The issue mentioned was using this RH finger pattern: 1-3-4 on C-E-G, supposedly staccato for the theme of the "Surprise" symphony. Staccato on the 5? It's mechanically and physically inefficient. The child is right to prefer using the 4.Consider another situation: Alberti bass. Would you play rapid alberti bass as 5-1-3-1 (C-G-E-G) or 4-1-2-1 on the same notes?
Do kids left to their own devices tend to become virtuosos- from following their natural instincts?
The fingering that the child chose, 1-3-4, played staccato on C-E-G is perfectly acceptable. However, for alberti bass, it would be very inefficient because of the reach between 3-4 (E-G), as you mentioned.
Yes, e.g. Chopin and Liszt. What they did not have were teachers to teach them what was "correct" and as a result, were able to figure out an incredible amounts about how their bodies functioned in relation to the keyboard. (Liszt could already play the piano before he received lessons from Czerny.)These are just two well-known examples. Contrast: the hundreds of students in conservatories in France during the 19th century who never learned how to play the piano with the same kind of fluency because of teaching methods prevalent during those times. Those methods are still taught today in today's conservatories because it is still believed by great minds today that there is a "correct" way to play the piano as in the subject title: "should I correct her fingering?"
I for example have large hands so I can play alberti bass with 1 3 4 fingering very comfortably and easily and use it if I need to use my pinky in an upcoming passage.
The reach is still there. Stacatto does not excuse sloppy fingering. If you get used to sloppy fingering where you have time to get away with it, you inevitably end up limited by it when you reach situations where there is no time. If you were to excuse the omission of 5, the only logical way to do so is to use 1 2 and 4, so as to place the wider reach in the natural area between thumb and second. To leave a spare note between 3 and 4 is simply a poor fingering. Why are you even arguing for this ridiculous idea?
Did you still not read that the poster said 5 proved to be EASIER?
So, let's take two great geniuses, pretend they never had any lessons in their formative years (which they certainly did) and use that to suggest that kids do better if left to evolve on their own?
How about we contrast Chopin and Liszt with the thousands of genuinely self taught pianists who never learn to play very well at all? Are you actually saying you think that kids who play tunes with only one finger do so because they know best? Do you seriously believe all humans have some inate piano instincts that do better without teaching? To play piano well is not natural or normal in any sense. That's why we have to SHOW students better ways to think and move- not take the ridiculous idea that a blatantly poor fingering is some act of Lisztian ingenuity.
There's a world of difference between a sloppy fingering and an individually selected but valid fingering. Leaving students to make major mistakes does not make them likely to find individual solutions- it just leaves them to struggle.
Even in your case, surely you would use 124? Why have the two cramped up in no man's land with nothing to do?
I don't know what you guys are talking about . . . 1 2 4 for fast alberti bass??? I use 1 3 5 but have small hands, so maybe that's why.
I'm sorry, but if you're going to tell me that for a young hand to span a third between 3 and 4 (while leaving the 2nd stuck right against the thumb) is "mechanically efficient" I have no idea what planet you come from to possess such a hand. You sincerely feel it's less natural to open the space between thumb and 2nd finger to a third than to do so between 3 and 4? This is utter nonsense, beyond the nature of "opinion". There is no more natural place to open out than between thumb and 2nd.
You're basically suggesting that it's easier to do a vulcan salute (where 123 are bunched up and 45, with a gap in the middle). It certainly is not. It's easier to keep the four fingers together and bring the thumb away.
So, Liszt's professional musician father never once would have helped him? You are making up facts. This is total nonsense. Not to mention the fact that the average child is NOT a genius. Take even a million kids and give them a piano without tuition and see how many will become great pianists. To base general teaching on such a model is simply foolhardy.
Regarding this bilge about how to avoid the single most important finger in piano playing, try this instead.
Any kid can get their fifth to work when they start from this approach. It's when they try to jam the whole arm through the fifth that it's perceived as being weak. While I think Roy Holmes attributes rather too much to this approach, it's a great way to feel what the fingers are really able to do.
