oh one more thing.. The only confusion I still have with regards to this plan, I think I touched on it above, is how to lay out HT sessions. Bernhard has said elsewhere how he tries to get HT as soon as possible. I had hoped to achieve this by doing something like:SESSION 1: RH: 1-4SESSION 2: LH: 1-4SESSION 3: HT: 1-4but if I had say 4 sessions available in a day, and I just started at the top, I'd do RH, then LH as two sessions. So far soo good. But what next? The HT session that joins the two new and unmastered HS sessions? It seems I'd have to skip over the HT session becuase it doesn't make sense that I should do a HT session before each seperate hand is mastered. Or should I? Preliminary work? With the understanding that it won't reach it's "zero minutes to mastery" until at least a day or so after each seperate hand is mastered.. The alternative would be for me to put the HT session much further down in the plan, so that chances would be good that both HS sessions were mastered by the time I got to it.. But that is delaying HT perhaps too long. Or, perhaps I'm on the right track in so far as defining the sessions, but misguided in trying to apply any particular order to them? hopefully Bernhard can shed some insight on this. -Paul
No you should not do this way. If you spend 20 minutes on one hand you are risking injury. Instead, alternate hands. Initially you may need to repeat the RH 10 or 20 times, and then the LH 10 or 20 times (this should take no more than 2 or 3 minutes for each hand) but soon you will be able to do just a couple of repeats on each hand, and finally alternate one time RH one time LH. Try not to do more than 30 seconds on each hand.
Ideally you should choose passages that equally challenging for both hands, otherwise one hand is not going to be working enough while the other will be overworking.
So now the scheme should look like this:Session 1: Alternate RH and LH (they may come from different parts of the same piece or even from different pieces).Session 2: HTOr even better:Session 1: Alternate RH and LH, then do HT (if doing the same piece).Of course this assumes that you are tackling a completely new passage and learning it from scratch.
If on the other hand you have already mastered the whole RH and the whole LH of a Bach invention you should still alternate hands, but it may take you one or two minutes to complete each hand. That is not a problem because there is enough variety in the full piece to protect your hands from harm (very different form 5 or 6 notes repeated 200 000 times in 20 minutes.)
And yes, do not delay HT. Join hands as soon as you can (but not before! Exception: counterpoint music – there are other exceptions as well, but you will figure it out)
By the way, I am aware of your other posts, but they will take longer answers, so I am answering the easy ones first!
I would like to see this spreadsheet...
I was wondering what you thought about the alternating hands method, Bernhard. Normally, I play one hand until it's mastered, then the other, and then either join or leave for the next day (after mastering HS again). I did not think that switching hands was actually efficient whilst trying to master the hands.
You answered this in another post, but I'm bringing it up here. How MUCH faster should I be playing a section? What if it's already a slow section that poses no difficulty, should it be played faster anyway?
I am sorry to be a bother, but please do try to get around to answering my question in this thread. It is very important. https://pianoforum.net/smf/index.php/topic,4750.0.html
Arg. Now I'm confused again. I thought a given practice session was intended to work on one thing, using 20 minutes to get it to the point of 7 repetitions, and continuing practicing that one thing for the remainder of the 20 minutes.. One thing being a RH passage, a LH passage, or a HT passage.. If you try to do more than one of those things during that time, aren't you reducing the effectiveness or have I still missed the point?
See, "but not before" - how can HT in the same session that you started HS possibly be the right time with that said?
Ok, lets take an example. The following is a 6 bar phrase taken from the Malaguena. Lets pretend for the sake argument that this is the piece in its entirety. Lets assume that my RH can handle the RH part of bar 1 into the first beat of bar 2 based on the 7 rule. My LH based on the 7 rule can handle bars 1 and 2 since they repeat. How would you break this into sessions?
2. Although I'm still a *bit* unsure about how to know when it's too early to bring HT, I'm now trying to do HS and HT work within the same session, it seems to be working OK even though I don't quite understand how according to these methods I can be putting HT before each HS session has had at least an overnight learning period. But none-the-less, it does seem to work, especially when I am conscious of alternating hands.. more on this to come I hope.
3. Repeated Note Groups.. HOLY COW.. I tried them on this passage of fast cascading downard pentuplets (that's what you call a 5 note "triplet" right?)
