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Nocturne in E Flat Major, Op.9 No.2
Beautiful, and all in one neat package now. Thanks so much, Teach.
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Nocturne in E Flat Major, Op.9 No.2No idea what many of the terms are indicating: I recommend a dictionary of musical terms if you don't speak know Italian (or Latin). Some terms don't mean what they look like. We met, just the other day, Tempo giusto, just time, not with gusto! Andante = Walking speed. Sometimes this is walking along the beach speed and other times walking to the bus stop. If it's Lee Marvin's walk at the beginning of Point Blank there should be some other direction. Esspressivo dolce = Sweetly expressive, as sweet, tender not sweet, wheedling. dolcissimo = Very sweet (tender) F, FF, FFF = Forte, fortissimo, fortississimo: loud, very loud, loudest Piano, pianissimmo, pianississimo: soft, very soft, softest sfz = sforzando: strongly accented or forced sfp = fzp = sforzando followed immediately by piano. mf = mezzo forte, moderately loud simile: the same (as before, likewise) sempre = always poco = a little a tempo = in time, usu. after a rit, rall or accel. does it just mean we can change tempo here? No, the opposite. stretto = quicker (stringing the notes closer together). The marking of stretto, as here, is usu. the build-up to the final climax. The (unmarked) stretto in a fugue is where the answer to the subject (not the countersubject) begins before all voices have completed the subject. con = with; forza = force senza = without smorz. = smorzando, gradually dying away (from morire, to die, mortal, morbid, mortuary). ETA: Ooh! I see I'm late - must drink coffee quicker!
Last edited by zrtf90; 01/12/13 02:08 PM. Reason: Slow drinker!
Richard
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MENDELSSOHN OP.85 NO.2 in A minor
In 3 Parts; Part I: M 1-11 Part II: M 12-24 Part IIIa: M 24-42 Part IIIb: M 43-47
Measure 1
Treble Cleff Beat 1: C (Melody note) Beat 2: c Beat 3: E Beat 4: B (Melody note)
Bass Cleff
Beat 1: A Beat 2: Beat 3: Beat 4: G#
All the notes contained in measure 1 are all contained in A minor major 9
Measure 2 would it be best to split these measures in half?
Treble Cleff
Beat 1: D (Melody note) Beat 2: E Beat 3: G# Beat 4: C (Melody note)
Bass Cleff
Beat 1: B Beat 2: Beat 3: Beat 4: A
A minor major 11?
Treble cleff
Beat 5: E (Melody note) Beat 6: F Beat 7: A Beat 8: B (Melody note)
Bass Cleff
Beat 5: D Beat 6: Beat 7: Beat 8: B
D minor 6 add 9?
Last edited by wayne33yrs; 01/12/13 03:57 PM.
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I'm using the Ditson edition "link removed"
Last edited by wayne33yrs; 01/13/13 06:56 AM.
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Never thought to actually read it lol
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About Sonates and Sonatines...... Try these...... Georg Benda Best regards, Johan B
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Ditson doesn't have bar numbers, Wayne, and the numbers you're using aren't clear.
I have only 45 bars. There's a half bar up-beat or anacrusis. The first full measure starts on D.
I thought, when first looked at it that it was a variation of Stairway to Heaven then I saw the phrase marks!
A is the first phrase, or two half phrases, M1-4 is then repeated with a different close, which is itself repeated and finishes in M10.
B begins with a crescendo at the second half of M10, 2 + 1 + 1 + 4 finishing in M18. This last four measure phrase is again repeated (same in RH, new LH) in M18-22. This is 'B' and is in E minor.
A returns in M22-26.
M26 begins a chromatic rise to what I think is the climax in M32 and/or M36 ending with a codetta in M38-41 and the actual coda in M41-45.
How helpful are the chord names to you while you are playing?
M1-4 is a simple melody C-D-F-c, E-B-G#-B. This is then repeated in 5-8, and the last half-phrase again in M10-12.
M10 begins B-A-C-G#, C-G#, F-E, B-G-E-D-E-B-A-G, B-G-D-E-B-E.
Add the quavers when you've got the main theme (and the penultimate D# crotchet in M21).
How are you getting on with playing this?
I would guess that M1-10 is not too difficult for you, apart from the tempo, but that M10-22 is harder with the LH breaking into chords and changing the rhythm in M16 and M18. How hard are the chords in M17 and M19?
M30-38 shouldn't be difficult after M10-22, they're pretty much (but not exactly) the same but back in tonic.
M38-41 are just a repeat an octave lower and the final coda is a cakewalk by comparison.
M10-M14 would be my first visit. Any two bar phrase from M1 to M12 would do to get the rhythm going. The rest is the same with different notes. M14-16 next and M16-M18 is pretty much the end of the piece, technique wise.
It matters not whether you do these measures or their parallels but get one variant right before you start learning another set of notes. There's no point confusing yourself. How well do you memorise or are you a reader?