Oh and ... I don't think I ever said 5 was easier, in fact insisting on it has introduced a stutter because she has to stop and think at every "G". And come to think of it, when she plays "twinkle twinkle" (from memory) she uses 5 on the A because she understands she wont reach D without it. Although then she has to pass a finger over to get to C, or else use, say, 4 on G and F which I think is what Suzuki has. So maybe I am being too pedantic.
so, anything goes in staccato? Never mind sensible fingering? Hell, why not take just one finger for the lot? That's what most beginners tend to do. How can their instincts be wrong, eh? In advanced piano playing, staccato is the most important place of all to think ahead and cover sensible hand positions. Hopping from 3 to 4 to avoid a 5th that is already in place is no more acceptable for stacatto than legato- UNLESS there is a vastly better reason than to avoid use of finger 5.
Or the thumb moves sideways- into the exact same position that is used for something so basic as a C major arpeggio.
That's one of the most bizarre pieces of logical implication I've heard.... And that it implies that geniuses can never go on to have their own thoughts unless nobody ever teaches them anything? ... Your chain of logic is seriously supposed to be, Liszt had some unusual techniques, therefore his father could never have taught him anything?
So what business does anyone have avoiding a (weakness-free?) 5th finger that was ready on the key anyway? If you want to argue for this, can I please ask you to exercise some degree of consistency?
One common error in beginning pedagogy is the 5-finger position that is taught to many students. It makes one assumption: all fingers are equal. They are not and will never be.
However, the mechanical action of the fingers is inherently different because of each finger's shape, placement on the hand, and musculature and tendon attachments. For these reasons they will never be the same.
But, this understanding of the hand and arm anatomy is relatively new in piano pedagogy. Few teachers know of this, and even if they do know of it, they only have a surface understanding of it and while they may be able to discuss the differences of each finger, they may still give 5-finger advice and use the same pedagogy books they learned on.
5-finger position is so prevalent that almost all, if not all, beginning piano books promote it as if there was no alternative. Students learn and grow up on it and believe there is no other possibility nor do they ever question the fact that it is ineffective. After all, it worked for them, why should they doubt it? And yet, if they get beyond the beginning methods, they will inevitably learn things that contradicts 5-finger position. And then they will use this rationale to explain it away: "We should not confuse elementary piano pedagogy with advance literature."
Really, 5-finger position is taught almost entirely for the purpose of learning how to read music. It's just simpler to teach them to keep their hands on the keys and associate certain notes with certain fingers. It's a lazy way to teach and an unproductive one as it prevents beginning students from exploring how their bodies work. All things being equal, this exploration of one's body is the key difference between a mediocre pianist and a damn good one. The damn good one knows exactly how his body works; the mediocre one only knows what he was taught.
It is like teaching a student to sing by discribing the vocal folds showing pictures of the diaphram and how the vocal chords vibrate. They will not get it, be bored with it, and assume all of music is as boring as you the teacher.
But that is not true for 99 percent of 4 years old is it?
Really, 5-finger position is taught almost entirely for the purpose of learning how to read music. It's just simpler to teach them to keep their hands on the keys and associate certain notes with certain fingers.
My main objection to teaching 5-finger position came from my own experience as a teacher teaching children 5-finger position: it didn't work very well for playing the piano. If I were to compare students whom I had taught 5-finger position in conjunction with written music to students whom I taught to associate written notes with keys, the latter displayed a high degree of ingenuity on par with many of Chopin's etudes.