It took me 57 minutes to get through the whole set of groups. The next day, MAN! the runs were so easy! It's almost hypnotic running through the breakdown of an entire set, but you really nail every single transition! I did find myself questioning "how many repeats do I do for each group?" I basically started each group very slowly to really feel the note, then if the chord attack worked, I'd start there (infinitely fast) and then slow it down (this goes to Chang's "parallel sets" and "phase degree") and I'd just kinda repeat slowing down, speeding up until it felt mastered.. No set time or number of repeats. Some groups were easy, especially where the chord attack worked, some were hard when it involved shifting my hand to the left..)
I also did an experiement with another repeated note group set on this: That's image shows the first of 4 repetitions (it's cut off, but that dotted line at the top is an 8va) - it repeats dropping quickly through 4 octaves. I actually broke it into groups of 12 23 34 etc... all the way up to the 1234567. I asked myself "since it repeats, do I have to do each group all the way down the 4 octaves or is it enough to go through one octave?" since my arm position moves and therefore the hand position ultimately shifts a bit, I chose to do the whole 4 octaves - anyway, since LH and RH are the same, I did each group HS (slow, infinite fast and in between) and then HT at speed.. It took me just over 3 hours to get through the entire set of groups.. My hands were not sore at this point (probably because of the way I alternated them), but I don't believe a set of groups that takes that long is appropriate (somebody correct me if I'm wrong). I tell ya, the next day though, I was able to play the entire cascading run with HT close to speed with very few flubs, something I couldn't come close to doing before working the repeated note groups. The movements and maintaining that octave shape of my hand were just so easy, suddenly I didn't really have to "think" about each of the jumps.. Also, since each of these was an octave, there was no possibility of "chord attack" or "parallel sets" between each eigth note, at least not how I understand them. Question: do repeated note group exercises ever need to be repeated or are they a one time benefit thing?
However, as long as your HS is mastered, you do not need to wait until the next day to join hands. Quite the opposite, by joining hands you increase the chances that next day it will be perfect and you will not forget it, since it will now be engraved in hand memory. Does that make sense?
Most likely, the next day the passage will be somewhere between these two extremes (completely forgotten and totally mastered).If so, observe carefully where the problem lies. You may be able to tackle it in isolation and not have to go through all steps again. Ultimately the final arbiter is your progress. As long you are progressing you are doing the correct thing. If you stop progressing or if everything start to consistently fall apart, then you must change what you are doing.
Yes, Repeated note-groups is the single most powerful routine I ever came across (I thought I had invented it, but no, someone else had already come up with it long before I touched a piano ).As such, it overrides the 20 minute rule. If you are going to do it, you must finish it in on session no matter how long it takes. The results are so staggering that it is worth it.
I do not think I have anything else to teach you.
3. Repeated Note Groups.. HOLY COW.. I tried them on this passage of fast cascading downard pentuplets (that's what you call a 5 note "triplet" right?) It took me 57 minutes to get through the whole set of groups. The next day, MAN! the runs were so easy! It's almost hypnotic running through the breakdown of an entire set, but you really nail every single transition! I did find myself questioning "how many repeats do I do for each group?" I basically started each group very slowly to really feel the note, then if the chord attack worked, I'd start there (infinitely fast) and then slow it down (this goes to Chang's "parallel sets" and "phase degree") and I'd just kinda repeat slowing down, speeding up until it felt mastered.. No set time or number of repeats. Some groups were easy, especially where the chord attack worked, some were hard when it involved shifting my hand to the left..)
Hmm, I was thinking that you would play one parallel set, then the second, then the second and third, then the first second and third.
Oh, and Paul, did you end up playing notes 1-15 at the end of that session? Isn't that the ultimate goal?
paul,it's this the same to learn a piece HT ?Let say our piece is 20 mesures.You do as above like 1-2; 2-3; 3-4,...In fact the same as above but not with notes but with mesures ?thxSteven
Quote from: Mosis on October 19, 2004, 09:17:32 PMHmm, I was thinking that you would play one parallel set, then the second, then the second and third, then the first second and third.by the way - that is what this is. Each of those groups that can be played infinitely fast by the chord attack is a parallel set. regardless if there are 2,3,4 or 5 notes within it. I believe the samllest unit you should subdivide the full passage for repeated note groups is the smallest part you already have mastered.. so in my example above with the 3 quintuplets, if I already had the 1 2 3 4 5 mastered, I wouldn't have to break it into 1 2, 2 3, 3 4 etc.. I could go right to the 56 to get the hand shift.. or maybe 456 to get more motion preceeding it.. I think you have to experiment with it.
