I am learning a 2 piano piece by myself using a digital piano to play one part while I play the other (for info, "Clair de Lune" by Debussy transcribed by Henri Dutilleux). It's possible with a regular piano too, but harder because you cannot adjust playback speed easily (unless your recorder allows that without changing the pitch).
While I never had problems synchronizing 2 hands, having to synchronize 4 hands is another story...
I figured out a couple of things already:
- the part I am listening to while playing the other part needs to have equal or faster notes than the other part, so it works well if it has fast runs or scales while the part I am playing has chords. The other way around I find just too difficult, say listening to slow chords while playing fast runs and expecting them to be synchronized with the next coming chord.
- sometimes I have to swap the "Piano 1" and "Piano 2" parts so that it is easier to synchronize.
I still have trouble in the following scenario:
- a bunch of slow chords for an entire measure, then the next measure starts a new theme with fast runs. The part I am listening to starts the fast runs after the slow chords end, but I have a hard time knowing when the fast runs start (hope I am not being confusing here).
Wondering if anyone has insights on this :-) I am sure video would help, but it would be cumbersome to have my laptop standing there on top of the piano and I couldn't use the digital piano for playback then. I could also insert some note right before the fast runs start, to help me synchronize. That extra note could later be removed by editing the MIDI file. Hmm.
Either way, it will keep me busy for a while, and the piece is gorgeous
