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Topic: What are the most important exercises for piano students?  (Read 2475 times)

Offline zackxoxo

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hey guys i have a question about piano what are the fundamental exercises for piano ? If you practice these daily you'll eventually play very well kind of exercises. I know there is Major,Minor scales and arpeggios and broken chords, hanon finger exercise. Apart from these i don't know any other exercises. is there anything else in the technical department one needs to learn ? I'm currently teaching my self to play and i want to know all the exercises so i can create a good schedule for myself.
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Offline lostinidlewonder

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Re: What are the most important exercises for piano students?
Reply #1 on: June 03, 2020, 03:14:41 AM
I create coordination exercises for some of my beginners who are uncoordinated. Understanding the circle of fifths/fourths and being able to construct all sorts of chord combinations with their inversions to allow you to control direction of chord progression is a good to further develop your chord/scale understanding. Studies and etudes  are a more musical path to take if you are technically focused.
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Offline pianoannieq

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Re: What are the most important exercises for piano students?
Reply #2 on: June 03, 2020, 08:41:29 PM
Hi Zackxoxo,

Scales and arpeggios are definitely very effective for improving one's technique. Practice them in different ways--legato, staccato, loud, soft, different rhythm patterns, intervals of 3rds, 6ths, and octaves. Long-short rhythm patterns in both hands also help with coordination. I would also recommend Dohnanyi's Essential Finger Exercises, available on imslp. They improve the weaker fingers and the later ones are really good for stretching. I hope this response helped!
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Offline debussychopin

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Re: What are the most important exercises for piano students?
Reply #3 on: December 29, 2020, 10:35:16 PM
This is a good question because it comes with a lot of good answers and suggestions, conventionally, all the main answers will involve suggesting some sort of combination of working on scales and arpeggios, octaves, trills, etc and some exercise book(s) from Hanon or Czerny or Bach or what have you.

I also believe that a good exercise is a mental exercise of being keen to the musical score (what is written on it). Understanding all the nuances of what the composer wrote (phrasing, rhythms, articulations, dynamics and pedaling notations, etc) and trust me, for pieces like , let say, a typical Beethoven sonata movement, you will have so many musical ideas involved even in the stretch of a couple of measures.

It is of course vital to learn the notes of the score, and to eventually get it up to speed, but I guess what excuses, for most students, the disregarding working on the musical details of the score , is because one wants to get a piece up to a certain speed and have it pass for a performance or recital, which is always in a few short weeks.  To spend time really trying to work out all the nuances of the musicality written out in the score will definitely lengthen time spent overall on the piece, which doesnt bode well for most young students.

At least two musical technicalites in a score: dynamics and phrase markings... if spent some real laser focus on getting those right , will do wonders for one's actual expression of that piece. Dynamics and correct phrasing (and thus pedaling to accomodate for hashing out the phrasing) is the difference between real magical music that turns heads and keeps the attention of listeners/captivates the listeners , and a series of notes played out that is merely reminiscient of music, and unfortunately will make most students in a classroom fall back to looking at their phones during the performance.


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One idea on how to gain that musical keenness is by really knowing how your piece sounds like. Play it everyday that is performed by top performers of the piece ( and a variety of performers, so you get a picture of the musical range on how to express it) and hum/sing it to yourself (whether out loud or in your head). Do it a lot. Singing and humming the piece will allow you to kind of have an organic feel for the actual phrasing and dynamics of the piece (rather than "oh, i have to remember there is a pp in the beginning of this phrase" or "remind myself there is a staccato on these two notes in measure 45). You will want to really copy that sound in your head into your playing..thus you pay attention to the score more.
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Offline quantum

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Re: What are the most important exercises for piano students?
Reply #4 on: December 30, 2020, 04:58:36 PM
Reddit from 3 years ago
Reported.
Made a Liszt. Need new Handel's for Soler panel & Alkan foil. Will Faure Stein on the way to pick up Mendels' sohn. Josquin get Wolfgangs Schu with Clara. Gone Chopin, I'll be Bach
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