ade16,
Sorry, I'd be glad to address your points but it's just not legible. Some of us older folk are vision challenged.
It would appear you rushed through without checking the format, just as many people rush through scales carelessly and derive no benefit.
I think you can edit a post. Hope you will.
Sorry, but the quotation text is exactly the same size as in all other posts. I have made the text of my comments just the same size as all other posts, and in upper case too. The confusion was that I was getting into rather a muddle trying to address each of your points in turn; so I have moved all my comments to the end, addressing all your points one by one. However, again I fail to see the problem with font size as its exactly the same as every other post; seems to be set by default so that those who are a bit ICT challenged like myself can cope!
I am new to all of this posting (but an old hand at playing and teaching the piano; sorry about the pun!), but despite getting into a muddle with the format, I did not rush through any of my comments, in this post or in any others; indeed, I actually gave them very considerable thought, going back and re editing the wording more than once in the interests of clarity and precision, in order to get my ideas across as best I could.
Also in reference to another post, I have never at any stage suggested that 'scales' (in the widest sense, covering a multitude of patterns as I have explained earlier) are the 'be-all-and-end-all' of piano technique; merely that they are a very important part of the whole package. I never suggested that technique arises from scale practise alone, rather that such practise can help to reinforce aspects of technique including finger dexterity as well as general strength and stamina. I also believe exercises and studies are really important too and that they work hand in hand with scales etc. (Again, sorry about the pun!) I have worked through many over the years including those of Czerny and Brahms.
My main point is that I do not understand how scales, arpeggios etc can just be dismissed out of hand by some people. (Oops, there I go again!) Also, in another post (I have forgotten which) how can anyone say that they only ever need to play the chromatic scale whenever they try out all of the notes on a keyboard for purchase or repair? What repertoire are you playing? Whether Baroque, Classical, Romantic, Dodecaphonic, Modern Jazz etc etc the chromatic scale crops up reasonably often at least, or more often depending on the style and context. Anyway, why have you got it in for the chromatic scale rather than any other, what has it ever done to you? Actually, it is almost as useful as majors or minors. Depends on the context, but it crops up in real music fairly frequently actually! Not just Classical music (in the widest sense) either.
Also, with regard to scale patterns in real music often beginning part way through a scale, then just choose an appropriate finger to begin on!. Again, no one is saying that scale or arpeggio patterns, for example, are always going to occur in exactly the same way in every piece. Obviously there are always going to be variations on patterns, with fragments here and there. But at least having done pure scale and exercise practice some of the time will have given a pianist a starting point for understanding any modifications that Mozart, Beethoven, Prokofiev or anyone else has made in the context of any particular passages in their compositions. To recognise the nature of a variation on a scale or other pattern, you need to be familiar with the original generic version of it.
Also, thanks for the quotes, including the one from Robert Schumann, which seem to reflect a rather balanced view; that scales are very important but not everything. I believe that several of us have been trying hard to make this point in various recent posts.
Let us not forget however that Schumann did not always practise what he preached. He invented a contraption for his hands to strengthen the 4th and 5th fingers and make them work more independently, but in the process he permanently damaged the tendons, and consequently his prospects of being a great concert pianist. His wife Clara was a first rate pianist, by all accounts better than her husband, and performed his works in public including the A minor concerto, as he could no longer do so himself. His mental breakdown towards the end of his life may have been in part connected to this fact, who knows for sure? However, Brahms was a close friend of the family and suggested that it may possibly have been one of the factors. Sorry, I am now digressing!
I will read with interest the comments of others, on whichever side of the argument they fall, or somewhere in between? Happy practising and performing to you all!
