Wow, can you seriously not tell the difference between legato in both voices and legato in one voice only? Although it will sound legato, it will sound even more legato if both voices are legato.plus neither of your voices were legato
Yes, it would sound more legato if both voices of thirds are legato but is this honestly workable?
...as long as one of the notes is legato, the ear is 'fooled' into believing there is a true legato going on.
I don't personally know of one that is much good. All I'd say is that most double thirds scales tend to be situated in places where you can use pedal (or they tend to imply non legato anyway, in classical period repertoire). I'd work on staying well grounded in the keys in a slow tempo- with no staccato notes. From there, you can build up to the point where the gaps are so small as to be inaudible. One of the only extended scales in legato thirds I know of is in the Brahms 2nd concerto- and nobody actually plays that properly anyway (I doubt if even Hamelin could fit all the notes in). Aside from that, it's virtually all chromatic scales that crop up.
...I took it for granted, unfortunately, that in a discussion with advanced players talking about advanced techniques, other posters would naturally assume that striving for perfect legato of ALL notes in the thirds would be obvious.
So, to get back to the topic, and your comments about 35 -> 13: I often use a 35 -> 12 fingering, which gets around the repeated 3rd finger issue, and allows for four thirds in a series with the fingering 12 13 24 35 - but this introduces two thumbs in a row while still requiring a break where the top voice is played by 5 -> 2. This for me is still more manageable than two 3s in a row, but as described in a post above I still have issues with dynamic evenness at the crossovers at fast tempo. What do you think of this strategy?
Hi xerula@Nireghazi (my apologies if I spelt this wrong) can you tell me more about double escapement? I've not come across these words before and am wondering what you mean by this.
Agreed, and that's why it's the 'official' solution; it's the best fix.
Well the point of that was, it didn't sound legato because it wasn't. You failed to mask the gaps in sound with the technique you claim to be using when I don't even hear legato in the upper voice.
If you don't like the first vid I posted listen to the second.
Also, while the second video features better legato than yours, many of the gaps are still rather striking. So the idea that as long as one note joins legato occurs is wrong.
Like I say, if you're listening for gaps you'll hear them.
I wasn't listening for them. I was just listening.
...and that's exactly where you've gone wrong. You can't 'just listen' - you listen for something. If you were just listening you'd hear the fridge, the cars going by and the neighbours.
If they're listening to the 'tune' that's exactly what happens. It just total pedants who hear otherwise.
The thing about legato is that if a "pedant" can hear holes, it's not legato.
Just as if one magician sees through another's trick it's no longer a trick?? ..go back to your Chopin mate!
If you think the mark of a real musician is that they can get away with playing to non-musicians,
No, non-pedants. I'd ask you to refrain from moving my goal posts! I thought you were off to practice?
Geez, what's wrong with you? A good magician can see through an amateur's tricks, especially if the magician tells you to close your eyes and not watch him while he takes cards out of his pocket. A great magician fools even the other great magicians. The illusions that the greats (Horowitz, Rachmaninoff, Arrau, Lipatti, etc.) make are absolutely magical, and couldn't be seen through with a set of x-ray goggles. Your "illusion" on the other hand is a failure of execution and lack of sensitivity.
Just because you are lacking in your ability to critique your own playing and improve it, does not mean you should insult others who point out your faults which you claim you don't have.
Absolutely. I once saw a Penn and Teller programme where Penn spoke of thinking that he had seen the magician do a standard move recognisable to any magician. Except it turned out he had done something totally different.
You are not even aware of what the correct fingering is for scales in thirds - so there's not much to debate. As I've pointed out you have a choice of vids - at least I've contributed more than just talk. Good bye!
Your videos have contributed nothing to this debate other than the fact that you do not understand the concept of legato. Legato is not sustaining one note to the next, it's how seamless a phrase is played. Obviously if there are gaps in sound, you fail to achieve legato.
Your videos have contributed nothing to this debate other than the fact that you do not understand the concept of legato.
Here's Mark Hambourg: