Monday, April 5, 2010
The French School!
Les Doigts Française
First, Cortot, whose Rational Principles of Pianoforte Technique seemed that it may be a little like Hanon, except encased in an entire method, complete with graded repertoire. If this is the case, it may not be a bad, all encompassing method particularly for high school students. What I think we can learn most from Cortot, however, is in his quote on page 318 of Gerig's text ". . . the mechanical and long-repeated practice of a difficult passage has been replaced by the reasoned study of the difficulty contained therein, reduced to its elementary principle." If we, in searching for a solution to a problem passage in a piece of music, can pinpoint the exact issue (tension, fingering, the left or right hand) that is causing the problem, and directly address that, we will waste a lot less time in practice.
From Marguerite Long we are again reminded of the importance of slow practice, and also of practice without the pedal. Practicing without the pedal is, I think, often overlooked as a valuable tool for working on articulation. It stands to reason that if the blurring effects of the pedal are eliminated, we will be able to hear, and so improve, our articulation with more ease.
In Debussy, we have almost a school of piano technique all to itself. His gorgeous impressionist style for the piano is unique in the repertoire, and therefore must be given special attention when played. The overriding principle I shall take from the the section on Debussy, however, is the account of his overwhelming fastidiousness. His neat, precise, and perfectionist's personalty undoubtedly carried through to his music, and in light of this, perhaps I should attempt to take on that personality more in my playing of his music; his tempi, articulation markings, and many dynamic shadings.
Does anyone have a croissant?
Chapter 15
Marguerite Long mentions how important it is to follow composers’ fingerings since they know what will best facilitate their musical ideas. I don’t think a pianist should blindly use the composer’s fingerings to help convey the musical content… Understanding the musical content can come before any choice of fingering has been decided. Every hand is different, so what brings out the musicality for one person may not for another. She cites how enlightened she was by following Ravel’s fingerings, but she should have mentioned Debussy as well… I don’t think Debussy would write fingerings in his music because he knew how different everyone is… this does not inhibit understanding of his music.
Long also mentions on page 320 that “it is not our mind which moves our fingers, but our fingers and their almost conscious movements which set our mind in motion.” This does not make any sense to me… The mind would always be behind the music, which is not at all helpful. Kinesthetic memory should never be the primary means of securing a piece of music in one’s body. Kinesthetic memory will be a natural consequence of enough practice, and of course it is useful, but to rely on this would be dangerous in performance. Fingers do not have a memory; I think all that happens is that with enough repetition an unconscious memory results in the brain, which we call finger memory. If we just learn music consciously it will not only be a deeper understanding but a more secure one too.
Marguerite Long’s method Le Piano was insightful, I think her methods can easily be applied in our studies and teaching. I liked her view on technique and how she stated, “there is nothing more important to strive for than finger articulation…this is an elementary truth.” (320) I remember how my teacher made me practice a new major and minor scale every week when I started playing piano. Looking back I am glad she made me practice them because they really are a strong backbone to playing the piano. I like how she compares diligent technique training to runners and dancers and their work toward developing their legs for strength. Once you have that strength you just keep getting stronger and faster as long as you are still working hard. Therefore, once we have the technique down we will continue getting better and stronger fingers if we keep practicing well.
Debussy was an interesting character, the way his personality is described in the book as being so neat and clean, a perfectionist puts his music in a new light for me. Now, I look at it as very precise and exact, only one way of executing it. I thought his reasons for omitting pedal markings was interesting and also what was said of Chopin. He wanted his students to practice without the pedal and to only use it sparingly when performing. Was this an idea that was still lingering on from the baroque period? Why was he against the pedal? One reason I though Debussy and Chopin might seem, lets say 'leery' of the pedal is because without it one has to depend much more on ones ears and fingers to get a beautiful sound.
Sunday, April 4, 2010
Chapter 15
Camille Bellaigue's description of Marmontel as teacher was interesting: "Perhaps he had at one time been a virtuoso; he was now not even a pianist." (317) It sounds like he was an effective teacher despite the limitations of his playing abilities. While perhaps not an ideal situation, it goes to show that being a good teacher requires more than being able to play well.
I admire Debussy's principle behind not indicating fingerings and pedaling. The description of his personality shows that he was a perfectionist; thus, it would be in keeping with that trait to only indicate the absolutes in his scores. From a practical standpoint, though, his pedal markings in particular would be helpful starting points.
Saturday, April 3, 2010
The French School
I was impressed about Marguerite Long's teaching. She emphasized the finger activity and she said the fingers have to move with the mind in motion. I usually move the fingers unconsciously when I practice playing the piano. But I realized that it is unuselness. I have to practice consciouly with thinking in order to improve my techniques even though I play just dotted rhythm scale and so on. Also, I am having a trouble that each finger is not even and each finger has each problem. But she said "five fingers should be thoroughly trained for vigor, elasticity, firmness, and independence so that each can overcome common obstacle." I think it is the fundamental stage of the piano technique. If we know each finger's characteristic and problem, we could overcome each's finger's problem. Moreover, we could play the piano very comfortable and confident.