Improve Your Piano Playing - John Meffen
Improve Your Piano Playing - John Meffen
Improve Your Piano Playing - John Meffen
11 10 09 08 07 5 4 3 2 1
ISBN-13: 978-1-58115-476-4
ISBN-10: 1-58115-476-3
eBook: 978-1-58115-806-9
MT220.M49 2007
786.2'193—dc22
2006038406
This book was previously printed in Great Britain as part of the “Right Way Plus” series,
published by Elliot Right Way Books.
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 Your Piano
2 General Approach
3 Methods of Preventing and Correcting Mistakes
4 Fingering
5 Touch
6 Tone Production
7 Phrasing
8 Pedalling
9 Learning a New Piece
Index
Acknowledgements
It was the remark “what you are talking about is facilitation at the
synapses”, made by my friend and pupil the late Dr Mavis Taylor,
which first set me thinking and reading about the workings of the
mind, not just the working of the muscles, in connection with piano
playing. This book is a direct result of that chance remark.
I am much indebted to Sir James Beament, who was for many
years the Head of the Department of Applied Biology at the
University of Cambridge, for reading various chapters of the book.
His suggestions and advice helped clarify my thinking on many
aspects, as well as bringing my information up to date.
My thanks to Mike Frankton who made such a professional job of
setting the musical notation which appears at various points in the
text.
Many thanks too, to my wife, Kathleen, who, though sorely
neglected in favour of books, a piano, and a computer, still offered to
draw the excellent illustrations which add so much to the text, and
the pictures which bring a touch of humour to the book.
I would also like to express my thanks to Cassandra Birmingham
the editor at Elliot Right Way Books who guided matters with a
steady hand and made many helpful suggestions throughout the
editorial process.
Finally, I would like to thank my many pupils who, over the years,
have made me think of ways to keep the complications of piano
playing in my mind while, hopefully, not implanting them in theirs.
End of Chapter Questions
“The music teacher came twice a week to bridge the awful gap
between Dorothy and Chopin.” My task, not so daunting as that in
George Ade’s quip, is to bridge another awful musical gap. There are
many books about music, musical history, musical appreciation
(whatever that happens to be), harmony, counterpoint, musical forms
and the like, and also many about piano technique, but explanations
of exactly how these two aspects, general musical knowledge and
specific information on how to play the piano, can be brought
together are hard to find. It is this gap that I hope to fill.
There are many versions of the following anecdote; I give it in the
way I first heard it. A young musician had travelled to London to
attend a Promenade concert. Coming out of King’s Cross station,
somewhat bewildered by the number of people, and not knowing
which way to go, he approached a gentleman whose face seemed to
be familiar and asked “Can you tell me the best way to get to the
Albert Hall?” The answer was unexpected, “Practise man, practise!”
The familiar face had belonged to Louis Armstrong.
As musicians we are constantly told to “practise”, this or “practise”
that, not to forget to “practise” or not to skimp our “practice”. But
there is more musical dirty-work, sculduggery, and damage done in
the name of “practice” than in any other musical pursuit. Everyone
knows that it is necessary to practise – few know how to do it.
The essence of wasted practice time is crystallised in the much
used admonition, “That was wrong – do it again.” If something is
wrong, the worst possible course of action is to “do it again”. This
implies the hope that, by some miracle, it will come right by itself
next time. If it does, it is usually more by luck than management and
the luck is unlikely to hold. If something is wrong, active and positive
steps must immediately be taken to ensure that it is not wrong next
time. If they are not, and the mistake is allowed to continue, it might,
in the end, prove difficult, or even impossible, to eradicate. This is
sad because with careful, but enjoyable, work it is possible, within
the natural limits of every player, to acquire a sound and reliable
technique.
My objective is to help anyone who wants to improve their piano
playing. Since it is impossible to improve upon anything which does
not already exist, I need to assume that the reader has at least some
pianistic ability. That ability need not be great. The ways of working
and thinking outlined in the following pages can be adapted to the
needs of musicians of all stages, ages, and abilities. They are as
appropriate for the beginner as for the serious student. They will also
be helpful to parents with little musical knowledge who wish to help
their children; they can, in fact, be of value to anyone wishing either
to improve their own playing or to help others improve. Although
specifically directed towards piano playing, many of the methods
outlined can readily be adapted for use with other instruments.
Chapter 1:
Your Piano
Tone Quality
New or Second-hand?
The piano might be all right, but it is just as likely to be a worn out
wreck only fit for the scrap heap. Buying a poor quality, or otherwise
unsuitable instrument is a false economy. Good musical instruments
are expensive, but they do hold their value. Pianos can suffer from
many defects which can be at best costly and, at worst, impossible
to rectify satisfactorily, but an instrument which is dusty, dirty, and out
of tune might only need a little care and attention. It is well worth
paying the fee of a good piano tuner if you are not sure: it could save
you money in the end.
There are, however, many things you could look out for before
calling on expert help. An overstrung instrument, with underdamper
action (these terms are explained as you read on) is best and these
facts are easy to check. When assessing an upright, lift the lid on the
top of the piano (the lid which covers the keys is known as the fall)
and look inside. With an underdamper action all the piano hammers
will be visible and the different thicknesses of felt on the face of each
will be noticeable. However, if what appears to be a block of wood
covers most of the hammers and only those to the right hand end of
the instrument are visible, then the instrument has an overdamper
action. Usually, the better pianos have underdamper actions, but,
although I would advise you to go for one of these, not all pianos
with overdamper actions are poor instruments. Underdamper actions
are generally more positive in their reactions. The extra mechanism
needed to place the dampers above the hammers in an overdamper
action can cause noise and influence the touch of the piano. Having
said this, many overdamper actions are quite serviceable.
While you have the lid up, check to see if the instrument is
overstrung. Look at the tuning pins (known as wrest pins) which are
just below the lid and to which the piano strings are attached. Near
the left hand end there will be wrest pins, from which the strings run
diagonally downwards towards the right. There will then be a gap
before the next, and greater, set of wrest pins from which the strings
run diagonally downwards towards the left. If this is the pattern you
see, the instrument is overstrung, and it will be obvious that the
strings do overlap. If there is no gap in the pattern of wrest pins, and
the strings run vertically downwards with no overlap, the instrument
is straight strung. There is a further possibility in that all the strings
may run downwards slightly diagonally. This type of stringing is
known as oblique, but again there is no overlapping of strings.
Overstringing improves the sound quality and most new instruments
will be made in this way. However, there are many older instruments
on the market which are neither overstrung nor underdamped which
could still be serviceable. Listen carefully to the tone quality of
whatever instrument you are inspecting. If it does not match up with
the description already given be wary of it and, if in doubt, consult a
piano technician.
Key Action
The next consideration is the action of the keys; that is, how they
respond to your touch. When you play on the instrument, none of the
notes should fail to sound. If they do, further exploration is needed to
find out why.
Sometimes the cause is simple and easily rectified, but this is not
always so. Check that the keys go down easily, but that they do offer
a certain amount of resistance to your touch. If they go down too
easily or the dip (the distance the key travels before it hits the key
bed) is very shallow, beware. Compare the resistance and the dip
with a new piano if you can because a new instrument should give
you the correct ‘feel’ for a standard touch and dip. If the used
instrument you are trying does not give this ‘feel,’ or something very
near it, and the keys appear to be loose and ‘wobbly’, get some
advice before you buy. Play all the notes on the instrument from
bottom to top and, while trying to play each note with equal
loudness, listen very carefully. All the notes should speak evenly,
none should be appreciably louder or softer than the others, always
provided, of course, that you strike the keys with equal force. If there
is inequality among them, advice should be sought.
