So we've all read about Chang's advice on getting a passage blazing 30% or so past performance speed, and Bernhard's preaching on making a passage easier for you to play as being the goal of practice. How many of you think this is a sack of ***?How many of you have actually tried it?Well, if you haven't, go do it.Today, I was practising Rachmaninoff's C#- Prelude 3/2. Using various practice methods, I was able to get the agitato section blazing so incredibly quickly that I couldn't believe my fingers. I mean, this speed laid Chopin's etudes to waste. I gradually slowed down to the speed required for this prelude, and I found that it felt like I was CRAWLING along. My fingers naturally wanted to go faster. Mind you, all this time, I'm playing all this absolutely perfect; not a flub in sight. I actually had to get used to playing so slowly, because it was SO EASY. I didn't bother with this before, either. I deeply regret it. But hey, you learn from your mistakes, and hope you don't make the same ones again. Now the goal of my practice is to get the passage as easy for me as possible; so far, the only ways I know how to do this are to play in different rhythms and to play much faster. I find that the different rhythms contribute to increase in speed anyway, though.I didn't apply this to the slow chordal beginning section, because I can play that without a problem as it is. The real trouble there lies in the musicality; making the notes whisper, playing the chords perfectly even, and bringing out the one note on the pinky. Speed practice won't help me any here.Anyway, I just want to be a witness to the superior effectiveness of practising this way. Don't doubt it until you try it. Check it out, you'll be surprised with the results!
Quote from: Mosis on October 23, 2004, 03:32:00 AMSo we've all read about Chang's advice on getting a passage blazing 30% or so past performance speed, and Bernhard's preaching on making a passage easier for you to play as being the goal of practice. How many of you think this is a sack of ***?How many of you have actually tried it?Well, if you haven't, go do it.Today, I was practising Rachmaninoff's C#- Prelude 3/2. Using various practice methods, I was able to get the agitato section blazing so incredibly quickly that I couldn't believe my fingers. I mean, this speed laid Chopin's etudes to waste. I gradually slowed down to the speed required for this prelude, and I found that it felt like I was CRAWLING along. My fingers naturally wanted to go faster. Mind you, all this time, I'm playing all this absolutely perfect; not a flub in sight. I actually had to get used to playing so slowly, because it was SO EASY. I didn't bother with this before, either. I deeply regret it. But hey, you learn from your mistakes, and hope you don't make the same ones again. Now the goal of my practice is to get the passage as easy for me as possible; so far, the only ways I know how to do this are to play in different rhythms and to play much faster. I find that the different rhythms contribute to increase in speed anyway, though.I didn't apply this to the slow chordal beginning section, because I can play that without a problem as it is. The real trouble there lies in the musicality; making the notes whisper, playing the chords perfectly even, and bringing out the one note on the pinky. Speed practice won't help me any here.Anyway, I just want to be a witness to the superior effectiveness of practising this way. Don't doubt it until you try it. Check it out, you'll be surprised with the results!I read this and see only benefits of practicing this way; so long as you're able to play it well at the correct speed.
So we've all read about Chang's advice on getting a passage blazing 30% or so past performance speed, and Bernhard's preaching on making a passage easier for you to play as being the goal of practice. How many of you think this is a sack of ***?How many of you have actually tried it?Well, if you haven't, go do it.Today, I was practising Rachmaninoff's C#- Prelude 3/2. Using various practice methods, I was able to get the agitato section blazing so incredibly quickly that I couldn't believe my fingers. I mean, this speed laid Chopin's etudes to waste. I gradually slowed down to the speed required for this prelude, and I found that it felt like I was CRAWLING along. My fingers naturally wanted to go faster. Mind you, all this time, I'm playing all this absolutely perfect; not a flub in sight. I actually had to get used to playing so slowly, because it was SO EASY.
Can you please explain better what do you mean?I've never understand this practicing faster advice
um yeah, i don't think the agitato section is meant to be blazingly fast. like sure it's faster than the beginning and end parts but it's not meant to be prestissimo or anything
QuoteCan you please explain better what do you mean?I've never understand this practicing faster adviceDefinitely read Chang's book Fundamentals of Piano Pracitice as well as a myrid of posts by Bernhard throghout these forums to understand what this is about.
In the smallest nutshell, it goes like this. You play fast first (faster than end speed) to determine the motions that will be required to play it at speed, and then you practice exactly those motions in slow motion.[/quote+Okay, and here's the problemOnly rarely I might be able to play faster than end speed firstLet's say for example I've a piece that begin with an arpeggioIt makes sense to begin playing those arpeggio faster than end speed so that I can then slow it downBut while my hand is able to play those arpeggio at 50% end speed it not absolutely able to play it faster than final speedAnd I'm talking here about hald bar !!It's not that I can't understand the principle of playing faster, it's just that I'm physically imcapable of doing it without a slow practice preparationI'm not guessing here, it's a fact, my hand can't do itAny thought ?Daniel