I'm not going to ingrain this piece. Not worth it.
It's all white keys. I'm having a tricky time getting my hands in the right position. I need my eyes on the music too.
Any tips for jumps, etc. on an all white key piece? Without repeating the piece until the hands have it.
I don't personally recommend feeling the black keys. If there's no direct reason to be feeling them within the demands of the piece, you're only making your path indirect and hence less reliable. It may help in the short term, but in the long run it's just an extra step that gets in the way.
Black keys are very useful when you go direct from one position to another that features them. They aid the sense of certainty- because if you end up in a different place then you can perceive that you didn't get where you wanted to, with ease. With white keys, you have to use your eyes for the same feedback, at first, to know if you judged it right. However, virtually any position shift should be done as single direct path of movement (not straight into playing the next key, but into preparing the required position, which should usually be felt before going on- except when you get extremely rapid leaps). Black keys are there to provide extra feedback about if you didn't get the movement spot on- not for you to slowly make adjustments from after having completely misjudged the position you should have found in one direct shift.
The best trick is quite simply to stay on the note before the position shift and make no movement away from it (I mean literally NONE- don't start to anticipate it by reaching even a little bit). Simply look at the note you are going to and imagine the path to get there- from where you started. What most people screw up is that they lose sight of where they are coming FROM and do a bit of the movement already- which makes the size of next movement inconsistent and unpredictable. You need to judge an exact distance between two consistent places. Then make a single movement from the arm without any adjustments, to get the finger straight over it. If you miss covering the right note, observe where you got to and try again until you are 100% direct. Try it very fast first- to be sure it's truly direct and then also try it slower and more steadily. Finally, try it with your eyes shut. Remember- NEVER play the note as part of the same movement! This destroys the sensory feedback and awareness that you need to develop. Always perceive the movement that takes you there first. If you don't get to the right place, it's no use playing anything or adding a correction movement. The path to security is to have a sense of certainty about where you have got to, before you then go on to play. When people miss notes on leaps, they are too concerned with trying to play straight off and have not spent enough time feeling their way around the precise distance of the transition. Always perceive where you think you are and then check if you really are there (sometimes with eyes closed then opened to check) and only then play.