After reading all these messages, I find myself having to agree with nyiregyhazi. If a standard fingering has survived over all these years, there obviously must be a good reason. And what nyireghazi has said about standard fingering is absolutely correct. To avoid standard fingering without a good reason is crazy, if not simply because it has been tried and tested to degrees for a very long time by a large number of pianists who have passed this way before. To avoid standard fingering simply because it’s too difficult or too slow to learn how to pass the thumb under smoothly suggests that someone may be searching for a ‘quick fix’ to play arpeggios.
But I dread to think how many gaps are likely to be created by starting all arpeggios on the thumb and being honest, a well trained ear is likely to pick up these gaps pretty quickly, even if the player is not doing so.
So forgive me for saying this, but when someone says they believe ALL arpeggios, even those which begin on black keys, should begin on the thumb, I immediately think to myself, hmmm, someone is trying to avoid the best way simply because it’s the easiest route. Sometimes, the route may appear more difficult, but actually, the more difficult route is often the one which produces the best results. Quick fixes never pay off!
The argument about Liszt’s use of alternative fingering as a suggestion that he might also have played arpeggios with his thumbs on black notes is not cutting it for me. I studied with Joseph Weingarten, who himself studied at the Liszt Academy in Budapest in the early 1900’s and although he did offer alternative fingerings to facilitate certain passages, there was never a time when he suggested using anything other than the standard fingering for arpeggios. In fact, if I remember rightly, he was very stringent about using correct fingerings to ensure notes were always played exactly as they should sound – legato, smooth, speedy…… Not only this, the use of specific fingering can facilitate weight on individual keys allowing the fingering to help along the expression and flow.
What he did show me, however, was an exercise to improve the position of my fingers on the keys and this DID involve putting thumbs on black keys. In no way, though, was this intended to ‘replace’ the standard fingering of scales and arpeggios but more to improve finger position and strength, which would later create faster, smoother playing. What I am saying, therefore, is that there is a place for standard fingering BUT there is also a place, and situations, for also being able to play with the thumbs on black keys. To be able to do both will obviously improve one’s playing to a large extent. However, one was never designed to replace the other.