Chopin Method Analysis The ZONE
Chopin Method Analysis The ZONE
Chopin Method Analysis The ZONE
Stefan Kutrzeba
(Parkano, Finland)
Introduction
"Touch the Zone…" describes the facility that I have found and that
is in use in my piano pedagogic practice as the very important
methodic aid; this finding could surely be of great help to many
teachers and students of the piano. In this article I interpret the very
special aspect of Chopin's method, that for technical development
of the pianists is in my opinion the priceless one, sincerely. My
personal way to this formula was not direct and took quite a long
time. That is why I am afraid, at first I should briefly explain some
additional things until I start introduce the basic substance of my
discovery.
For many years I searched for a system, which could give the
decisive success in the piano pedagogy. Surprisingly, in 1996 I
received some really unexpected help on that way. I have read the
book by Barry Sears, Ph.D.: "The Zone; A Dietary Road Map" (Regan
Books; USA, 1995). Dr. Sears took a zone, a notion this book tells
about, from sport's language; the elite of American athletes' uses it
for many years. The Zone means them "a near euphoric state of
maximum physical, mental and psychological performance". As a
medical researcher Dr. Sears describes it as "the metabolic state in
which the body works at peak efficiency". If somebody is interested
in such matters, they unconditionally should read this seriously
advanced book!
A Way
Many musicians are truly able to play the piano very well but in
spite of it they play poorly, without joy or satisfaction. That is the
question - why? For a long time I have been particularly interested in
relations between the technique of piano playing and the artistic
vision of the music that one try to play. Therefore I start just from
this point. Here are my conclusions:
- The players' unclear plan concerning the artistic sense of form that
should be shaped in playing.
- The incorrect players' conception of the piano sound; the very few
pianist knows, that vision of the sound definitely directs the piano
technique as the whole.
So, if the players' thinking, hearing and attention roam along wrong
tracks - the work must constantly be started from the beginning.
The technical side of piano playing, interpreted as something
related to mechanical fingers' (hands') movements - totally sterilizes
fantasy, makes the playing boring and overworks the player
physically. Due to such artistically incomplete playing one obviously
must feel a lack of satisfaction and try to look for the formula that
could improve this unpleasant situation; in this case the idea of
making the fingers stronger and stronger surely can appear on the
first place as something rational. This plan focuses yet one's own
attention on the second-class elements of the matter, again. The
various finger-exercises will reappear as the center of regard, that
for many pianists seems to be most natural, but in fact - it guides
them strictly on the same fully ineffective path.
The second wrong option is a flight to the world of pure fantasy and
tries to solve all the operational problems in piano playing in this
way only. These both magical circles: purely mechanical and purely
psychological could be blown up exclusively by a powerful impulse -
something should connect all the elements of playing into the one
fully effective system; unfortunately such an impulse would very
rarely arise from the player's own inside.
It has been known for very many years that a mastery in piano does
not mean a manual perfection only, but rather an art of creating The
Beauty in (through) the really sounding musical appearance. So, it
should be usual, that the mastery in such an art must be achieved
through condensed and many-sided processing of one's own musical
ideas and images using the very specific technique. Consequently:
the professionally adequate piano-technique is not achievable by
practice supported by a mechanistic, anatomic-physiological or
exclusively psychological base. In these cases the focus of attention
to entirely mechanical or purely mental aspects of playing
automatically sets the major questions of our art far away from any
one possibility of solving them.
Sound, tone, timbre, color, etc. - are very poetical, beautiful and
instructively very useful notions, but in the didactic sense of a
matter using them only is not enough. The students truly need the
artistically firm impulse for their fantasy. The characteristic notions,
thoughts and ideas surely will induce their mental activity. Still at
the same time they must obtain the very simple, real and handy
tools for developing their playing and hearing technique (as the
builder needs a plummet, level and the measure tape).
I would like to maintain now, and even stress again my deep belief
in the irrationality of every physical movement in playing - if it does
not directly fulfil the artistic idea of performing musical element. For
many reasons, especially in practicing classical music, it is possible
to use artistically "empty" moves to an alarming extent. Using the
zone make impossible to take even one tone of such a character: if
artistically invalid tone still arises, the player immediately loses a
feeling of pleasure in the hands, just physically! I definitely have
understood this aspect that put the finishing touches to my new
comprehension of the piano technique, after accidentally
associating a zone which in Dr. Sears' book refers to another
question - with the idea of perfectionism in piano playing. The
nuance of this notion worked at that moment like a taste of
"madeleine" or a sound of knocked flag-stone in "ภ la recherche du
temps perdu" (by M. Proust)... - many things have appeared in my
imagination in the new colors. Relations and similarities between
matters that are so far from each other like "Une M้thode de piano"
of Chopin, TAO and the technique of using a bow in the Russian
method of the violin - have come to light (at last it prepared me for
my new understanding of the Chopin's main piano-technical idea.
Thanks to this nuance I have discovered the proper sense of that
"region in which the vibrations are more easily perceptible to us").
In Part Four (p. 80) Prof.Milstein wrote: "... if one wants to eliminate
the hardness and restrains from his own hands, one should start to
play the piano not with legato, but rather with the light, soft
staccato, with attention to full flexibility and ease in palm and wrist.
After that Chopin advises to go to a light portato, legato marcato,
and, in the end, to a true, full-valued legato, which should be
exercised through various tempos in forte as well as in piano."
And herein after (p. 85): "... an equality of the touch้ should be
achieved through rational use of fingers - not through the dull
knocking on the keys which is against their natural properties.
Exercises should be played with a free hand, with slightly collected
fingers that should not be raised high, but rather keep in close
contact with the keyboard (as Chopin said: "before one starts to
play, one should touch the keys with one's fingers").
In my own experience, again, I may say that the fingers and the
palm always should act as the compact unit that can operate
properly thanks to "full flexibility and ease" in wrist. This is the point
of truly strategic importance in the whole piano-technique. If such a
joint (the wrist) becomes "closed" or immovable due to any stress,
the game is nearly over...! The fingers and the palm that should
operate as a mobile base for the fingers have together quite enough
weight, power and capacity for implementation of surprisingly many
technical duties. But, they could fulfil their tasks only if they are
adequately integrated in the action, i.e. if the wrist helps them as
the truly flexible joint that connects them smoothly with other parts
of the hand (being there as the basic support). In truth: the mobile
palm should continually support the fingers. In my opinion this is the
point of the greatest importance in the Chopin's piano-technique.
The use of the zone makes the whole piano sound-processing just as
help as possible, because it brings to light nearly objective image of
the existing sound (the very creative but professionally unskilled
individuals usually listen rather to their own imaginative internal
sounds than to the really existing sounding values). At this point I
must affirm, sincerely saying, the incredibly great value of the
Chopin's staccato and portato as the truly beneficial assistance in
playing. The "normal" staccato and portato habitually divide a
musical phrase into separately sounding details - meanwhile those
both of the Chopin's kind really connect the sounding elements with
the musical reality that lives under the external appearance of
sound, giving it fluency and organizing its internal integrity. This
"theorem", I suppose, cannot be proved in writing at all; as Chopin
said by himself - "sound before word".
It is astonishing
It is astonishing that, seriously considering this problem, so few
pianists are interested in Chopin's technique and do not try to
assimilate and evolve it in their own practice. Perhaps it is because
of the suspicion that Chopin's method is suitable only for studying of
his own pieces. After my long run research I must assuredly say that
such a suspicion is entirely wrong. All these things that were the
main problems to Chopin in his pedagogy are still important today:
W. Stefan Kutrzeba
mailto:oppinet@hotmail.com