I'm always an ask "why" type of person. What are the real reasons for learning scales and arpeggios? Everyone says just do it. But I ask why.-Develop proper fingering for pieces?-Develop your ear so if you hear something... you can go oh that's D major. I could just start adding stuff in there?-Burn in a key at a sub-conscious level so if you're playing in D major your hands just know what sounds good?
Okay, speaking "truthfully, (from decades and tens of thousand's of hours of experience), the daily practicing of scales/arpeggios (including simple and seventh chords) is, in terms of developing ones technique, a "propagandized joke!"So, in that I am a Musician/Philosopher (once upon a time), I was a Cartesian Rationalist. There is no shame in your being such at this particular stage, per this discourse. It is perfectly normal, in my opinion, for you to broach the question, as to why!Hey, every piano teacher in the world has a technique dictum: with which any piano teacher can supposedly back up.Conversely, the late Earl Wild in is Memoir completely took question with this traditional scales/arpeggios logic. He stated that when it comes down to a particular piece, there is always something different which makes these daily exercises useless.That means, that: yes, you can waste the rest of your life practicing these scales, arpeggios, exercises, (which in the long run will do you no good) or you can take a more specific proactive approach to piano technique.
This is a recording at 6 months.
That's pretty damn impressive for someone who has only been learning for 6 months!
With all due respect (meant genuinely), the level of truthfulness on this website is, let us just say, less than 100%.Accordingly, this is not some self-taught student. Further, he is jabbing at his chords in the left hand, which if he keeps it up, will ruin hands.I, on the other hand, have challenged the Conservatory Methodology of the traditional so-called mastery of scales, and arpeggios. And, I have the late Earl Wild to back me up.The point is: that given the time, anyone could come up with at least a hundred "new pianists" who could rip some famous piece to show their great talent.1) That is not the purpose, in my opinion, of the OP, and 2) that this particular post has nothing to do with anything (assuming that it is genuine, as described).
So, learn your "All" of your scales and arpeggios (including alternative fingerings, i.e. Chopin), and then take that knowledge and move on to the concept of musicality.
musicality.Does anyone really think that anyone is ever going to ask you to play, in terms of an audition, any of this stuff? The answer, unfortunately, is that everyone one of the 644 Accredited NASM Music Schools in the U.S. is going to ask you to do just that.Is it your goal to become a real musician, or is it to pass some test? Enough said!
the one that makes things look like this
(me) We're having a very wet spring this year. (other person) What do you mean by "wet spring"?