This would save you a LOT of time, would it not?
I must have misunderstood something.. Are you talking about repeated chord group sets or repeated note group sets?
What's the difference?
look above in my Reply #6 at those images cut out of a score.. a repeated note group set would be for the first passage -3 downward quintuplets.. a repeated chord group set would be used for the 2nd.. That's how I was using the term at least. Nothing to do with the "chord attack" or parallel set terminology.-Paul
Okay, so I am unaware of the repeated chord group set. What is that, and how did you go about applying it to that passage?
I think you're overthinking this If for example I have a fast passage to learn that consists of 15 single notes:Then I could tackle it with a set consisting of groups of repeated notes ("Repeated Note Group Set") - that is, I am defining groups of repeated notes.. (single notes) as I outlined above in Reply #12.With this passage however:The passage consists of chords (well, 2 note chords in each hand at least) - not single notes (like an arpeggio type thing).. therefore, if I wanted to do a "repeated group set" to learn that passage, it would be a set of repeated CHORDS, not individual notes. It could be any passage really, say you had 4-note chords in the right hand, and the chord changed every beat for 4 beats.. If you labeled each CHORD 1 2 3 4 then the repated chord group set would be:1 22 33 41 2 32 3 41 2 3 4The practice technique is exactly the same, I just called it a repeated chord group set because the passage consisted of chords, rather than single notes.. call it whatever you like, the point is to get through the whole set. get it? -Paul
See, that's what I was thinking you meant, but my question specifically pertains to your quintuplet runs.
Let us use the first pentuplet as an example, ignoring the first C#.
The remaining four notes are D natural, C#, G#, and E#. You were practising D-C#, C#-G#, G#-E#, and so on and so forth. Would it not be more practical to practice just moving your hand from the D/C#/G#/E# chord to the next C#, and then to the next chord, et cetera? By blocking the chord (parallel sets, chord attack, WHATEVER) you're already playing all those notes at infinite speed. The real difficulty is displacing the hand, so what's the point of practising two notes that can be practised as a part of an entire chord?
Many, many thanks for this forum in general and to these contributers, especially Bernhard, Paul and Mound;
A book, a book, yes please! I volunteer to help proofread!
YES! Finally it does. If I get the HT work from the end of yesterday correct first thing today, then I never have to repeat the HS sessions that it took to get there, even if that means they were only executed that first day, because I got HT right the 2nd day. THAT IS THE POINT! The point which has alluded me until now. I've kept thinking that something about the "psychology" of this whole approach requires me to learn and relearn the HS sessions before ever attempting to put them together, so that HS would be long term mastered and then HT would see a similar process. As if HS and HT are two completely unrelated entities. So the test on day 2 is not weather each HS session is mastered, rather, if HT from yesterday is mastered. It is only if HT fails on day 2 that I need to start from scratch with HS, otherwise, there is no need to do any further HS work, because HT already works, so right to being musical with it. Why did it take so long for this to click for me?? Hopefully this dialog helps it click for others in a fraction of the time.
You sir, have completely, and utterly blown my mind I thank you!
Oh, just an aside, perhaps food for thought.1. I'm sure everything you described above exists elsewhere in these forums. 2. I've been pretty exhaustive in trying to seek it all out and "order it" in my mind from this web/circular format. 3. Yet the very core of the method alluded me until 2 weeks of experimenting on my own, and several days of back and forth dialog. Why? Perhaps some incentive for you to begin on a book?
oh and ps. I'm not sure there is need for you to worry about that Sinfonia PM I sent you last week unless you feel there is more to add specifically because of the style.
Writing a book is hardly the problem. Where are the willing publishers?
Anyway, there are large chunks that I "know" - and can execute at moderate speeds 7 or more times w/o too many flubs, but it's not at speed in many areas.
I too am experimenting with these memorization techniques. I have come across a problem I was hoping somebody might be able to help on. When I get a small passage memorized, I play it without looking at the keyboard, I might even have my eyes closed. But as soon as I look down at the keyboard and watch my fingers, it all falls apart. I don't get it. What am I missing here? I'd love to be able to look at my hands or nothing at all while I'm playing.
we just got a little black Pug puppy.. There goes my practice schedule!