Quote from: faulty_damper on June 14, 2011, 03:09:43 AM I do object to a minor degree that students should not be taught how to read immediately because it focuses the mind away from the mechanical aspect of playing. What usually happens is that the student focuses so much on reading and is unable to process the mechanics of playing, thus leading to poor or sloppy technique. But they do learn how to read but at the expense of learning how their bodies work. It is more important that students learn how their bodies work before they focus on reading.This is were the teacher's focus need to come in to divert over emphasis on reading and less on technique and ear training. Everything we do is not bad in it of itself but when we over emphasis something, we tend to have a weakness in something eles. For example the first lesson I have with my students , we explore the keyboard up and down, learn about our hands, elbows, shoulders, experience what right position look like and how uncomfortable what bad technique feels like. When that is discussed and reinforced I don't have issues with them because I model it for them or it is quickly corrected. Many times I take the music away from them and have them play it memorized so they can watch their bodies. Problems can easily be avoided when their taught what to do and not left to learn bad habits. The weakness of just teaching by rote is the students will not see a reason to read music and find it confusing and unseemly (have had plenty like this). There is no magic formula, what I find works best is to balance rote teaching and note reading and give them a balance of both. I will say I prefer rote teaching especially when I know a specific movement is going to be new for the student.Quote from: faulty_damper on June 14, 2011, 03:09:43 AMHow was Mozart able to play the keyboard at 4? Was it because he was a genius or was it because everyone around him played the keyboard as well as other instruments? Likewise, how the hell did he learn to speak German and Italian? It had nothing to do with him being a genius and almost everything to do with his environment. So true, it also helped his father was a music teacher! Children surrounded in a musical environment of course will be increase their interest and aptitude towards music ; the supposed Mozart Effect. For every good piano student, I can show you a parent that is there supporting them if not joining them in their playing. Unfortunately students are not all blessed with these type of parents or musical environment and for me it is important to educate them despite their personal condition. To many students feel they do not have the talent to play piano or it is to hard. It is unfair to compare other students to Mozart who lived in such a privileged environment because they are different people. The best we can do is give people the best musical instruction and allow the motivation from success to propel a love for music regardless of an limitation in technique or musical " potential".Quote from: faulty_damper on June 14, 2011, 03:09:43 AMI do not advise this strategy to anyone who is does not have these direct/concrete concepts. This is not instruction on how to sing, it is instruction for those who can already sing who already have these concepts in mind. Only when they have these concepts can it be discussed in such a way.Me neither, and surprisingly there are teachers that are like that. It mention that because talking explaining tendons to a 5 year-old is comparable to this method. Students need to have their movement corrected by their teacher and shown how to do it. They do not need a human anatomy lesson because it will not help them understand what they cannot do already. That is why I said the statement to separate elementary pedagogy from advance piano literature. It is not out of ignorance but because they are different. Children imitate...thats what they do and what they can handle . Mozart's composition as a child are simple imitations and not rule breaking or particularly in genius. You show me a child prodigy and I will show you a child who has an enormous ability to imitate someone who can play. We should allow students to imitate a good model so they can have a good role model
I do object to a minor degree that students should not be taught how to read immediately because it focuses the mind away from the mechanical aspect of playing. What usually happens is that the student focuses so much on reading and is unable to process the mechanics of playing, thus leading to poor or sloppy technique. But they do learn how to read but at the expense of learning how their bodies work. It is more important that students learn how their bodies work before they focus on reading.
How was Mozart able to play the keyboard at 4? Was it because he was a genius or was it because everyone around him played the keyboard as well as other instruments? Likewise, how the hell did he learn to speak German and Italian? It had nothing to do with him being a genius and almost everything to do with his environment.
I do not advise this strategy to anyone who is does not have these direct/concrete concepts. This is not instruction on how to sing, it is instruction for those who can already sing who already have these concepts in mind. Only when they have these concepts can it be discussed in such a way.
To clarify - is middle C position considered a five-finger position? I thought the five-finger positions were the ones where both hands start on the same note (but in different clefs), so both hands are placed in either C position (C D E F G) or G postion (G A B C D) to start. The Faber books teach this way and I don't understand why teachers like them so much. Those are the ones I avoid like the plague. Like faulty_damper, I don't think it's a good way to teach reading. Transposing, chords, and intervals, yes. Reading, no. I personally have chosen a book that starts on middle C and goes out, note by note, eventually introducing all the notes to the entire grand staff. I saw it as an alternative to the five-finger books.
Hi, nyiregyhazi: I agree with everything you just said. If you review the thread, you'll see that I was one who argued for being strict with students about using common sense fingering and teaching them how to best use their hands and fingers on the piano. The conversation, though, turned into the idea of teaching students to read based on five-finger positions, which is what I avoid. I don't avoid the concept of five-finger positions altogether. As you mention, it is fundamental to understanding the structure of music and piano-playing. All of my students start out in C position pieces (taught by rote) before branching out. I teach them how to read using a different approach, though. Actually, this discussion has led to the reasons why I do what I do in my teaching. I use materials from several different methods (including my own homemade materials) to cover as many bases as I can. It is too easy for students to get stuck in a certain way of thinking if there isn't variation. I try my best to approach every subject from different angles.
