"Composers often write up and down the keyboard. Example: Chopin etude op.10 #1, and Beethoven Sonata Op 2 #1 first movement measure 36 has a 3 octave scale for the RH. I’m sure you can find more examples if you look."
True. But does this motion really need much practice?
"He does not have “all possible permutations” as you say. He has what I call “selected permutations”.
True. But is more than one permutation actually needed?
But let's think about this a little longer. Hanon lived in the 19th century. Czerny lived in the 18th century. How come there is nothing better in the last hundred years? Was there anything extremely special about Hanon? Was he a super-genius of some sort? Or are we just all complacent about piano practice?
I was reading about how gymnastics practice has improved and become more efficient.
It is time to improve piano practice and make it more efficient. My "Hanon in 60 Seconds" is a first step.
Firstly - Everything you're saying is just complete nonsense. You, just as Hanon did, are trying to find a solution to a problem that doesn't exist, to prey on the ignorant.
+1 it is a waste of time to resurrect your dead thread for advertising purposes.
Let's put The whole theory of Hanon into another (but relatable) scenario.
You write a daily blog on the internet and want to learn to touch type on the computer** so that you can type the blogs faster and spend the rest of your day procrastinating.
Now you've done your touch-typing course and can at a basic level press the keys and remember where most of them are.. Here's the divsion
What YOU'RE suggesting, as was Hanon, is that it is logical, and practical to rather than learn the combinations of letters that are useful for the language in which we're learning to type (piece of music we are trying to learn), but that you should daily practice every combination of letters.
Day 1
aa,ab,ac,ad,ae,af,ag,ah,ai,aj,ak,al,am,an,ao ETC
Day 2
ba,bb,bc,bd,be,bf,bg,bh,bi,bj,bk ETC
It is a waste of time, whether you do it for 6 hours or 6 minutes or 30 seconds, it is not truly preparing you for real pieces, because pieces are not random combinations of notes or chromatics, they are logical, thoughtful and structured, and anybody with any real experience at the piano will find patterns not only within a single piece, but between multiple pieces.
The reality of this is, all pieces come from Scales, Chords and arpeggios, and these are what should be practiced when not working on pieces.
Any educated person with half a brain can also discover, that pieces increase in incremental difficulty, and not only prepare you for more difficult pieces, but develop the so called skills Hanon promises to offer over the 100 year period you would likely need to spend to complete them as suggested.
I often conclude with this point in many arguments because it stands to reason - If Hanon in 60 seconds, or Hanon in any amount of seconds was truly the key to making a virtuoso pianist, why aren't we all virtuosos? Get yourself 100 non-pianists, get them all on your wonderful revolutionary ground breaking method and see how many of them make it to Carnegie hall.
**Touch type is the ability to type on a computer keyboard without needing to look at any of the letters