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#446458 - 06/07/01 06:24 AM
Cold hands
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Full Member
Registered: 05/28/01
Posts: 57
Loc: Denmark
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Does anyone of you know how to avoid getting cold hands while playing the piano ? Normally I try to warm up before playing but that only helps me through the first 5 minuts..  Any help or comments will be appreciated.. Even the ones going off topic :rolleyes: Regards Daniel
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#446459 - 06/07/01 06:27 AM
Re: Cold hands
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500 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/26/01
Posts: 722
Loc: Singapore
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i'm sorry but the first thing that came to my mind was "wear gloves!"... interesting to note that Pollini once did it during a performance... but that was to protect himself from the keyboard and not against cold...=] sorry for the off-topic reply...
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#446460 - 06/07/01 12:54 PM
Re: Cold hands
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Full Member
Registered: 05/28/01
Posts: 57
Loc: Denmark
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Hey magnezium I don't think that was off topic at all. Actually I thought about that myself but never seriously though.. Maybe I should find some nice white 'piano gloves' if ever such things exists. (?) Thanks Daniel
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#446461 - 06/07/01 04:40 PM
Re: Cold hands
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Full Member
Registered: 05/25/01
Posts: 116
Loc: Plano, tx
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Magnezium
You're going to have to elaborate on that Pollini story. What kind of gloves can a concert pianist wear and still play? And, protecting himself from the piano?
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#446462 - 06/07/01 05:16 PM
Re: Cold hands
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500 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/26/01
Posts: 560
Loc: Southeast, U.S.A.
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Aren't there "fingerless" gloves (similar to driving gloves) that organists wear to play in cold cathedral organ lofts?
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#446463 - 06/07/01 06:28 PM
Re: Cold hands
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Full Member
Registered: 06/05/01
Posts: 33
Loc: london
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Hi, There are gloves with no ends at the fingers. I have seen a boy at school with them. I think their quite cool actually.
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#446464 - 06/07/01 08:57 PM
Re: Cold hands
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500 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/26/01
Posts: 550
Loc: Encinitas, CA
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If anyone knows where to purchase "fingerless gloves" suitable for playing pianos, I'd love to know where one could find them. My son sets up a little electrical heater (Heat Stream by ArvinAir, 800 watts) on a stool to his left when he practices, aiming the hot air directly at his hands. He used to soak his hands a la Glenn Gould before practicing, but the effect only lasts for a little while. The room where our piano is situated has a vaulted ceiling. Coldest room in the house, but very friendly acoustic-wise. Joy  :rolleyes:
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#446465 - 06/07/01 09:33 PM
Re: Cold hands
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500 Post Club Member
Registered: 06/04/01
Posts: 902
Loc: Philly, PA
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Oh Daniel, so i know your plight all to well. let me tell you, the worst feeling in the world is playing the Messiah in a 55 degree church in the middle of winter ( december) and having you hands so stiff you could crack cement on them. usually i just sit on my hands before i have to go up and play and then just hope for the best......
_________________________
"Music is enough for a lifetime, but a lifetime is not enough for music." ~Rachmaninoff
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#446466 - 06/07/01 10:51 PM
Re: Cold hands
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500 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/26/01
Posts: 722
Loc: Singapore
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damn i can't find the article... but i remember it was some piece by a 20th century composer that was highly demanding technically and it would have been easy to be cut by the keys... let me look for it... i thought i read on steinway.com's lyra magazine but it doesn't seem to be there now... maybe it wasn't pollini... let me look further...