The Pedals
The Hammers
While the lid is still up you could check the face of the hammers
which strike the strings. If the instrument has been frequently used,
the strings will have cut into and compressed the felt on the face of
the hammers. This sort of wear, together with excessive noise from
the action, individual notes which are badly out of tune, broken or
missing hammers, keys which have a lot of sideways movement,
and anything about the mechanism which appears to be cracked or
broken, are all matters which should be inspected by a piano tuner.
Many of them might be easily and cheaply dealt with, but some may
not, or may even be beyond repair. You would be well advised to find
out before parting with your money.
The diagram shows the end of a hammer whose felt has been cut off by wear. It
will also be deeply cut by the strings. The dotted outline shows the shape the
hammer should be. The felt covering on the hammers for high notes is very thin
and could be cut through to the wood.
Notes which react to the slightest touch can inhibit the development
of your technique. You ought to be able to feel the weight of the key
beneath your finger and to control its movement accurately. On a
well-regulated piano with standard touch and dip, as you press a key
down very slowly you will, at about half its travel, feel a slight click. If
you are controlling it fully, you ought to be able to continue the
downward movement of the key past this point until it is stopped by
the key bed. The click you felt occurs when the action passes the
set-off at which point the hammer is thrown, forwards in uprights and
upwards in grands, towards the string. If the speed of key descent is
too slow the action will not set-off properly which means that the
hammer will not be projected onto the string and there will be no
sound. The speed at which the key passes the set-off point
determines the loudness of the sound. It is therefore important that
you have control of the key before the set-off point is reached,
because, after it is passed, you can have no further influence on the
sound until you release the key and depress it again. This is why it is
critical that the combination of touch and dip of the key is as near
standard as possible, and this must be the same for every key on the
instrument otherwise you will find it extremely difficult to play evenly.
It is possible to become used to an instrument that is not working
correctly and be unaware of the difference a better one could make.
Always buy the best you can afford. At the time of purchase, look to
its resale value. If you cannot buy the best, make sure you know the
limitations of the instrument you are buying and aim to use it only so
long as you must. An instrument with limitations can serve you well
for a period of time, but you will become increasingly frustrated if you
are capable of playing better than the instrument will allow. When a
change is obviously necessary, a tuner, or a teacher, might be able
to help. If you bought wisely in the first instance, a tuner’s client or
the pupil of a local teacher might be glad of the instrument you have.
Questions
General Approach
Inhibition
We are familiar with the term inhibition, used in the Freudian sense
of frustration and repression; but by exponents of the Alexander
technique it is used in an entirely different way. To C. F. Alexander,
inhibition meant the ability to prevent an unwanted habitual response
from taking place by deliberately creating a pause. Inhibition, in this
sense, is of considerable use to us in improving our piano playing.
The ability to exercise self-restraint by inhibiting an action, and
thereby allowing us to think out the next move, is one to cultivate. It
takes courage to decide not to have just one more ‘go’ to see if
things ‘come right’ of their own accord. If we do have one more go,
responsibility for that next move is thrown back onto our self-
organising system, and if that has set us on the wrong track already
it will be pure chance if things do ‘come right’.
Thinking Time
Isolation
If the notes are correct, do not assume that you have solved the
problem because, as I explained earlier, faulty practice will have
created many trackways from which your brain can select. The fact
that on this occasion the correct one has been selected means little
or nothing beyond the fact that a correct trackway does exist, if only
you can select it every time.
Repeat the sequence from step 2 to step 10 a few times, reducing
the thinking time between each step. Each time you reach step 10
check the notes you are playing and remember what errors occur.
They could vary on each occasion. Continue repeating the step 2 to
step 10 sequence while reducing thinking time until:
This might seem a long and complicated process, but when you
become used to it you will be able to locate where the wrong
decision was made, and what it actually was, in a matter of seconds.
Like everything else, this method of working needs practice, but
learning to use it is time well spent and it will eventually save you
time and frustration.
It is absolutely vital that you find the real fault because attempting
to substitute an alternative sequence of messages without detecting
it is unlikely to prove satisfactory. Decreasing the amount of thinking
time will eventually force you into making the error; a necessity if you
are to eradicate it. I repeat yet again, do not be surprised if you
produce a few different errors at this point since several patterns
sending a variety of messages to hand and fingers may be available.
You need to eliminate each of them leaving only the correct one, and
you know you have done so when you have removed all feelings of
apprehension or doubt. A little careful observation will enable you to
recognise exactly what the error is and what is causing it. It often
happens when you actually get the notes right that you are making
an involuntary finger movement immediately before the potential
error and correcting yourself before you play the right note. Check
for such involuntary actions and try to follow the direction in which
they are pointing; they could tell you precisely what and where the
mistake is. Involuntary actions of this sort are mistakes waiting to be
made. It is not always easy for you to detect these yourself. If you
slow down you are less likely to make that involuntary action, having
given yourself enough thinking time to avoid it; if you do not slow
down, things might be moving too quickly for you to detect exactly
what is happening. Someone sitting beside you can often help. If you
direct their attention correctly, they might be able to see that slight
tell-tale movement of a finger setting out in the wrong direction and
then being immediately corrected. A friend willing to do this is
invaluable.
To give a simple instance, if the mistake was a B natural being
played instead of a B flat, sitting beside a student I can often see that
in approaching the B flat the student’s fingers are too close to the
edge of the white keys when ideally they should be much nearer to
the black keys. As the B flat approaches I can see a slight finger
movement towards the B natural being made, and then the finger
being hurriedly extended to try to reach the flat. Sometimes it does
so, sometimes it doesn’t. Seeing this happening I can advise that, at
a particular point, the student’s hand be moved further forward,
making it easy to play the B flat and much more difficult to play the B
natural, and mark this point on the copy as a reminder. This is just
one particular example among many I could have cited. A friend who
has no knowledge of piano playing might not be able suggest a
solution to the problem in the way that I was able to do, but could at
least tell you where you appeared to be making an unnecessary
movement and what that movement was. Armed with that
information, you will then be able to work out the solution for
yourself.
I cannot stress too strongly the necessity of finding out precisely
the nature of the error. It is tempting to try to save time by simply
working out a new procedure. If you do this the old error is still there.
Your new procedure might help you bypass it, but will not have
eradicated it. Your old error is still lurking, waiting to catch you
unawares, usually at some particularly important time. It is only when
you know the exact nature of the error, and the precise moment at
which the message containing the instructions which caused it was
sent out, that you can successfully inhibit the faulty action and
positively substitute a correct one in its place.
Having uncovered the true cause of the fault, do not expect that
substituting the correct message at the correct time on one occasion
will put matters right. It won’t. You will no doubt have practised the
wrong sequence of actions many times which means that it will have
been established very firmly in your nerve network. You will need to
approach this danger point with extreme caution for some time,
making sure that on every occasion from then on you put the right
pattern in place at precisely the right moment. Every time you get it
wrong you are reinforcing the faulty pattern and thereby increasing
the number of times you will need to get it right before the error can
be removed.
The most effective method of substituting the correct pattern is to
isolate the section within the context of the piece. Having established
exactly what the error is, deliberately slow down the section in which
it occurs in subsequent practice sessions, making the slowing
considerable enough to give you time to think. This allows you to put
the correct pattern in place each time and makes a sufficient enough
difference in speed for you to notice that you are slowing down. It is
important to make the slowing down considerable. If it is only slight,
you can begin to accept it as the way you wish to play the section.
