Home
Piano Music
Piano Music Library
Top composers »
Bach
Beethoven
Brahms
Chopin
Debussy
Grieg
Haydn
Mendelssohn
Mozart
Liszt
Prokofiev
Rachmaninoff
Ravel
Schubert
Schumann
Scriabin
All composers »
All composers
All pieces
Search pieces
Recommended Pieces
Audiovisual Study Tool
Instructive Editions
Recordings
PS Editions
Recent additions
Free piano sheet music
News & Articles
PS Magazine
News flash
New albums
Livestreams
Article index
Piano Forum
Resources
Music dictionary
E-books
Manuscripts
Links
Mobile
About
About PS
Help & FAQ
Contact
Forum rules
Pricing
Log in
Sign up
Piano Forum
Home
Help
Search
Piano Forum
»
Piano Board
»
Student's Corner
»
Practicing slow pieces
Print
Pages: [
1
]
Go Down
Topic: Practicing slow pieces
(Read 3603 times)
tmjorden
Jr. Member
Posts: 29
Practicing slow pieces
on: March 01, 2017, 04:22:54 AM
I need help with ways to help practicing slow pieces. If this helps it i'd Debussys La Soiree dans Grenade. Also with any pieces that are not technical just tips on practicing these would be great.
Logged
Repertoire:
Rachmaninoff Concerto 2
Haydn Sonata 50
Prokofiev Toccata and Suggestion Diabolique
Liszt La Campanella, Hungarian Rhapsody 6, and Concerto No. 1
And other stuff...
Debussy: Soirée dans Grenade No. 2
Sign up for a Piano Street membership to download this piano score.
Sign up for FREE! >>
iansinclair
PS Silver Member
Sr. Member
Posts: 1472
Re: Practicing slow pieces
Reply #1 on: March 01, 2017, 10:10:15 PM
Tempo! It is oddly difficult to keep an even tempo. What needs to happen is to learn the piece at an even -- and reasonably appropriate tempo first, and get it really solid. Then, and only then, can you afford to bend the tempo a little.
I never thought I'd say this to a student, but... you may find you need to use a metronome until you get it even.
Logged
Ian
j_tour
PS Silver Member
Sr. Member
Posts: 4162
Re: Practicing slow pieces
Reply #2 on: March 05, 2017, 01:22:26 AM
I agree with
iansinclair
, except that I would have led with the metronome. I've never played the Debussy, but for anything with more than three voices, if it's very slow, I can't see any other way than the metronome. Maybe deep meditation, I don't know.
However, there
are
ways to really "feel" the metronome -- some people describe it as not hearing the clicks at a fast tempo (presumably because your own notes are right on), or just sort of grooving on it, like a pop tune or something. It doesn't have to be that bad -- just think of the metronome as a decent drummer playing in the room with you.
Logged
My name is Nellie, and I take pride in helping protect the children of my community through active leadership roles in my local church and in the Boy Scouts of America. Bad word make me sad.
Sign-up to post reply
Print
Pages: [
1
]
Go Up