Hello.
After many months of struggling with the third movement of the moonlight sonata (and leaving it, and taking it up again, and not being able to master it, etc.), I finally realized what my problem was. My arm gets all tense during the first and second pages, so much that I can't play well below the first or second line. I've gone through it slowly countless times, legato, staccato, swing, etc. I can play any individual run at tempo, but all together it becomes too much for my wrist. How do I release all the tension that builds up? My piano teacher said that was what the sforzando chords were for, but that doesn't seem to be enough for me at this point. See below for my other repertoire, in case you're curious about my level.
I can play the Chopin G minor Ballade and Mozart K576 sonata without many problems, so why is this piece giving me so much trouble?
I welcome any advice anyone has!
Thanks
When I approached this piece the first time (in my early teens), it was after watching Wilhelm Kempf. I was taken by the vivacious qualitys, notably the required tempo. As a result I started from the wrong place. My obsession was with getting it out, at the speed needed.
Years later, when I returned to the piece, my ear and eye had improved and I saw a lot more in the score that I had not noticed before.
1) The piece is made up almost entirely of arpeggios. Having a thorough understanding and ability to execute C-sharp minor (and directly related keys) in a variety of applications helped. This meant, time was spent listening to the quality of sound, not producing the correct note.
2) Understanding the composer helped. Beethoven was a keyboard virtuoso; even his orchestral writing imitates his understanding completely of keyboard harmony. That said, yes in an orchestral setting, he has more colours to play with, but essentially, you could play all of his symphonies on a keyboard instrument and still get his general intention. Look at HOW he writes his phrases, then think WHY it was written that way. Remember, he would have played everynote of this piece himself, likely improvising various sounds before notating it.
3) You would be surprised how changing your understanding of tempo and metre can help your performance. Are you thinking about each measured semi-quaver, quaver or crotchet? Are you counting in relation to this?
Semi-quaver
X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X | X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X | etc
Quaver
X - X - X - X - X - X - X - X - | X - X - X - X - X - X - X - X - | etc
Crocthet
X - - - X - - - X - - - X - - - | X - - - X - - - X - - - X - - - | etc
Minim
X - - - - - - - X - - - - - - - | X - - - - - - - X - - - - - - - | etc
If the X represents where you are thinking in terms of beat, you are using a lot of energy playing just the first two bars, thinking in semiquavers, and markedly less with minims..
Thinking in regards to the minim, though contrary to the metre of the piece, can help reduce your effort, and actually increase the perceived tempo, also helping drastically with your muscle tension.
PS edit: the crotchet is what gives the piece is agitated; remember it needs to sound that way, you cannot think that way.