This was the reason for my earlier comment about haphazardly
slowing down to avoid a mistake. If the slowing is done consciously
and deliberately it leaves a mark in proceedings which you will
remember even when you have put the section back into context at
the correct speed. Isolating like this has the added advantage that
you will approach and quit the danger area using the same fingering
pattern on each occasion. Isolating a section out of context can
result in an inappropriate fingering pattern being used unless a
careful check is made to see that the fingerings which approach and
follow on from the section are compatible with those which begin and
end the isolated section. If they are not, you will find that you cannot
start the section on the finger you wish, and you cannot move back
into context on the correct finger; in other words, by trying to remove
one error you have created the possibility of two others. Carefully
controlled isolation within the context can prevent this from
happening.
Questions
Fingering
Forward and backward movement. Use the same fingering to play this short
sequence. When your 3rd finger plays note D at the end of the second bar, push
your hand forward so that your thumb falls easily on the C sharp at the beginning
of the 3rd bar.
Questions
Touch
Balanced Arm
The first step is to practise keeping your fingers, hands, and arms in
a balanced state. Muscles can only pull, they cannot push, so equal
sets of them are needed to enable arms, hands, and fingers to be
moved in any direction. By a balanced state, I mean that in whatever
position you hold your fingers, hand, and arm, your muscles should
be exerting the minimum amount of force in opposition to each other
to stop your limbs from collapsing. Try this experiment. Sitting away
from the piano, in a chair without arms, rest your right forearm on
your knee and relax it as completely as you can so that it rests quite
heavily on your knee. Next, without actually moving (and that
instruction is very important), think about raising your whole arm as if
you were going to play the piano; then, still without actually moving
your arm, let its own muscles take the weight of your arm. Your arm,
even though it has not moved, should now feel lighter on your knee.
Practise this a few times to get used to the feeling of only just
supporting the weight of your arm without raising it. Try the same
experiment with your left arm, and then try it both arms together.
When you have become used to the feeling of a balanced arm you
will have an immediate guide as to how tense your arm is. Without
such a guide, it is difficult to assess the state of tension in your arms
and hands. Too great an amount of tension and too great a degree of
relaxation are both detrimental to movement, and your ability to
assume the balanced state quickly and accurately will greatly
enhance your fluency.
Having got used to the balanced feeling, raise your arms to a
piano playing position, hold them there, and try to induce a similar
feeling in your arms and hands as you had when they were resting
on your knee. They will not feel quite so free because your muscles
will be supporting the weight of your arms, but try to make them feel
as free as you can. I hesitate to use the word relaxed in this context
because a relaxed arm must fall and hang loosely by your side.
Some tension is needed in your shoulder to hold your arm in the
playing position, and also in your elbow and wrist joints to keep them
from collapsing. Now move your forearms, hands, and fingers as if
you were playing the piano, whilst trying to retain the feeling of
freedom and balance you had when you first lifted your arms into a
piano playing position. Still in the piano playing position apply just
enough force to make your right arm reach out as if you were about
to play a high note, stop the outward movement when your hand is
above the imaginary note and let your arm, hand, and fingers
assume the balanced feeling. Do this a few times, assuming the
balanced state as soon as your hand has reached the position of the
imaginary note. Do the same with your left arm, aiming for a low
note, and then repeat the exercise with both arms together. The
object of this exercise is to practise re-establishing the balanced
state as quickly as possible after making a lateral arm movement.
Any movement must be made with the minimum of effort, and you
must be able to return to the balanced state immediately after that
minimum effort has accomplished its task, in readiness for the next
move.
Finger Touch
In this type, power to strike the key comes only from vertical
movement of the hand at the wrist joint. The finger used to strike the
note must stay firm enough to prevent it collapsing under pressure.
The action for pure finger touch, the movement coming from the knuckle joint only.
The action for pure hand or wrist touch, the movement coming from the wrist joint
only.
Forearm Touch
The power to strike the key comes only from vertical movement of
the forearm pivoting at the elbow. In this case both finger and hand
stay firm. There are other forms of forearm touch, but they will be
described later.
The action for pure forearm touch, the movement coming from the elbow joint only.
The action for pure whole arm touch, the movement coming from the shoulder joint
only.
The power to strike the key comes only from vertical movement at
the shoulder and all joints between shoulder and finger tip should
remain firm.
Staccato Touch
Finger Staccato
This is done by a lift of the hand using only the wrist joint. This type
of staccato action is performed more easily if your forearm is held
slightly above key level and your hand and fingers are allowed to
point down-wards towards the keys than it is if you keep your wrist
low and raise your hand above wrist level. This is the type of
staccato action Chopin advised his pupils to use to counteract
heaviness in their playing (see page 47).
A staccatissimo note is played with an accent and is usually
allowed to sound only for a short time, but even then a crotchet
marked staccatissimo should be longer than a quaver similarly
marked.
Non Legato
Forearm Rotation
Vibrato
Liszt, it has been said, played rapid octaves “as if he were shaking
cards out of his sleeves”. It is possible neither with normal finger
movements, nor with vertical or rotational movement of the forearm
or of the whole arm, to produce a visual effect such as this. It can
only be done by forward and backward movements of the arm. The
main element essential to this type of touch is a push-pull action by
the upper arm, moving the forearm and hand forward and backward
across the key. The hand and fingers must remain firm throughout to
enable the full force of the action to be transmitted to the keys. This
push-pull action is usually coupled with a rise and fall of the wrist
which helps to avoid stiffness. Although the details of how this action
is to be performed vary depending on who is describing it, the push-
pull type action is common to all.
The ‘push’ action of vibrato, with the wrist parallel to the keys and hand pushed
forward on the keys.
The ‘pull’ action of vibrato, with the wrist raised and hand drawn back towards the
front edge of the keys.
I have tried to describe some of the most basic forms of piano touch.
You will probably find that you use them in combination rather than in
their pure states. Which form of touch you will need at any particular
time is something you will eventually need to come to terms with for
yourself. Generally, the best advice I can give is to use the smallest
forces you need to do the job. By that I mean do not use whole arm
touch where finger touch is all that you need. Save your whole arm
movements for strong, loud passages; they will be more
cumbersome than finger or hand movements, but they will tire less
quickly. Use finger touch whenever you need great speed and
dexterity. Trouble arises when speed, dexterity, and loudness are all
required. It is for this reason that hard practice of scales, arpeggios,
and exercises is necessary. You need as much strength in your
fingers as you can muster, but that strength must be directed
towards making the key move as quickly as possible through the set-
off point, not towards hitting, and remaining on, the key bed.
Strength is certainly required, but there is also a skill in converting
that strength into speed at just the right moment to make a loud
sound. Finger drumming on some flat surface such as a table is a
useful exercise in rehearsing this skill. You will need to be sitting in a
playing position, and the surface on which you are practising should,
most times at least, be hard. Drum your fingers on the hard surface
and try to make as much sound as you can. Do not use your arm to
assist your fingers in any way, other than to keep them in the playing
position. Use your fingers and your thumbs in this exercise and try to
make all your fingers strike with the same strength and speed.
You will almost certainly notice that your fourth and fifth fingers are
weaker than the others. It does no harm to exercise these more
frequently and more strongly than the others. Do not stop when your
fingers begin to feel tired. Always go on just a bit longer. Stopping
when they feel tired will not extend them beyond their normal
capacity, and it is this extension of normal capacity that you are
seeking, but be careful not to strain your fingers too much.
You can also practise finger drumming on your own knee. This has
the advantages that you can practise whenever you like (provided
those around you do not think you have gone peculiar) and that you
can judge the strength of each blow quite accurately by the impact it
makes on your knee. I have done more useful finger practice during
boring meetings, less than enlivening lessons, and tedious sermons
than I care to admit. All you need is sufficient cover so that no one
can see your fingers, but beware – you can become so engrossed in
your practice that you miss large chunks of the meeting, lesson, or
sermon; only you can decide how good or bad that is!