Yea well I say C position to mean both hands start in C position so it would be a 5 finger position. The Faber book do start of that way but they do move away from them in the beginning of level 1. If you skip the primer and go straight to pieces where the hands start on different notes. Most of the pieces are in C or G positions for the most part and that is one of the weakness of the method.However the illustrations are nice and the pieces are not nearly as wooden as Alfred series. I agree it is a great idea to supplement this method and not totally rely on it.
come on! leave your freaking pissing contest out of this! Ask her why she wont use the 5th finger. If she says something like "it's more difficult" or "it's easier to use the 4th", then that's a reason to change it. But tell her why. Don't just "do this and do that", cause then she wont learn a thing. If she says something like "because it hurts when I play it" or "it's very uncomfortable" you should do some very soft stretching or massage.
I prefer to use the term "guided practice" when helping a student figure out the best movement to execute the depressing of a key or keys. It's usually never necessary to tell the student why he should try something else, other than to tell him to try something else. The reason is simple: when the best movement of the ones he has tried works the best (easiest and most effective) he will adopt that movement. It's a very simple process.
I completely agree with you. There are always alternative fingering solutions but one ideal answer. You have to guide students through the process of finding fingering that works for their level and their body type. Teaching students to teach themselves is the best thing we can do as a teacher.
A student ought to be able to justify a fingering with explanation- or chances are they are only thinking of the smaller picture.
The only way to learn effective individual fingering is to be shown good fingerings and have it explained why they work. In all too many cases, the student won't even have noticed that they didn't follow the fingering. That's just laziness and sloppiness, sorry. If they say,
(On an aside: habits are thought to be difficult to change - they are not. It takes the same amount of time to learn a different behavior in lieu of the behavior needing change. The reason it seems so difficult is because the new behavior isn't practiced, thus it is never learned.)? After saying habits are not difficult to change, you basically went on to say that they indeed are- just in rather more words.
The other day I had a student moving her whole hand across to play the highest note of a phrase- when the 5th was already there. She immediately ran out of fingers and had to jump down again. The two unnecessary adjustments interfered with the left hand- totally breaking it. She struggled with the correction at first, but purely due to habit. As soon as the habit was broken, the passage flowed.
"They didn't disagree with the way it sounded, only with the way it looked. It didn't conform to the way they thought the piano should be played. "Are you so sure of that? The sound is almost always compromised in cases where I correct fingerings. Bad fingerings usually lead to accented lumps/ bad legato/hesitations etc. All too often, students who are used to bad fingerings don't even notice the effect on the sound. They are too accustomed to doing it to perceive what a difference it makes. It actually damages their musical hearing. I won't speculate about your teachers or your playing, but I know why I feel the need to correct sloppy fingerings. If a pianist takes a thumb on a black note in a c sharp minor arpeggio say (as virtually all students would, if left to their own devices), it takes a hell of an advanced player to disguise that.
Without having been shown some principles for fingering, it's just unguided guesswork. To assume that will go anywhere is to assume genius. If the above held up, it would be better to have scores with no fingerings at all. That just does not work, unless the student has prior understanding of the principles. Most of the time you'd just end up wasting a lot of time on poor executions, before having to give the student what they'd have been better off knowing from day 1.
Ask a student who only knows arpeggios starting on white keys to finger C sharp minor and they will almost always use thumb on C sharp. They will also have corresponding accents and very poor legato. Very few students ever begin by finding the superior fingering comfortable- never mind divine it for themself. ... However, the point is that students don't magically figure out how to finger root position C sharp minor without possessing either relevant prior knowledge or personal genius. ...
For even simple pieces, there are virtually infinite possible combinations.
So where do we draw the line? Do we also forgive a missing key-signature? Good fingering is one of the essentials. To assume that a student will chance upon it (while being too busy to read a few numbers) assumes piano genius. You seriously think it's easier to understand the big picture well enough to compose a decent fingering- than to READ a decent fingering. I find that logic simply absurd.
A student who is not up to processing such basic instructions is in no position to be processing how to calculate an effective fingering. Students who ignore fingerings are students who have countless musical problems and habits to be resolved. You see this over and over again. Students who read fingerings- BUT ask their own questions are a whole different kettle of fish. You cannot compare the two. It's a grave error to treat sloppiness in the same way.
So, in other words, it's difficult to change a habit. When trying to make a new habit, the old one will be trying to kick in. They are not independent. Rephrasing a statement in a larger number of words does not refute that initial statement.
You seem to think that contradicts me, but that was the point I made. Crap fingerings cause accents/bad legato and the ear grows to accept them- due to knowing no other. Which is exactly why they must be corrected. Otherwise it creates a student who becomes deaf to gross musical deficiencies.