Hello everyone
I am 30 years old and have been playing piano since about age 8 or 10 I think. But VERY intermitently. This puts me in a bit of a weird place. With so much playing time and music reading under my belt I can pretty much play anything...but poorly and with alot of time. Which brings me to my question. My particular interest is in Beethoven. I am good enough at reading music and patient enough that I could THEORETICALLY sit down with the actual scores and practice learning a sonata. But it would be VERY slow going. On the other hand, I have simplified scores that I could practice and learn an a VERSION of the piece in a few days. However, as many of you know, these aren't just simplified versions but actually different arrangements for easy or intermediate piano. So you don't really "learn" anything beneficial in regards to the actual score...you are learning a DIFFERENT score that sort of sounds a little like the original.
Example...take the famous Moonlight Sonata. I could learn a easy/intermediate arrangement. But since it is a totally different score/arrangement it doesn't really help me to understand and learn the original true score.
It is fun to learn the "easy" versions because in a few days you have a complete piece that you can play and enjoy. But I am left with an uneasy feeling that I am in fact wasting my time.
So I guess the question is after a lot of rambling..for an intermediate player that can read music and play pretty much anything with enough practice time...is it better to hammer away ever so slowly at the exceedingly complicated original scores of Beethoven or work through those easy/intermediate Beethoven arrangements?
The end goal is to play the originals.
Thoughts?
Thanks for your input...I hope this made sense lol!
There's actually a simple solution.
Outline.
Every piece has a basic skeleton, the essence of the piece so to speak. There's nothing wrong with simplicity. Like all other conceptual processes, humans understand musical complexity as elaborations of simpler underlying musical ideas (see Schenkerian theory or even motif analysis).
If you don't understand the simpler concepts, you will never be able to beautifully express the elaborations. You cannot see the forest for the trees.
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Examples:
https://www.pianostreet.com/smf/index.php?topic=9135.msg92643#msg92643 https://www.pianostreet.com/smf/index.php/topic,7246.msg72307.html#msg72307It's a bit of an art form in itself, and the reality is that there is wrong way to do it, although greater experience, a keen ear and sense of rhythm, and even theoretical knowledge will produce greater results.
Of course, not doing it at all, will never let you obtain that experience. Thus a "failed attempt" (which is not really a failure) puts you in a better position than letting perfectionism get in the way.
This technique trains your ear to hear the longer musical line, and synchronize your larger more rhythmic motions to it. This technique is NOT supposed to be visually oriented, although it does help the sight-reading process as you learn to see the basic skeleton of pieces. Sound should guide your movement, not your sight.
These larger motions are important because the smaller motions are tucked in or incorporated into these larger motions. This is the connection between your physical movement and the elaboration of complex musical ideas. These smaller motions elaborate and are incorporated BUT DO NOT replace the larger motions. If you do not feel these larger motions when you are incorporating the smaller, you are not doing it right. Obvious this is difficult and will not happen in the beginning, but that is the end goal that you are always striving and refining toward.