Although it is usual to employ whole arm touch for loud playing
and finger touch for light and delicate passages, there are other
ways of thinking about touch than just that large and strong means
loud. The stronger and more powerful the muscles being used, the
greater the control it is possible to exercise over them. Forearm, and
whole arm, touch can be appropriate for very quiet passages, and
very good effects are obtainable provided the playing speed is slow
enough to make it possible. Increased control over the key speed
enables us not only to play very softly, but also to make many subtle
changes in the dynamics with the minimum of effort. It is up to each
of us to decide what form of touch we think is suitable for a particular
passage, and, when in doubt, it is best to experiment with a few
types before deciding. Our own self-organising system can also be
brought into play. A clear aural pre-perception of the sound we wish
to produce can help our muscles to make right decisions on how to
attain that sound, provided we know something about touch, and
about the mechanical efficiency of the particular instrument. But
beware: self-organising systems need to be carefully monitored.
Because it is their function to relieve us of decision making, they can
take over to such an extent that we have played something before
we have really controlled it in the way we want. The result of this can
be playing which is mechanical and lacking the fine gradations of
sound which are the hallmarks of an accomplished pianist.
It is important to remember that, when playing softly, key speed
will be slower than when playing loudly. This being so, the actual
amount of time needed to play the notes is fractionally longer. If you
check the speed of your quiet playing by using a metronome, you will
find yourself under pressure to keep to the beat. When playing loudly
we tend to get faster because key speed needs to be faster. In
checking your loud playing against a metronome, the pressure will
be on to stop gaining speed. These are not the only reasons for
gaining or losing speed; interpretative factors also play a part and
you may need carefully to distinguish between such reasons.
Questions
Tone Production
From the previous chapter it is clear that the word tone as applied to
piano playing can be ambiguous. Since the actual tone quality of the
instrument is established at the time of manufacture, the purpose of
the present chapter is to discuss ways of making the best of that
tone using the types of touch already described.
Quality of tone is something which almost everyone recognises,
especially when it is poor. But what makes tone good or bad? A
weed has been described as a plant growing in the wrong place.
Although there might be nothing wrong with the plant itself, it is in the
wrong place. Much the same might, under certain circumstances, be
said of pianistic tone quality. It is its appropriateness to its
surroundings which makes it good or bad. Dictionary definitions of
tone such as “a musical or vocal sound considered with reference to
its quality, as acute or grave, sweet or harsh, loud or soft, clear or
dull” do not help us as practising musicians. In trying to capture in
words the essence of something which, although recognisable, can
have no real verbal equivalent, we are bound to hit trouble.
The sound of a trumpet is distinctive, but it would be impossible to
give an adequate verbal description of it to someone who had never
before heard it. By using a variety of adjectives, certain comparisons
between its sound and that of other instruments could be attempted,
but the result would not be wholly satisfactory. Similarly, with pianistic
tone, we would be unable to find words to do justice to it in all its
diversity. My job in committing advice about the production of ‘good’
or ‘appropriate’ tone quality to paper is, therefore, not easy.
Demonstration is by far the best way of helping, so being at a
disadvantage in that respect I will eventually be calling upon you to
do your own demonstrations. Since adjectives are not precise
enough for our purposes, I will need to get down to whatever facts
are available about tone itself.
The speed of the hammer controls the loudness of the sound and its
harshness, but there is one further element which has a
considerable effect on the wider aspects of tone control, and that is
note length.
There are many excellent books available which describe the
elements of piano technique and tone production, but it is not always
made clear that all we as pianists can do, once the correct note has
been found, is to make that note either louder or softer, longer or
shorter. All pianistic effects (apart from some special ones which can
be gained by the use of pedals) are controlled by variations in
dynamics and note lengths. This is not a suggestion that the well-
considered advice contained in books on general muscular control,
on playing scales, arpeggios and octaves, or producing legato and
staccato effects, vibration technique, and the many other technical
aspects which they cover, should be ignored, but rather it is a plea
that when the advice has been read and understood, the pianist’s
attention should be focused on the control of the two variables:
volume and length.
Looking more closely at the fundamentals involved, note lengths
can be fairly readily controlled, but the fine grading of dynamics is
more difficult. Loudness depends on the speed at which a key is
depressed; the faster the key speed the louder the sound, but also
the greater the harshness.
Since the control of loudness, softness, and note length are the only
facilities at the disposal of the pianist, good tone, whatever that might
be, must result from the carefully balanced mixture of these factors.
This is where I must now call on you to act as demonstrator. Strike
the B flat almost an octave above middle C as strongly as you can
and, whilst holding the note down, listen carefully to the dying sound.
Depending on the resonance of the instrument you have, it will take
about 15 to 20 seconds for the note to die away completely. During
that time you can hear the full range of the piano’s tone ‘colour’. The
initial sound will be ‘rough’ or ‘harsh’ (the starting transient) because
of the sudden displacement of the string and the resultant conflict of
the vibrations. The inharmonious elements will soon disappear
leaving as full and rich a tone as the instrument can give. The tone
will gradually soften into a gentle hum and finally into a faint whisper
before dissolving into silence, the exact moment at which it stops
being difficult to establish. Try the experiment a few times, listening
very carefully to the changes in ‘quality’ as the volume of sound dies.
After listening a few times to the B flat above middle C, try the B flat
immediately below middle C and become aware of its various tone
qualities. Try the same experiment with each B flat on the keyboard.
The differences in the lengths of time it takes for each note to die will
be considerable, and the higher the pitch the more difficult it
becomes to make a full, rich, sonorous, and durable tone. Having
listened to the tone qualities which your piano can produce, practise
striking various notes at different pitches and see if you make them
give you exactly the sound you are aiming for.
The value of the exercise comes from listening intently, and in
teaching yourself how to form an aural picture of the sound a note
will produce before you actually strike it. Just as it was important to
give yourself sufficient thinking time to get the right finger to the right
note, so too is sufficient thinking time needed during practice in tone
production to ensure that each note is struck at the correct speed to
produce a suitable tone for its position in the music. Practise
producing various degrees of loudness using pure finger, pure hand,
pure forearm, and pure whole arm touches as described in the
previous chapter, as well as combinations of touches, and try to
imagine just before you strike the note exactly what the tone quality
will be.
Note Length
Having practised for loudness, the next exercise is to listen to the
effect of length on notes of different degrees of loudness. A
succession of notes played loudly and of short duration will sound
crisp and clear by comparison with notes of a similar loudness held
for a longer time. The latter will sound loud, or ponderous, or
majestic, depending on the adjective you choose to use. The actual
loudness appears to be less when the notes are shorter in length,
but the brightness and crispness is greater. Soft notes of short
duration will appear to sound even quieter than those of a similar
intensity held longer. Time spent listening to the effects of loudness
and length on single notes will pay dividends in your playing.
Building up a repertory of sounds which you can clearly imagine
before they are heard will help you to aim exactly for the required
sound, allowing you to make subtle alterations to what we call tone.
Gone will be the days of just loud and soft, or take it as it comes.
So far discussion has been focused on single notes, but piano
music usually consists of chords, and melodies which are
interwoven, resulting in notes sounding together. Under these
circumstances it is the ‘definition’ of the chord, or the supremacy of a
particular note or musical line which ‘defines’ the tone quality. It is
seldom the case that every note in a chord is given the same
intensity. One or two notes usually take precedence, adding life and
interest to the texture and thereby enhancing the quality of the
playing, and the quality of the tone.