Ignoring the theory and going back to my initial questions, where are you with this, in practical terms, and what is the biggest or most immediate difficulty?
Richard
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Mendelssohn 85/2
Wayne, do you notice how the melody in part I is written in the treble clef, with stems up? Can you find a similar set of notes -- treble clef, stems up -- in part II?
What is the rhythmic pattern for most of the melody?
(cross-posted.)
Last edited by PianoStudent88; 01/12/13 05:23 PM.
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I'll get bk to you guys, I need to think about this
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Mendelssohn 85/2
-- treble clef, stems up -- in part II?
(cross-posted.) Ah thnx,
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Mendelssohn, 85/2
I've just seen your other post in the Mendelssohn thread, Wayne.
So you've got M1-10 memorised or close to.
Keep practising M1-4 bringing out the melody, now that you have it. The speed at which you do this is completely unimportant. Once you have it the speed will come faster than you might expect. But it's important that you wait for it to come from frequent repetitions at a manageable speed and not trying to force it.
Bear in mind throughout that this is a song without words - and therefore it is meaningless with the melody line. Practise playing those two accompanying notes whisper quiet while you "shape" the phrase. This is 2/2 so the first note takes the strong accent, the fifth note of the bar takes a weak accent. The other three notes in each half measure are without accent but the melody, and bass, are louder than the two harmony notes.
It would be rather basic to make each melody note louder the higher it is on the staff - but it would still work. This can continue up through each climax except the actual climax notes marked with an accent or sF (the first notes in M33, M34, M37 and, in the bass, M38 and 39. The second climax at M37 is part of the climbdown for me, so slightly less than M33.
Leave M5-8 until M1-4 is flowing. Then do these three sections, each in isolation M1-4, M5-8, M8-10 until they're easy at a steady tempo, around 44-48 bpm (two beats per bar) then join them together.
M10-22 I would practise on different days because of the change in the accompaniment to descending notes instead of rising. Stick with M10-14 as one unit for a few repetitions. Include the Upper B in RH and the lower D# in LH of M14.
Start with those two notes for the next section, M14 to the first beat of M17.
Keep M17-18 isolated until it's well absorbed, fluent and memorised (if you memorise your pieces).
Only when these three parts are flowing would I learn M18-22 and join all four parts together, M10-22.
M26-34 will be easy once you've got those first two sections up to half tempo. Likewise the finish, M34-41.
If you've got M1-22 almost memorised already you're not going to have problem with this, Wayne, by the time the recital comes. M14-18/M30-34 is about as hard as this piece gets.
Richard
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Mendelssohn, Op. 102 No. 1M32 - Am M33 - Em/B,,B7 M34 - Em/B,,B7 M35 - Em,Am6/E,Em,B7 M36 - Em,Am6/E,Em,B7,Em M37 - M40 - Em
These octaves are killing me. Chords are fine and opinions are equalled in M32 but also in M35 & M36. Octaves killing you? Shoulder from the leaps or hand from the stretch? Are you getting tension there? Are you able to relax both hand and arm between strikes?
Richard
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Mendelssohn, Op. 102 No. 1 These octaves are killing me.
Octaves killing you? Shoulder from the leaps or hand from the stretch? Are you getting tension there? Are you able to relax both hand and arm between strikes? I think it is the stretch. Clearly an octave is not a big stretch. But, the repetition and the intermingling with other intervals is taking its toll. I'm trying to relax as best I can, but my left arm and hand is really staring to seize up. I having a hard time tpyeing this . For example, left arm felt fine this morning. But, after 15 minutes on this piece I was feeling it again. I didn't do much work on this one today. I think I've been over doing the practice a bit. It is actually a welcome relief to go back and work on polishing up the Schubert. It's a breeze in comparison.
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These octaves are killing me...I think it is the stretch...after 15 minutes on this piece I was feeling it again I started on piano with songs like Come Back To Sorrento, Because, and songs from musicals like The Desert Song - that's all there was in the piano stool. Most of these featured a bass octave on the first beat and chords after. I'm not qualified to diagnose or solve the problem but the way I play this sort of thing is to plop/drop a relaxed arm onto the keys with the hand shaping the chord/octave at the last moment then drawing the hand up relaxed. It came naturally to me from watching my dad play rags. The word on the street forum is that tension leads to RSI, tendinitis and so on. A one time early consultation with a piano tutor might cost less than a later one with a medical practitioner. Unless you carry an awful lot of bling on your wrist you should be able to do stride for a one to two hour set.
Richard
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plop/drop a relaxed arm onto the keys with the hand shaping the chord/octave at the last moment then drawing the hand up relaxed ... tension leads to RSI, tendinitis and so on. A one time early consultation with a piano tutor might cost less than a later one with a medical practitioner. ... should be able to do stride for a one to two hour set.
