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#1746276 - 09/04/11 01:59 PM
Mendelssohn Piano Concerto 1 (fragments of practice)
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Registered: 05/30/10
Posts: 414
Loc: London
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#1746288 - 09/04/11 02:12 PM
Re: Mendelssohn Piano Concerto 1 (fragments of practice)
[Re: feebeeliszt]
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5000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/25/09
Posts: 5228
Loc: Louisville, Kentucky, United S...
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This is a HARD piece. Kudos for you taking it on. It sounds fine to me. Your sense of long line is great, overall the projection of the top voice isn't bad, maybe continue to focus on that some more, and the fast runny notes are coming out pretty well, keep up the slow practice and proper sinking and transferring of your arm weight into each note! In the second video, how come your wrists are so high when you play the octaves? You have a good sound and feel for this piece. I can't wait to hear the final product. By the way, that's a cute image in the first video, haha. 
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2013: The year of Alkan
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#1746479 - 09/04/11 08:41 PM
Re: Mendelssohn Piano Concerto 1 (fragments of practice)
[Re: Orange Soda King]
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3000 Post Club Member
Registered: 08/26/08
Posts: 3159
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In the second video, how come your wrists are so high when you play the octaves?
+1. I've noticed this in other videos of young PW pianists (can't recall exactly who now). Is this the octave technique that's taught in a specific school of piano playing (Russian?)? Is this a more ergonomic way to play octaves? I just bought myself a book of octave technique (50 studies). I now need to know how to play octaves.  (No book tells you that precisely, need to find a good teacher for that).
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Current: Beethoven: Sonata Op.31, No.2 ("Tempest") Debussy: Danseuses de Delphes (Prelude 1, Book 1) Next in line: Chopin: Ballade No. 1 in G minor, Op.23 Debussy: Le vent dans la plaine (Prelude 3, Book 1) Debussy: Les sons et les parfums tournent dans l'air du soir (Prelude 4, Book 1)
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#1746481 - 09/04/11 08:44 PM
Re: Mendelssohn Piano Concerto 1 (fragments of practice)
[Re: Orange Soda King]
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3000 Post Club Member
Registered: 08/26/08
Posts: 3159
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You play extremely well, that goes without saying! I can only hope that I play this well some day. :P Good luck, PW awaits the final product on this piece from you. The teaser did its job!
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Current: Beethoven: Sonata Op.31, No.2 ("Tempest") Debussy: Danseuses de Delphes (Prelude 1, Book 1) Next in line: Chopin: Ballade No. 1 in G minor, Op.23 Debussy: Le vent dans la plaine (Prelude 3, Book 1) Debussy: Les sons et les parfums tournent dans l'air du soir (Prelude 4, Book 1)
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#1746513 - 09/04/11 10:02 PM
Re: Mendelssohn Piano Concerto 1 (fragments of practice)
[Re: liszt85]
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5000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/25/09
Posts: 5228
Loc: Louisville, Kentucky, United S...
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liszt85, I actually now remember her talking about her having small hands (smaller than mine, actually).
I don't think it has much to do with technique training. Although I do not want to jump to conclusions about Ms. feebeeliszt's background in technique, I think high wrists with octaves is what immediately feels comfortable to people who haven't really been showed what's proper and taken the time and effort to practice. I experimented by doing fast 9ths, and my wrists were still not as high. (fbl, please forgive me if I am incorrect!)
I basically learned how to do octaves by watching Jack Gibbons play Alkan's Allegro Barbaro and reading a comment he posted to one other YouTube user who attempted the piece.
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2013: The year of Alkan
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#1746524 - 09/04/11 10:10 PM
Re: Mendelssohn Piano Concerto 1 (fragments of practice)
[Re: Orange Soda King]
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Full Member
Registered: 05/30/10
Posts: 414
Loc: London
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liszt85, I actually now remember her talking about her having small hands (smaller than mine, actually).
I don't think it has much to do with technique training. Although I do not want to jump to conclusions about Ms. feebeeliszt's background in technique, I think high wrists with octaves is what immediately feels comfortable to people who haven't really been showed what's proper and taken the time and effort to practice. I experimented by doing fast 9ths, and my wrists were still not as high. (fbl, please forgive me if I am incorrect!)
I basically learned how to do octaves by watching Jack Gibbons play Alkan's Allegro Barbaro and reading a comment he posted to one other YouTube user who attempted the piece. L85, I need to learn the proper way of doing octaves as well.  I think I have been playing them like this all my life. But since my teacher didn't complain, I assumed that it's okay...
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#1746531 - 09/04/11 10:23 PM
Re: Mendelssohn Piano Concerto 1 (fragments of practice)
[Re: feebeeliszt]
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5000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/25/09
Posts: 5228
Loc: Louisville, Kentucky, United S...
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Yeah, I had to change my technique over the summer (like, for scales and arpeggios and figures like that). I think I am getting the hang of it now, but it's still undergoing refinement.