There are many reasons for making one or more notes louder than
others. It is open to debate as to whether such features should be
discussed in connection with tone production or under the general
heading of interpretation, but they do alter what we call the tonal
quality and so need to be discussed here. The carefully thought out
balance of loudness between notes which are sounding
simultaneously is therefore an important element in tone production.
This balance is achieved by knowing which notes to subdue as much
as which notes to highlight.
It is possible to bring a note into prominence by volume, or length,
or both. Making the prominent note louder is usually the first thought
that comes to mind, but increases in volume can lead to harshness
rather than importance, unless they are carefully controlled. Although
we are again bordering on the realm of interpretation, my real
objective here is to suggest how tone can be altered by highlighting,
rather than the use and intensity of such highlighting in any particular
piece of music; it is the method used that needs to be explored.
Training yourself to make one note in a chord more prominent than
the others, although not difficult, demands careful and detailed
practice. The easiest notes in a chord to highlight are either the
highest or the lowest. The inner notes can be more awkward, but
perseverance once the principles have been established, will
produce the desired result.
Let us assume, for demonstration purposes, that the chord you are
about to play contains the three notes E, G, and C immediately
above middle C (technically, a chord must consist of three or more
different notes). You are going to play these notes with your right
hand, finger 1 (thumb) on E, finger 2 (index finger) on G, and finger 5
(little finger) on C, and it is the note C played with finger 5 that you
wish to make more prominent than the others.
Place your fingers over the three notes in question as if you are
ready to play them all. Lift your hand, and in the balanced state,
extend finger 5 down towards the key. Still keeping in the playing
position for all three notes, rotate your hand very slightly towards
finger 5 and then bring it down, using forearm touch, onto the keys
so that you play only the note C, the other two fingers being above
the notes E and G, but too high above them to touch. Let your arm
weight rest on note C while holding the note down, and “feel” the
amount of weight you are applying to it. Lift your hand, then bring it
down again to play only the note C. Make sure that your hand
descends at a steady speed, that finger 5 goes right down to the
bottom of the key, and that it stays firm (i.e. does not collapse) when
the key comes into contact with the key bed. The sound you produce
must be firm and loud (there should be neither weakness nor
harshness) and you should again feel the amount of weight on your
little finger. As explained in the previous chapter, do not press on the
key; instead, by releasing tension in your upper arm and shoulder,
allow the weight of your hand and arm to rest on it and let your little
finger support that weight. There should, of course, be no feeling of
weight on your other two fingers because they are not in contact with
their respective keys. Do this a few times, directing all your weight
on, and attention to, your little finger. That little finger should feel as if
it is supporting a heavy weight.
This might seem a ludicrously simple exercise, hardly worth
practising. Don’t you believe it. I did point out a few paragraphs
earlier that this work needed careful and detailed practice, so do not
skimp on the details. The important points to establish about the
exercise so far are:
(a) Your hand must work as one whole unit, and your fingers must
stay in the relative positions you intend.
(b) When your hand, propelled by your forearm, comes down onto
the keys, your little finger must go right down to the key bed
without checking at any point once you have started the
movement.
(c) Your hand must be brought down at a constant speed, capable
of producing a sound at least f in volume.
(d) You must feel the weight of your hand and arm being supported
by a little finger which does not give way under the strain.
(a) Making the note C played by your little finger sing out strongly
and clearly.
(b) Making the other two notes sound, but only very softly.
(c) Making all three notes, either sound, or appear to sound,
together, with no obvious splitting.
It takes many words to describe what to do, even though the actions
themselves are simple. But what is not simple is acquiring the fine
judgment necessary to get the end result right. If the E and G are
sounding too loudly, practise the second stage exercise a few more
times, and at the conclusion of each rehearsal of it extend your
thumb and first finger to a position just beyond the set-off point and
just above the key bed. Do this over and over again until you feel
sure you have estimated accurately the height your thumb and first
finger should be. Remember, you do not want them to hit the key
bed with the same force as does your little finger, but at the same
time they must go past the set-off point for making their notes speak.
The judgment is critical.
You will probably find that you get it right sometimes and not
others. Try to remember how your hand and fingers “feel” when you
get it right. When you get it wrong, analyse what went wrong with it.
Did you rotate your hand slightly towards your thumb? Was your
second finger extended too far so that it came down too soon, or
was it not extended sufficiently and so did not produce a note at all?
Was your little finger extended so much that it came down before the
others, thus splitting the chord? Self analysis, when you are playing
only three notes, will not present much of a problem. Get used to
doing it so that you are well equipped to tackle chords with a greater
number of notes.
When you can highlight with your little finger, transfer your attention
to your thumb. Using the processes described above, practise
making the thumb note more prominent than the others. Being
stronger than your little finger, your thumb might respond more
quickly to the task, but it might also split the chord more frequently.
Questions
Phrasing
A perfect cadence.
Turning now more directly to the main substance of this chapter, the
word “phrase” can appear in different contexts when discussing
musical matters. It is therefore necessary to show the similarities and
the differences in its use so that confusion can be avoided. The three
main ways in which it is used are:
The skill needed to be able to analyse music, and to work out its
phrase, sentence, and motivic structure, is one which all aspiring
pianists should acquire. Without it, it is not possible, unaided, to
come to a true understanding of the music. Taking an example from
literature, it is only when properly punctuated that on paper the
following verse from a well–known poem is truly intelligible:
The second use of the word phrase concerns the marks of phrasing
that appear on copies of piano, and other, music. Much depends on
the philosophy of the editor (or the composer) as to how these
markings are used in any particular piece of music. In most
instances, the phrase marks which cover four bars (occasionally two
if the bars in question are long) serve a structural purpose, indicating
the main points of punctuation. The marks showing shorter phrases
are often referred to as slurs. The markings for both long phrases
and for slurs are interpretative aids, indicating accentuations which
might run counter to those suggested by the bar lines.
The third, and most usual, meaning of phrase concerns its use as an
interpretative factor in performance. When we refer to someone
phrasing well or badly, this is the sense in which we are using the
word. But since the phrases are already established by the
composer and marked by the editor, what is it, precisely, that we
mean by phrasing?
Our task is to bring out the shape of each phrase by our mode of
performance. The most usual advice given is to build the phrase up
to a point of climax, probably somewhere about two thirds to three
quarters of the way through it, and then allow it to fall to a point of
repose at its end, or cadence. Since each phrase is an individual
entity, this order of shaping does not hold good for every one, but it
embodies some basic principles common to all. A phrase must have
a clear beginning and ending and it must be perceptibly separated
from the phrases surrounding it. Within the phrase itself there must
be points of climax and points of repose. Where these points occur
differs from phrase to phrase, but they must be present, and it is the
build up towards the climaxes and the subsequent relaxation when
moving away from them that gives life to the music.
Questions
Pedalling
It has already been stated in Chapter 1 that there are usually two,
sometimes three, pedals on a piano. The descriptions given there
were offered as assistance when buying a piano, but some more
detailed explanation of what they actually do would seem
appropriate before discussing their use. It will be better to start with
instruments with only two pedals, since they are most common. The
left pedal is referred to as the soft pedal, and the right, as the loud
pedal. Although the terms ‘soft’ and ‘loud’ have some relevance, they
are not entirely helpful. A much greater understanding of what the
pedals actually do is needed if we are to use them to their best
advantage.
There are three distinct and different types of soft pedal available. By
far the most effective is the una corda type. Depending on their pitch,
piano notes are produced by one, two, or three strings. The notes in
the lowest, or bass, register have one heavily weighted string; those
in the middle, or tenor, register have two strings; and those in the
high, or treble, register, have three strings. The una corda
mechanism, which moves the whole keyboard slightly to the right
when the pedal is depressed, has two effects. In the tenor register, it
allows the hammers to hit only one of the two strings; and in the
treble register, two of the three strings. But in all three registers, it
allows the softer, less used, areas of the hammer face to strike the
strings. This results in a totally different quality of sound, certainly
softer, but also of a different timbre (tone quality) from that produced
when the pedal is not depressed.