[ June 07, 2001: Message edited by: magnezium ]
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#446467 - 06/07/01 11:21 PM
Re: Cold hands
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6000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/26/01
Posts: 6957
Loc: The Evergreen State (WA)
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Originally posted by Joy: [QB]If anyone knows where to purchase "fingerless gloves" suitable for playing pianos, I'd love to know where one could find them. Joy - you could try two things - There are these white cotton gloves made for people who handle negatives and things when they are doing darkroom work. We used to cut the fingers out of them and wear them when illustrating - to keep the oil from out hands off our paper. Also, surgical gloves used to keep my hands really warm in freezing temperatures when I was sewing up horses. He could try some of these with the fingers cut out. (they would be more expensive, and might not last as long as the cotton ones) Just a thought. Jodi
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#446470 - 06/07/01 11:38 PM
Re: Cold hands
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6000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/26/01
Posts: 6957
Loc: The Evergreen State (WA)
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Here is another link - these are a therapeutic glove for RSI (repetetive stress injuries): http://www.handeze.com/fingerless.htm There are also some fingerless gloves that guitarists and drummers use - I'm trying to find a site that has a photograph - I'll add the link if I find one.  Jodi Well, can't find the drummers gloves, but I did find these: http://www.yagersflies.com/sunglovfin.html My husband has a pair - I'll ask him to put them on and see if he can play the piano. Jodi [ June 07, 2001: Message edited by: jodi ]
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#446471 - 06/07/01 11:59 PM
Re: Cold hands
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500 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/26/01
Posts: 560
Loc: Southeast, U.S.A.
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I would be a little concerned about some of these therapeutic gloves--they look a little tight for people who have no injuries. I've seen organists actually use fingerless gloves--never asked where they got them. (Were they "knitted with love" by a family member, i.e. home-made?) An organ web site gives the following advice: "If a freezing cold church is all that is available, equip yourself with kettle, hot water bottle, fingerless gloves and a fan heater. And organise your practice tasks, so that every chilly half-hour at the organ is crowned with achievements." http://www.rco.org.uk/news7.htm  :p 
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#446472 - 06/08/01 07:42 AM
Re: Cold hands
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500 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/26/01
Posts: 722
Loc: Singapore
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ok i've found it... it was actually in an article posted in the old pianist corner forum...
"Pianist Maurizio Pollini once played a modern piece so technically punishing he wore gloves to spare his hands from the keyboard.
This time, at Carnegie Hall, the Italian musician chose a less brutal work by the same composer, Karlheinz Stockhausen, and played it with his bare hands."
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#446474 - 06/08/01 03:59 PM
Re: Cold hands
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500 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/26/01
Posts: 550
Loc: Encinitas, CA
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Jodi, I checked out the web site with the fly fishing gloves, and they look perfect! Nice and thin. Reasonably priced too. I assume the sizes are MEN'S sizes. I don't know if Max's hands are considered Medium or Large/Xtra Large. Anyway, I sent them an email querying this. Thanks for the tip! Last year Max cut the fingers off some old acrylic knit gloves. Our swell cat then proceeded to unravel them. Joy  [ June 08, 2001: Message edited by: Joy ]
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#446475 - 06/08/01 05:10 PM
Re: Cold hands
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Full Member
Registered: 05/25/01
Posts: 116
Loc: Plano, tx
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I wonder what Stockhausen piece he played. And, what could make it damaging to the hands? Who was the original poster for that tidbit?
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#446477 - 06/08/01 07:51 PM
Re: Cold hands
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500 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/26/01
Posts: 550
Loc: Encinitas, CA
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Alex said: "I wonder what Stockhausen piece he played. And, what could make it damaging to the hands? Who was the original poster for that tidbit?" ------ I'll bet Andrew would know about this. But he's on a car vacation with his family somewhere between Denver and Orange County, CA. If he makes it down San Diego way, he said he MIGHT contact Max and me for an Artistic Pianos looky-loo. Joy  [ June 08, 2001: Message edited by: Joy ]
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#446478 - 07/11/01 05:44 PM
Re: Cold hands
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Junior Member
Registered: 07/10/01
Posts: 3
Loc: england
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Hi I play at at my church which gets very cold in the winter, I purchased a chemical hand warmer from the chemist (boots)and the good thing about this is that it lasts the whole service (usually one hour)and it is also recharged by boiling it in hot water!
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