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2013: The year of Alkan
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#1746545 - 09/04/11 10:43 PM
Re: Mendelssohn Piano Concerto 1 (fragments of practice)
[Re: Orange Soda King]
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5000 Post Club Member
Registered: 09/22/06
Posts: 5321
Loc: St. Louis area
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I think high wrists with octaves is what immediately feels comfortable to people who haven't really been showed what's proper and taken the time and effort to practice. I kind of marveled at the high wrists. I froze the video in the middle of one of those octaves and I couldn't make that hand shape if you held a gun to my head. FBL is obviously more flexible than me but I don't know how that translates to octave technique. What does Mr. Gibbons say?
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Nothing primes the pump like the panic of impending performance.
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#1746547 - 09/04/11 10:47 PM
Re: Mendelssohn Piano Concerto 1 (fragments of practice)
[Re: feebeeliszt]
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1000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/06/10
Posts: 1556
Loc: Canada
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It's not the high wrists that are unusual, but how the hands immediately are flat with very curved fingers. Lots of pianists use high wrists for octaves...though she curls her fingers quite a bit in comparison to other pianists I've seen before.. Though she plays very well! (much better than me, if you can find anything of mine on youtube..)Though I remember, feebee, that you had many more videos on youtube?? What did they go!
Edited by Kuanpiano (09/04/11 10:50 PM)
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Working on: Chopin - Ballade no.3 Ravel - Ondine
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#1746549 - 09/04/11 10:49 PM
Re: Mendelssohn Piano Concerto 1 (fragments of practice)
[Re: feebeeliszt]
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5000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/25/09
Posts: 5228
Loc: Louisville, Kentucky, United S...
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Damon: It's all here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3qp1Qh4oskYI feel that it translates to octave technique, because... well, I won't explain. I'll just propose that you play the ending of Liszt's HR6 with high wrists, and then again with the wrist parallel with the arm. Like in THIS video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r49pIDj0hEIKuanpiano: I'm not sure if the curling of fingers by itself makes problems with tension, but having tension in the fingers does cause problems with tension in the wrist, arm, elbow, etc. EDIT: And yes, her older videos are gone. 
Edited by Orange Soda King (09/04/11 10:54 PM)
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2013: The year of Alkan
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#1746553 - 09/04/11 10:54 PM
Re: Mendelssohn Piano Concerto 1 (fragments of practice)
[Re: Orange Soda King]
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1000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/06/10
Posts: 1556
Loc: Canada
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Gibbon's octaves...I think he'd use a different technique for the HR6 (I would too). The Allegro Barbaro is mostly moving, forceful octaves. It's quite different with an endless stream of light, repeated octaves in a stationary position. I thought I was good at octaves (like in Chopin's 3rd scherzo, or in Chasse-neige, and even the Heroic Polonaise), but the HR6 and the Liszt Sonata totally proved me wrong this summer.. edit: I'm not saying her technique is wrong (I'm no teacher ;D), but it's just a bit unorthodox.
Edited by Kuanpiano (09/04/11 10:55 PM)
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Working on: Chopin - Ballade no.3 Ravel - Ondine
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#1746557 - 09/04/11 11:00 PM
Re: Mendelssohn Piano Concerto 1 (fragments of practice)
[Re: feebeeliszt]
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1000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/06/10
Posts: 1556
Loc: Canada
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That guy wrecks everything he plays  Though you can tell he has his wrist high up and has his hand angled downwards. Or at least his right hand, his left hand looks a bit weird. My Favourite Hungarian Rhapsody 6 is...Horowitz or Cziffra. Cziffra gets the mood right for the lively sections, and his rhythm makes the end so exciting! Horowitz sort of powers through it all, which is seriously scary. There used to be on youtube a live recording of him playing it in 1953, his last year concertizing before his 12 year retirement. Absolutely the best ever!! And wow, we seem to be talking in edits for half of this thread! :P And SCHUBERT'S D960!? So amazing!! Richter plays it like nobody else (at least before him, but nobody can come close to him when it comes to his vision of Schubert's last sonata). How does Schubert (and Richter) make B flat major so tragic?
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Working on: Chopin - Ballade no.3 Ravel - Ondine
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#1746559 - 09/04/11 11:07 PM
Re: Mendelssohn Piano Concerto 1 (fragments of practice)
[Re: Kuanpiano]
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5000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/25/09
Posts: 5228
Loc: Louisville, Kentucky, United S...
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We've totally hijacked the thread, hahahaha. I don't think I'll be playing the Schubert anytime soon. But it's SO great!!
Talking in edits is fun, hehe.
I haven't listened to HR6 in a long time. The Liszt I've been listening to is Dante Sonata (the recording you posted) and Venezia e Napoli (Hamelin).
I hacked my way through the B flat major part of HR6 a year and a half ago just for fun though, hehe.
EDIT: Speaking of talking in edits, I noticed that you mentioned you're not working with a teacher? Do you mean you don't have a teacher, or just with this piece?
Edited by Orange Soda King (09/05/11 12:17 AM)
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2013: The year of Alkan
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#1747186 - 09/05/11 10:46 PM
Re: Mendelssohn Piano Concerto 1 (fragments of practice)
[Re: feebeeliszt]
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Registered: 05/30/10
Posts: 414
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