The una corda type of mechanism is used on grand pianos, and
occasionally on uprights, but the most usual type of soft pedal
mechanism on uprights instead moves the hammers forward, closer
to the string. This restricts the distance, and therefore the speed of
the hammer’s ‘throw’, so reducing the volume of sound.
Unfortunately it does not alter its timbre.
The third type of soft pedal mechanism is more primitive than
either of the others. It introduces a strip of felt between the hammers
and the strings, reducing the volume of sound, but robbing it of much
of its quality.
A similar device is sometimes available on modern instruments
and worked by a third pedal placed between the normal two. It
introduces a thick strip of felt between the hammers and the strings,
greatly reducing both volume and sound quality. It is usually called a
practice pedal.
Use of Pedals
Sostenuto Pedal
The sostenuto pedal (see opposite), if your piano has one (and not
many instruments do), is useful particularly for playing music by
impressionist composers. Debussy, for instance, often asks that a
chord be sustained, while at the same time requiring the use of both
hands to play other things, and Rachmaninoff does something
similar at the beginning of his wellknown Prelude in C sharp minor,
by requiring a double octave to be held while many different
harmonies are played above it. If you do not have a sostenuto pedal,
effects of this sort need to be done by half pedalling, a technique
described on page 115.
Legato Pedalling
This is a useful pedalling technique which should be learned by all
pianists. It is essential whenever maintaining a pianistic legato with
hands only is impossible. Playing successions of chords, for
example, can seldom be accomplished without lifting your hand off
the keys from time to time in order to shape your fingering for the
next chord. This results in gaps in the continuity, unless you are
extremely skilled in leaping from chord to chord without a break in
weight transfer. Legato pedalling technique is needed to bridge such
gaps satisfactorily. The loud pedal must be depressed to sustain the
sound when your hands are off the keys, and released when your
hands are on the keys, to prevent blurring.
Try this very simple exercise which will demonstrate in slow motion
how to practise legato pedalling. Play, with both hands, a chord of D
major with a highlighted A at the top. Put your foot on the damper
pedal and lift your hands from the keys. The chord will continue to
sound with the top note, A, being prominent. Still keeping the pedal
depressed, play a chord of G with a highlighted B at the top and
release the pedal just as the chord of G sounds. Depress the pedal
again to sustain the G chord and lift your hands from the keys. Now
play a chord of C major with a highlighted C at the top, and release
the pedal just as the the chord sounds. Depress the pedal again to
sustain the C chord and lift your hands from the keys. If you have
synchronised your hands and the pedal accurately you should have
heard three chords with the short melody formed by the highlighted
A, B, and C singing out clearly without a break or overlapping. If your
hands and foot were not accurately synchronised there would either
be a gap in this short melody, or some of the melody notes would
overlap each other.
Legato pedalling. Make sure that the pedal is depressed immediately after the
notes are struck but while they are still being held down. Release the pedal just as
the next chord is played.
Direct Pedalling
Half Pedalling
The term does not mean that a pedal is to be brought half way up. It
refers to the correct use of the sustaining pedal to achieve effects
that would otherwise require a sostenuto pedal. The thicker, heavier
strings of the low notes require a greater amount of damping than do
the lighter treble strings. The loud pedal must be fully raised for a
fraction of a second and then fully depressed again so as to
obliterate the higher notes and allow the lower ones to continue
sounding. As an example of how half pedalling works, with your left
hand strike very firmly an octave G, its top note being an octave and
a half below middle C, while directly pedalling it. Take your hand off
the keys and, with a quick flick of your ankle, raise and lower the
sustaining pedal so swiftly that the octave is slightly, but not
completely, damped. Continue raising and lowering the sustaining
pedal, again with quick flicks of the ankle, and see how often you
can do it before you damp the notes completely. Do this exercise a
few times to get the feel of the process.
Now play a chord of G, your left hand filling out the octave you
have just played with a B and a D, and your right hand playing a
similar G chord starting an octave and a half above middle C. Strike
the complete chord using both hands simultaneously while directly
pedalling it. Take your hands off the keys and, with a quick flick of
your ankle, raise and lower the sustaining pedal so swiftly that the
sound of the upper chord is damped, but most of the lower chord’s
sound sings on. Keep on practising this until you can cut the upper
chord quickly and completely while still allowing the lower chord to
sing on. As mentioned earlier, sections of Rachmaninoff’s famous
Prelude in C sharp minor and many similar passages in other works
will benefit from accurate half pedalling.
Questions
1 Why should you resist the temptation to use the una corda pedal
whenever you see the signs p or pp?
2 What is the instruction on a copy of music when the left pedal is
to be used?
3 What is the purpose of a sostenuto pedal?
4 What pedalling technique will help you simulate the effect of a
sostenuto pedal?
5 What are the other names for the so-called loud pedal, and why
are they more appropriate?
6 The sustaining pedal has two main uses, what are they?
7 Explain the technique known as legato pedalling.
8 What is direct pedalling and when might it be useful?
9 (a) What is meant by half pedalling?
(b) How can you train yourself to use the technique of half
pedalling?
10 How can you make a piano ‘shout’?
11 How can you demonstrate the warming effect of the sustaining
pedal?
Chapter 9:
Sooner or later, when talking or writing about piano playing, the word
interpretation appears. While vaguely covering all the expressive
aspects of performance, the word itself gives no clue as to how
these aspects are to be achieved. For that reason, in a practical
book such as this, an essay on musical interpretation is
inappropriate; what is more to the point is discussing, in some detail,
the various factors which contribute to making a presentable
performance. There are many excellent exhortations in other books
about getting to the heart of the music, and making the spirit of the
music come alive, and so on, but the following pages will be directed
to showing how, by using the technical skills you possess, you can
achieve a satisfying standard of performance.
Learning a new piece of music involves many elements which,
when they have been worked out, understood, and painstakingly
rehearsed, must all come together simultaneously to produce the
final result. The problem in writing about these elements is that,
apart from a few obvious ones, such as learning the notes, there is
not necessarily any definite chronological order in which they should
be dealt with. Some need to be considered before you play a note,
some stretch right through the whole learning, and even the
performing, period, while others are of the “as and when” variety to
be dealt with as, or if, required, and also precisely when required. In
an attempt to impose some sort of logical and ordered approach, I
will deal with those which need to be addressed early in the learning
process first, and the others I will leave to your discretion to select
when the time is right to consider or incorporate them.
In common with the previous chapters, the information which
follows is presented so that it can be applied to any piece of music. A
few specific references might occur, but I have avoided the
temptation of explaining how to go about something by examining in
detail one particular piece of music. This adds to the difficulty of my
task, but it does mean that no piece of advice will be given in
reference to music whose details are not known to you.
Preliminaries
(a) Choose a new piece of music, preferably one which you have
never tried to play before. This is desirable so that you do not
inherit any bad habits acquired in your previous contact with the
music. If it is not possible or desirable to begin on an entirely
new piece, you must be prepared for the frequent use of the
corrective procedures described in Chapter 3, which will
undoubtedly slow down your progress.
(b) It is advantageous to have a piece of music which is reasonably
well known to you on hand before you begin your new one.
Breaking down a new piece and practising it slowly and carefully
is exacting work. It is a help to relieve the concentration at times
by switching to something which is well rehearsed, but not yet up
to performance standard. As well as relieving the concentration,
remembering some of the difficulties encountered in that piece
can act as a timely reminder of what to be looking out for in the
early stages of learning your new piece.