Acknowledged. Perhaps time to seek out some professional in person coaching. I don't think stride is the problem, but relaxing enough as you mention above, likely is. I've played plenty of stride without issue. But not like this. Normally it is bass (just bass note, or with 5th or 7th,) chord, bass, chord etc. This is a little more activity then that in the left hand; octave, chord, chord, octave, octave, chord, chord (with only a few variations) and at a much brisker tempo then I am accustomed for stride. Just playing the work, when it is MUCH BETTER rehearsed won't be a problem. But practicing it for long durations has compiled the problem to the point that it is a problem. Hopefully, just a temporary one.
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How well do you memorise or are you a reader?
I'm really slow at reading, so I just memorise everything
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How well do you memorise or are you a reader?
I'm really slow at reading, so I just memorise everything No problem, Wayne. I'll type future posts really slowly!
Richard
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Chopin Nocturne in E flat, Op. 9 No. 2
We've identified the sections even if we've chosen to name them differently. Regardless of any harmonic analysis we're analysing this with a view to performance so the first step in my plan is to decide which sections appear to be the hardest, where there are any technical difficulties that are likely to beset us and whether or not we can read the score.
M27 is the only measure that exceeds three ledger lines but M30&31 are scraping their knuckles there. You might want to check what notes are being used here and and how you might remember them.
There's a polyrhythmic 4 vs 3 in M18. If it's a tricky ryhthm for you you can use a phrase such as 'just before you offer more' with LH taking the bold notes.
The fioriture in M16 and M24 will need slow and careful practise. How I tackle these is to play the RH slow enough to distinguish the final triplet in M16 and the mix of quaver, semiquavers and demisemiquavers in M18. As the notes, phrase, articulation and accent marks are absorbed and the LH chords are placed carefully I let the tempo come up until the LH is in time with the surrounding beats. You may have your own way of tackling these.
The most awkward patch of accidentals occurs in M12 and 20. The measures are identical and don't pose a problem in the realisation.
There are a number of ornaments that will require isolated practise, some finicky phrasing that might thwart a good reader and the ability to read while making accurate leaps will be tested especially in M30-31 where right and left hand skipping and leaping independently. If you're the type to tackle a score hardest part first then M30 and 31 is where to begin.
The extended trill in M32 is not as difficult as a first attempt might suggest. I surprised myself when I first relinquished control of the notes and the fingers went on automatic pilot. I don't count the repetitions but merely start the final descent when the speed has fallen the right amount.
That covers just about all the main difficulties. We can cover the phrasing and other markings on a sequential pass through. Here's the first four bars.
M1-4 Four one measure phrases. I'll start by drawing your attention to the phrase marks in the LH of M1 and similar. After the bass note the following two chords are played in a legato sweep, 5-2 for the first chord and 4-2-1 for the second. You can loop the first measure while you get the hang of this if it doesn't feel natural.
While the LH has four dynamic layers the melody sings clearly above it. The turn in M2 is easy to overdo. Don't snatch at it but try to spread the notes evenly without slowing down in LH. Note the Forte and the break in legato for the last three notes of the phrase in M4.
Richard
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Just to let you all know that I am following the Nocturne analysis with great interest. Whether I participate depends if I notice anything specific. I went out today and bought the Henle edition of the Nocturnes (I know this won't be my last so I want a good edition.) As far as I can tell there are minimal differences between any editions for this piece but if I spot anything I'll report it.
I expect to be working for quite a while on this. I always have problems with ornamentation and leaps and this piece has plenty of both. The turn in measure 2, combined with the leaps in the left hand is causing me enough problems.
I'm spending a lot of time with hands separate. Not really because it's much harder hands together - it's really to get the phrasing right in both hands.
Last edited by Andy Platt; 01/13/13 09:46 PM. Reason: Changed mordent to turn
- Debussy - Le Petit Nègre, L. 114
- Haydn - Sonata in Gm, Hob. XVI/44
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Chopin Nocturne in E flat, Op. 9 No. 2 M1-4 Four one measure phrases. I'll start by drawing your attention to the phrase marks in the LH of M1 and similar. After the bass note the following two chords are played in a legato sweep,...
The legato ( smooth even style without a break *) is indicated by the slur above these chords? It is interesting thus, that these markings are only on this measure. I would have thought they would continue throughout the composition. I certainly cannot decipher much difference in LH treatment from M1, to M2 for example. * I am spelling this out mostly for my own benefit...I needed to go back and look up what legato meant The turn in M2 is easy to overdo. Don't snatch at it but try to spread the notes evenly without slowing down in LH.
The notes of the turn are C,D,C,B,C jump ... correct? I can see it would be easy to do a double (mini trill) on the first C,D. Is this what you mean by over doing? At some point, I will also be interested to also look at the chords for this. While I am learning this type of a piece (LH stride,) it helps me a lot if the chord my LH is jumping to is written as a chord (Abdim7) vs. just the dots on the ledger lines. My hope, at least, is that this translation exercise will also help strengthen my reading.
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