Hi all,I have been working through the Brahms E-flat major Rhapsody, and I am rather at a loss as to how to finger this measure in the right hand. Playing it is not the problem; somehow connecting the legato melody line is. Any ideas? I have a few solutions I've been working on (145-3-125-1/2-1245, for instance), but I'm not quite satisfied with that. The easy way to do this (just playing the melody with 2s and connecting with pedal) is not ideal because of the staccato left hand. I will be asking the same question to my teacher at my next lesson, but I have so much repertoire to go through that any bit of knowledge helps.Thanks!
I believe finger legato is the way to go, because it gives you freedom to convey the staccatos in the other voices and pedal however you want on top. I think your solution is fine, except that I would to145-3-125-1/3-1245 instead of 1/2, for maximum legatoWhat was it that bothered you with your solution?
In the example supplied by the OP, it's not impossible to play the melody legato, completely without pedal, and the rest staccato, though.
That may very well be, but I sometimes find the process of insisting upon a 'proper' finger legato creates more issues than it solves, especially when substitutions have to be made that create a break in the physical continuity of a phrase.
If finger substitutions create a break in the physical continuity of a phrase, I'd say you are doing something wrong. You constantly need subtitutions in Bach, Franck, Chopin etc etc, all composers who require very good legato and long lines. Assuming the goal is an as strong a legato as possible, I'd rank from easiest to hardest in achieving this1. Legato fingering2. Legato fingering with substitutions when needed3. Non legato fingering with pedal to cover up the holesBeing in continuous physical contact with the instrument is in my opinion the easiest way to play legato. However, if you do finger legato poorly, no amount of pedal is going to be able to hide that your legato is lacking, even if the notes are physically bound to each other. Legato is more than just one note sounding until the next one sounds.