(c) Always have a pencil and rubber, and possibly also a notebook,
available on the piano. It is essential to make accurate records of
decisions while practising. It is very easy to forget a fingering
which worked well in practice, and it is also necessary to
obliterate all evidence of one which did not. A few words jotted
down in a notebook can act as a reminder of something you
particularly wish to do during your next practice session. Little
details of this sort can save you a lot of time and effort.
(d) You will also need a book of the rudiments (or elements) of
music. There are many, inexpensive ones available. Make sure
that the one you buy contains all the key signatures, time
signatures and note groupings, lengths of notes and rests, the
most common ornaments (acciaccaturas, appoggiaturas,
mordents, turns, trills and shakes), signs and abbreviations, and
a fairly lengthy list of musical terms; information on phrasing and
an outline of the more common musical forms can also be very
helpful. Many books will contain other information, but for playing
purposes the above list is a reasonable minimum. Descriptions
of common chords can be of interest too, but if you are
considering examinations in musical theory you will need a book
which deals with intervals, elementary harmony, word setting,
and any other aspects which the syllabus for the particular
examination requires. Colleges which set the examinations
usually produce books to cover their own syllabus, and you
would be well advised to obtain one which is appropriate to the
examinations which interest you.
Now let us get down to the actual learning process. We cannot hope
to give a satisfactory performance of any piece of music unless we
can play the right notes, or at least most of them, so this is where to
start.
Staccato, staccatissimo (see pages 69 and 70), accent, tenuto and pause marks
(in that order). Make sure that you understand exactly what the signs and terms on
your score mean.
Although sustaining it, deliberately, in this way will give that note
prominence, it should not be the same as accenting it.
Another indication to accent notes is marcato. When this word
appears on the score, every note affected by it should be made
prominent.
These will be shown in the list of terms in your rudiments book, but
the following guidance might be helpful. Temporary variations in
speed are called for on many occasions. Rall (rallentando) and ritard
(ritardando) mean gradually slowing down, but rit (ritenuto) means
hold back immediately. It is easy to confuse these instructions, they
are different from each other and care is needed to read them
correctly.
Although not strictly speaking a speed variation, the pause mark
should be mentioned at this point. It applies only to the note over
which it is placed, and its length is governed by the character of the
music. It sometimes is accompanied by the word lunga, meaning
long.
Ornaments
(a)
1 2 3 4
(b)
1 2 2 2 3 2 4 2
Keep the numbers in bold type exactly in time with the metronome
beat and make them slightly louder than the small numbers between
them.
Try the same exercise in threes like this:
(c)
1 2 3 2 2 3 3 2 3 4 2 3
Again keep the numbers in bold type strong and exactly in time with
the metronome and make the small numbers weaker but fitting
exactly. It is slightly more difficult at first to make everything coincide.
(d) 1 2 3 4 5 2 2 3 4 5 3 2 3 4 5 4 2 3 4 5
Now try the same exercise at the piano. Starting just with single
notes as at (a) above, play a note C to each of the numbers in bold
just to get used to the spacing. Next, counting in pairs as at (b)
above, play that note C on the metronome beat and a note D on the
small figures between each metronome beat. Next, counting in
threes as at (c) above, play the notes C, D, E in triplets in the same
way, and be aware of the difference in speed of the notes you are
playing, even though the metronome beat remains constant. Again,
the note C always comes on a metronome beat. Finally, counting in
fives as at (d) above, play the notes C, D, E, F, G making sure that
the note C always comes on a metronome beat, and be aware of the
great increase in speed of the notes you are playing, even though
you know the metronome speed is remaining constant. The aim in all
cases is to begin each beat with the note C exactly in time with the
metronome. It takes concentration and careful listening to identify,
and to be sure of getting rid of, all inequalities. You will notice that I
have not used an & between any of the notes. This is the usual way
of counting, but it is only appropriate when counting in pairs of notes.
Counting triplets as 1 & & 2 & & and so on would be confusing, and it
would become even more so if the number of &’s had to increase.
Other groupings beyond 5s can be practised similarly by
increasing the number of counts between bold numbers and again
using a metronome to keep the pulse steady. Fortunately, the greater
the number of notes required in any group, the more latitude there is,
aesthetically, for slight adjustments in speed. Such groupings are
ornamentations to the musical line in just the same way as set piece
ornaments and they often appear in even quite simple pieces of
music. Like ornaments, they must be practised slowly until every
note is secure. Fingering patterns should be carefully worked out so
that evenness can be maintained.
Groups containing large numbers of notes usually require some
form of special treatment. They could run to a climactic point and
then come away from it within the space of the group; they could be
played very softly and lightly; when carefully rehearsed, they might
be played very quickly; they might be played very smoothly; or they
might be played with a well controlled staccato. There are many
possibilities, but the point I am making is that they must have a
character suitable to the context in which they appear. There is often
an instruction from the composer or editor to help you, but in the
absence of any such instruction it is up to the performer to make
sure that they enhance rather than encumber the musical line.
Simply to rush at them because you see a lot of notes is certainly not
the musician’s answer.
So far, discussion has centred on the note learning stage. Only when
this work is secure can you safely begin to build up an interpretation
of your chosen piece. Trying to come to terms with your impression
of what the composer intended is the final stage of your work. As a
first step to achieving this, it is necessary to create in your mind a
clear aural image of how you want the music to sound. Further
progress then depends on your emotional response to the music and
how well you can convert your feelings into a musical entity, using
whatever technical and musical elements you have learned. Your
approach cannot be haphazard. To create an aural image you must
listen to a great deal of music. Listening is an active pursuit and
requires a detailed knowledge of exactly what you should be
listening for. Casual, ill disciplined, and undirected listening can be
as misleading and unhelpful as misdirected practice, and can lead
you into errors of thought and action. Although it is in the final
preparation for performance that a real understanding of the music
reveals itself, the processes required to arrive at that level of
understanding begin before any notes are struck and continue
throughout the whole learning process. Active and concentrated
listening is a skill which can be learned, but like any other it needs to
be honed to perfection over a long period of time.
Background Reading
If you have more than one copy, or more than one recording, you
might come across some discrepancies in notes. The edition you are
using should have some reference to any usual variants in the
notation together with some explanation of why such variants exist.
If the work is one you are studying, you might find that you have
made a few misreadings in notes. It is surprising how often a wrong
note can creep into your playing. You might have begun by reading it
wrongly, or you might initially have read it correctly and the error has,
over a period of time, crept in and become so familiar to you that the
correct note is disconcerting. This is one of the more mechanical and
prosaic uses of listening to a recording, but it can be useful as well
as revealing.
Ornaments
Highlighting
Accent
Rhythmic Drive
Rubato
Dynamics
Speed
Questions
6 How can studying the score away from the keyboard be helpful?
7 Why should you divide your new piece into manageable sized
divisions before you begin the learning process?
8 What temptations should you resist?
9 Having selected the divisions of your new piece, what is the next
step?
10 Why is it always sensible to consider the fingering suggested on
your score?
11 Should you ever alter the suggested fingerings?
12 Why should you begin to practise at a very slow speed?
13 Why, even at this early stage, should you aim to play the notes
without hesitations and inaccuracies, and how would you set
about doing this?
14 What are the advantages of separating note learning from timing
and rhythms when you begin the learning process?
15 What procedures would you follow when you begin learning the
right timing and rhythms?
16 What are the advantages, and disadvantages, of working with a
metronome?
17 Why is a further close study of the score at the keyboard
necessary to your early reading of the new piece?
18 How can your book of rudiments be helpful during this further
close study?
