Hi,I have been playing the piano on and off for years without a teacher.so have lots of bad habits Sad I´m now learning with a teacher which is great.My problem is that I can learn a piece fairly quickly,so I can play the notes but the whole thing doesn´t sound like music! In my head I can sing the piece with feeling but it just doesn´t come across when I play.The piece I am working on is Schuman´s Dreams,but it sounds more like anightmare when I play it! Do you have any suggestions for learning lightness of touch.It seems I can only play pp or FF.I can´t do anything in between Huh
Many thanks
Well, this thread has gotten in way deep over the OP's head and question, so I'll try and give him a bit of the advice he seeks.
OK... you want to play Schumann's Traumeri out of the Kinderszenen (sp. forgive me)
First, you need to sit so your elbow's are at least level with the keyboard, and preferably (until you're able to really figure what's best for you, about an inch higher)... this will give the arms just enough leverage so the hands and forearms will feel like they are "floating" on the keys.
Second, try and make all movements from ON the key... don't lift or hit the keys... place your fingers ON the keys and pull down the key with fingers only just enough to produce sound.
The quicker you pull down your finger the louder the sound... the slower, the softer..
Place your hands on these keys E F# G# A# C, and without lifting play each note, one hand at a time, one finger at a time, until you can do this from ON the key with just the finger pad/tip and successfully play in different dynamics.... soft to loud and back, for instance.
Once you have produced a sound, all effort should cease and the relaxed finger will "pop" back up due to the nature of the hand and the key pushing your finger back up.
This is the basis of all piano playing... being able to control the finger on the key to pull it down and produce the desired sound.
When you can do this little exercise successfully (and make this a daily thing) TRANSFER this skill to the Schumann piece.
You need a good fingering, and just going over the first few notes, as I recall them, you start on middle C with the second finger of the right hand then play the F above it with the fifth as you simultaneously play the low F with your left hand with the fifth finger.
Do JUST this much using the method I described above until you "like" the sound you are producing.
Then move on to the next few notes/chords, etc.
Once you can do this with confidence and predictability, you've learned a lot!
Baby steps.
This probably doesn't seem like much to you, but it is really quite a lot and pianists all through their lives continually work from this basic premise of sound control with tiny precise efficient movements.