Hi all,
I've played Images for some time now. I can't play the left hand evenly, so I tried to just check a normal arpeggio (c-g-e-c-e-g-c), and my second finger gets stuck, and really pushes the key down. I'm getting a bit worried about it, because I really can't play it evenly, in a fast tempo.
Do any of you know what the problem might be, and how to fix it?
As a pianist philosopher, I do not care so much of what your problem (not "issue') is with your forefinger of the left hand. What I do focus on is how to fix it.
After that is done, then you can review everything you do with that hand to see how you got there in the first place. This is so you do not repeat the same mistake.
Accordingly, I will share with you my long past experience regarding tactile feel. It was warmly received by "pts1," whose teacher taught him/her the same technique. I genuinely hope it helps
Prior PostMy late piano teacher, Robert Weaver, taught all of his students to practice a simple five finger routine. Starting from middle C in the right hand (with an octave below, left hand) this involved playing 1-5, in both hands, up and down.
Most importantly, it had to be done with the fingers resting on the keytops, AT ALL TIMES, while playing a very soft staccato (1 staccato, 2 staccato, etc.). Also, there is no reason that this cannot be transposed (alla Chopin) to the entire scale, as one exercise.
Parenthetically, Glenn Gould used to espouse something similar called "Tapping." This is nowhere near the same thing.
However, what this soft staccato practice does is to develop finger independence without doing all of the abnormal, and bizarre exercises that tell you to lift up your fingers.
Earl Wild, in is memoir, talks about how Egon Petri taught him at the age of fourteen to always play and strike a key with your fingers resting on the top of the key.
Recently, I have taken this concept to a new level which is predicated on what Rachmaninoff taught his students. However, I will leave it there for now.
So, try the five finger soft staccato routine for now (slowly) and then see how it translates to your overall tactile experience at the piano.
Accordingly, if you cannot play a particular passage in a piece, drop down an play the same passage in soft slow staccato. If you cannot hit the notes that way, then there is no way you will be able to do it normally.
Arm weight, rotation, and the rest of it, means nothing if you do not have a normal resting tactile feel on the keys, in my opinion.