So, I've started learning the Maple Leaf Rag under my teacher. I had already tried to learn it on my own before, but found it too hard.
We started with it in October, I guess, and a while has passed, but there are still difficulties with the left hand (specially in the trio).
I'm on a break from lessons since before christmas and I'm about to get back, but have too little improvement to show. I'm a bit disappointed and also a little embarassed about it...
My forearm gets tense when trying to speed up, so I focus on playing as loose as I can on a manageable speed.
I'm all out of tactics as is, and feels like I'm going nowhere.
Is it normal to be taking such a long time with this? Is there anything I could try out on my practice sessions. My teacher's says I have to loosen up, but that advice on it's own has not helped much.
I'm open to suggestions, thanks everyone =)
Awesome! I believe this might have been the first Joplin I learned all the strains to, and it was certainly the first thing I transcribed from the record (
) by Janice Scroggins. I almost wish those were preserved -- I definitely remember trying to write down what she played. I don't know what year I was. Maybe like 8-9-10 or something -- I don't have a good sense of ages. I do know it was rewarding for me to learn Janice's introduction, and also, while maybe it doesn't speak to my originality, I enjoyed playing the piece pretty much EXACTLY like she did. I did it at a piano student recital, family, friends, so I don't know what age that would have put me, but definitely pre-teen.
Good for you!
I think somebody mentioned it above, but why exactly are you trying to "speed up" again? If you want my opinion -- and, trust me, you do -- the canonical, Josh Rifkin way is "there's no speeding up in Joplin!" Nice and easy -- and watch not to accent the obvious notes (I can't think of anything offhand here, but there's some one's that stick out in "Magnetic Rag").
Well, there's clearly a lot of ways you can go with this one -- I learned it Janice Scroggins's (RIP) way, and then later found out about the way Jelly Roll and some others might just go nuts on it, but I think it's a valid piece on its own terms.
FWIW, more than thirty years after playing my first Joplin, I still keep *Solace*and *The Easy Winners* in my book (even if I cheat on the last because the A strain is the same as "Show me the way to go home", so I don't stick to the script). There are *Bethena* and *The Magnetic Rag* that I still love, but I to read those with the music, so those are more like fond memories.
What was I saying. Oh yeah, none of that "speeding up" stuff -- that's a legit style, but you want to make the octaves in, like the B strain IIRC not choppy, like in a Hollywood Western movie, but nice and smooth.
ETA, no, there's no "right" timeline -- some piece spend their whole life on this. Listening to Scroggins's recording again, it reminds me, this isn't all that easy a piece to begin with. I'd put it up there with most of Schumann's Kinderszenen for sure. And to play it with feeling.
And there's always that extra step that Joplin wouldn't have liked, but you can always annoy your neighbors and try to play it in the style of a whorehouse "naked dance" whle improvising! ETA DO NOT EVER do what I just found as "Ragtime Piano In the Street" by some white skinny guy in suspenders on youtube. Believe it or not, some of us actually don't enjoy being lumped in with Ren-faire enthusiasts or "eccentrics" of any kind -- well, to each his or her own, but I happen to think attitude counts for some ways in performing music, so if you're going to play it, play it cool, and play it good, and as Albert King said, "play it pretty."
Plus, once you get done this is still ETA with having your version of "Maple Leaf Rag," you'll be ahead of the game when it comes to playing other fun stuff in Ab, like "All About My Girl" and stuff.