@brogers70:
thanks for taking the time to give me your thoughts. i'm sure they're worth me experimenting with!
@nyiregyhazi:
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Absolutely. You can support in this way just as well on a table top. The key is the static point when the key is at the keybed. This is where weight is most easily stabilised- when the key is no longer moving. So a light action should make no difference at all to that.
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thanks for this answer. i'm going to take a few weeks to read thoroughly some of your posts, and see if i can get a better understanding of your ideas!
it seems that you're saying that these two camps (arm weight vs finger action) have tended to become separated and exaggerated, when in reality, most high-level pianists neither use all arm-weight ("let gravity do ALL the work!") nor use all finger-action ("let the fingers move while keeping the hand and the arm completely motionless").
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[Successful pianists] don't play with an arm that bobs up and down, falling into every note.
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in my looking for info on piano technique, i came across video by lister-sink called 'freeing the caged bird', and it really intrigued me, because it seemed so much about preventing injury and playing the piano in a way where no tension accumulates. in the video, it seems that she really does advocate playing with an "arm that bobs up and down". if i am understanding what she is saying correctly, the "basic stroke" of piano playing consists of four elements, and when done together it looks like the pianist lifts her arm, then brings it down on the piano in free-fall; for each of these "basic strokes", she plays one to five seperate notes with her fingers. then to play more, she makes another "basic stroke". in other words, her method really /does/ seem to say that *all* notes start with you lifting your arm up, then letting it free fall .. and repeating this over and over again.
she seems to be a successful pianist, yet her method seems to say that you DO play piano with an arm that bobs up and down. what do you think of this?
maybe some background info on me will help clear up what is making me so interested in arm weight:
- i started trying to learn piano using a method that told me (among other things) to "lift fingers as high as possible" like little hammers, and exersices where (for example) you'd hold all other fingers down except the fourth, which you would try to raise as high as possible, to make it "independant".
` this resulted, in literally three or four days, of REALLY BAD pain in my wrists and up my arms. i couldn't even type at the computer without the pain coming back, and it's still hasn't completely gone away!
- this *REALLY* freaked me out, and now i'm honestly a little afraid of putting any strain on my arms and hands and wrists. so i'm really wanting to emphasise learning how to play piano with really good body mechanics, so that i can play with the least amount of strain possible on my body.
- now that i've got the courage to try learning piano again (just in the past few weeks), i'm finding that i have tension in my arms and shoulders as i try to keep my arms in the playing position (ie it feels like i'm fighting gravity to keep them up), and i'm really wanting to know how to keep my arms in the playing position without feeling so tense and tired.
- so then i turn to learning about arm weight (but can't find much clear info on it on the internet.. not yet, anyways), in order to find my answer.
it looks like your ideas have a lot to do with me trying to learn what i'm looking for, and am looking forward to studying them through your blog!
(but i'm also still very curious what the arm weight school says about it (if anything -- or is it just something they don't explicitly explain?), so if any arm-weight loyalists are reading this, please point me to some good sources of info, thanks!)