19 Why is it very important at this early stage that you check the
meaning of the terms you encounter on the score?
20 What initial steps should you take to prevent mistakes in playing
ornaments?
21 Why is it important to see that the fingering is firmly established
before you attempt to fit an ornament into the context of the
piece?
22 Why should you take particular note of the fingering required for
the first and the last notes of the ornament?
23 What bearing might this have on the fingering patterns leading up
to, and those following, the ornament?
24 What are the advantages of practising the ornament slowly and
firmly out of context?
25 How would you then fit the ornament into the context of the
piece?
26 How can you train yourself to play irregular groupings of notes in
time?
27 What is meant by the term ‘aural image’?
28 What sort of information about composers can be directly helpful
to building an aural image?
29 How can general histories:
(a) Be helpful;
(b) Be misleading
in assisting you to build an aural image?
30 In what ways can a study of musical form or architecture be
helpful for performance?
31 How can the names of compositions give us ideas about their
performance, and also about the performance of other works?
32 What are the dangers of trying to copy a performance given by
an eminent pianist?
33 What can be learned from listening to performances by eminent
pianists?
34 How can you begin to teach yourself to listen critically and
constructively?
35 What can listening critically and intently to your own
performances and those of others help you to learn about the
following aspects in performance:
(a) Ornaments and ornamentation;
(b) Dealing with important melodic and harmonic elements;
(c) Highlighting;
(d) Building phrases;
(e) Spacing and placing notes;
(f) Accent and rhythmic drive;
(g) Treatment of dynamics;
(h) Form and architecture;
(j) Sensible ways of using and controlling speed?
Index
A
Accents, 128–129
Accentuation, 100–101, 149–150
Alexander technique, the, 30–31
Architecture of the music, 140–142, 152
Arpeggios, 43, 47, 50–52, 78
Aural images, 89, 136–137
B
Background reading, 137–140
Balance, 59–61, 76
Barcarolle, 142
Berceuse, 142
Binary form, 100
Brain, the, 24 et seq
C
Cadences, 101–102, 106
Changing fingers on the same note, 51–52
Chopin, 46–48, 52, 71, 138
Concentration, 120, 122–124
Console pianos, 13
Continental fingering, 53
Copying, 143–144
Crescendo, 128
D
Damper pedal, 109–110, 116
Dampers, 16–17
Dark, playing in the, 124
Diminuendo, 128
Direct pedalling, 114
Divisions, 121–123
Dynamic markings, 127–128
Dynamics, 42, 58, 151
E
English fingering, 53
Examinations, 121
F
Fall, the, 14
Fantasies, 142
Finger crossing, 48–49
passing over, 47–49
practice, 78–79
staccato, 70
touch, 61–62, 78
Fingering, 26–27, 33, 36, 42 et seq, 76, 122–123, 125, 132, 136
, Continental, 53
, English, 53
Five-finger five-note position, 46–47, 49
Forearm rotation 33, 71–74
touch, 62
G
Gavotte, 142
Grand pianos, 11
H
Half pedalling, 115
Hammers, 17–19, 84–85
Hand staccato, 70
touch, 61–62, 77
Highlighting 91–98, 147–148
Horizontal shift, 50–51
I
Inhibition, 30 et seq
Interpretation, 118
Involuntary actions, 37–39
Irregular note groupings, 133–136
Isolation, 31–32
K
Key action, 15–16
dip, 16–20, 57–58. 87
L
Lateral hand and arm movements, 51, 54, 64
Leaps, 51
Learning a new piece, 118 et seq
Legato, 47, 50, 67–69
pedalling, 68–69, 112–114
Listening, 59, 143–145
Loud pedal, 109–110, 112
Loudness, 58–59
Lunga, 129
M
Marcato, 129
Mechanics of the piano, 11 et seq, 57–59
Memory, 26–30, 124
Metronomes, 125–126, 134
Mistakes, correcting, 30 et seq
Mordents, 120
Morendo, 130
Motifs, 104
Muffler soft pedal, 17–18
N
New pianos, 13–14
pieces, learning, 118 et seq
Nocturnes, 142
Non legato, 71
Note length, 86, 89–91, 101, 125, 126–127
O
Oblique stringing, 15
Ornaments, 120, 130–133, 146–147
Overdamper, 14–15
Overstrung pianos, 14–15
P
Pause marks, 129
Pedalling, 108 et seq
, legato, 68–69, 112–114
Pedals, 16–18
, damper, 109–110
, direct, 114
, half, 115
, loud, 109–110, 112
, sostenuto, 110–111
, sustaining, 109–110, 112
, una corda, 17, 108–109, 111
Phrase marks, 67
Phrasing, 100 et seq, 125, 140, 148
Piano, console, 13
, grand, 11
, new, 13–14
, second-hand, 13–14
stool, 20–22
, studio, 13
, the mechanics of the, 11 et seq, 57–59
, upright, 11
, upright grand, 13
Pitch, 13
Placing, 148–149
Practice, 24 et seq
Punctuation, 100 et seq
Pure touch, 61–64
Push-pull action, 74
R
Rallentando, 129
Reading, background, 137–140
Recordings, 144–145
Repetition, 124
Rhythm, 123, 125–130
Rhythmic drive, 150
Right notes, playing the, 32, 131, 145–146
Ritardando, 129
Ritenuto, 129
Rondo form, 100
Rubato, 125, 150–151
Rubenstein, 130
Rudiments of music, 120, 131
S
Saraband, 142
Scales, 43, 47, 78
Scherzo, 142
Score, studying the, 121–122, 126–130
Second-hand pianos, 13–14
Sentences, 100
Sequences, 53–54
Set-off point, 87
Sforzando, 128
Shakes, 120
Siciliano, 142
Slur marks, 67, 105
Sonata form, 100
Sostenuto pedal, 110–111
Soundboard, 84–85
Spacing, 148–149
Speed, 32–33, 54, 58–59, 124, 129, 152–153
Staccatissimo, 69–71, 129
Staccato, 47, 69–71, 129
Starting transient, 85
Stiffness, 75–76
Stool, piano, 20–22
Stretches, 53
String lengths, 13
Studio pianos, 13
Subito, 128
Sustaining pedal, 109–110, 112
T
Tenuto, 128–129
Ternary form, 100
Theory of music, 100 et seq
Thinking time, 31 et seq
Thumb passing under, 47–49
Time signatures, 140–150
Timing, 123, 125–130, 133–136
Toccatas, 142
Tone production, 83 et seq
quality, 11–13, 58–59
Touch, 57 et seq
, finger, 61–62, 78
, hand, 61–62
, pure, 63–64
, weight transfer, 65–69
, whole arm touch, 63, 78
, wrist, 61–62
U
Una corda pedals, 17, 108–109, 111
Underdamper, 14–15
Upright grand piano, 13
pianos, 11
V
Vertical movement, 62–64
Vibrato, 74–75
Volume, 86–89, 101
W
Waltz, 142, 150
Weight transfer touch, 65–69
Whole arm touch, 63, 78
Wrist position, 21
staccato, 70
touch, 61–62
The Quotable Musician: From Bach to Tupac
by Sheila E. Anderson (hardcover, 7½ × 7½, 224 pages, $19.95)
The Diva Next Door: How to Be a Singing Star Wherever You Are
by Jill Switzer (paperback, 5½ × 8½, 208 pages, $16.95)
Please write to request our free catalog. To order by credit card, call
1-800-491-2808 or send a check or money order to Allworth Press,
10 East 23rd Street, Suite 510, New York, NY 10010. Include $6 for
shipping and handling for the first book ordered and $1 for each
additional book. Eleven dollars plus $1 for each additional book if
ordering from Canada. New York State residents must add sales tax.