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#483183 09/14/01 10:37 AM
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I have been trying to play Mozart pieces like Sonata K533 and find many problems trying to master the piece. And I sometimes wonder if if it is too diffcult for my standard, as I have started learning piano four years ago.
I am trying to get into more serious pieces but encounter many diffcultes,like rhythm and certain parts need to run fast and I find myself lacking co-ordination. I would like to know if there are others in the forum playing Mozart pieces and like to know how long you take to master a sonata?,like just for one movement. I find myself to dependant on CD and unable to interpret well.

#483184 09/14/01 11:20 AM
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rachelle,
take it a bit easier on yourself. mozart sonatas are very--and deceptively!--difficult. i'm now on my second one, and i never did "master" the first one!

for me, the key to improving my mozart sonatas has been

1. to play extremely slowly, so slowly that my counting and dynamics are always precisely correct and my hands are always prepared and in position to play the next notes. do this regularly, even after you know the piece fairly well, and it will stregnthen your ability to play smoothly through all the sections. use a metronome.

and 2. to use one hand or the other as a "metronome" for the other. this is a bit difficult to explain without looking at the score together, but basically, on those difficult run parts, you take the hand that has the most automatic part and let it go do its thing while using it as a benchmark to keep you in place with the other hand.

hm, i didn't explain that very well. perhaps someone else here can do it better.


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#483185 09/14/01 01:54 PM
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Pique is correct, I find 'fingering' Mozart very difficult for some reason; it doesn't fall under the fingers like Chopin, though theoretically, many of Chopins pieces are much more difficult.

Keep at it, as we all try to do--that is the key!

Mat D.

#483186 09/14/01 03:20 PM
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Mozart is perhaps the hardest composer to interpret correctly. You must not just memorize the notes and listen to CD's, but you must study (emphasis on study) the piece, all relationships and technical problems.

#483187 09/14/01 06:37 PM
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Quote
Originally posted by Mat D.:
Pique is correct, I find 'fingering' Mozart very difficult for some reason; it doesn't fall under the fingers like Chopin, though theoretically, many of Chopins pieces are much more difficult.



I think that fingering matters just as much in Chopin as it does in Mozart. In some of the lighter pieces such as the waltzes, sections of the scherzi (especially #4) and some of the etudes, the graceful character and feathery sound that Chopin achives are a direct throwback to Mozart (whom Chopin admired). As with a Mozart sonata or rondo with similar passagework, smooth fingering is of prime importance if you want to get an equally smooth sound.

There are, of course, instances where the technique is idiomatic to the time period (parallel octaves and weight technique), but in general I feel that good fingering is of equal importance in order to successfully play both composers.

#483188 09/14/01 11:39 PM
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Hi Rachelle:

I find it useful to start slowly and count out loud, and always start with hands alone (that is, right hand alone, left hand alone, then put together). Another great tip I got from one of my teachers helps me a lot with fingering some of those long "gooseberry" passages. Start slow, and play around with different rhythms, like short-short-long, short, long, short, long-long-short, etc. This really helps me to get the notes under my hands. Once I no longer have to sight-read so heavily, I find I can concentrate a lot more on interpretation (and of course, the correct timing!). I hope this makes sense-- it's sort of hard to explain.

Nina

#483189 09/15/01 01:48 AM
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Brendan:
[QB]

I think that fingering matters just as much in Chopin as it does in Mozart

Brendan,

I didn't mean to imply that fingering is not as 'important' in Chopin as Mozart---it is important in ALL music! I meant that I find that fingering of some of Mozart's music more difficult (especially to memorize). Chopins music feels more natural under the hand IMO---in other words, the fingering comes more naturally in Chopin than Mozart-----for me, anyway.

#483190 09/15/01 11:50 PM
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It seems to me that all of you like Chopin and I want to know any pieces that are interesting and not too diffcult to master.
I have not been exposed to Chopin . I find Mozart pieces are very tune-catchy and like to know more about Chopin pieces.

#483191 09/16/01 02:42 AM
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Chopin is very nice to listen to (he is my favriote composer) but most of his pieces are difficult to play. You need good fingering skills to quickly move around the keyborad and to hit all the big chords. If your looking for a good peice by Motzart that is not too difficult to play, try the Sonata No. 15 in C Major K.545. This is an easy Mozart peice to play. Another one of a bit more moderat difficulty is Mozart's Fantasia in D minor. This is a very beautiful peice.

[ September 16, 2001: Message edited by: jgoo ]


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#483192 09/16/01 09:10 AM
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Try some Chopin noctures or the waltz in C# minor


-Amy-
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#483193 09/16/01 10:20 AM
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yeah the nocturnes are best. some like the Op. 37/1 in G minor, the posthumous C minor, C Sharp minor and the Op. 72/1 in E minor aren't too difficult and they are extremely beautiful... some of the preludes are also fairly easy and musical as well, like Op. 28 No. 4 in E minor and the No. 6 in B minor... just start playing one piece and u should be hooked on Chopin...=]

#483194 09/16/01 04:28 PM
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Yes, I agree very much with what Pique said about using a metronome. I found that after struggling with Mozart's K545 sonata for months, using the metronome (per teacher's advice) at a fairly slow clip really helped me improve. BTW, I don't find the K545 as easy as people say. I still haven't totally perfected it, while I've nearly "perfected" several Chopin pieces, including Nocturne 55-1 and also Brahms' most famous waltz. I think (goes back to the metronome advice) the rhythm is the main obstacle with much of Mozart, and maintaining "evenness".

#483195 09/16/01 09:27 PM
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I usually feel well "over the keys" in Mozart, moving each key to produce the right tone is the tricky bit!

Musically, the notes in Mozart tend to just sit there on the score staring at you, they don't immediately grab you with the same feeling as Beethoven, for example.

Mozart should flow like oil, not pour like grease.

#483196 09/16/01 10:12 PM
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If I remember, "it should flow like oil" was a phrase that Mozart used to describe how to correctly play legato lines in his compositions. Intersting how we get pristine, brittle interpretations of his music instead...

#483197 09/16/01 11:32 PM
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Quote
Originally posted by Brendan:
If I remember, "it should flow like oil" was a phrase that Mozart used to describe how to correctly play legato lines in his compositions. Intersting how we get pristine, brittle interpretations of his music instead...


It seems through the late 70s and early 80s, Mozart was played more smoothly connected (and heavily pedalled). About the time the movie "Amadeus" came out, we started to get short phrases and percussive detached notes. Was this to sound more "authentic?"

By the way, have we ever had a debate around here about the meaning of wedge-shaped versus dot staccato in Mozart? Doesn't the wedge-shaped staccato suggest a slight accent and more duration than notes with dots?

[ September 16, 2001: Message edited by: MacDuff ]

#483198 09/17/01 12:40 AM
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"It seems through the late 70s and early 80s, Mozart was played more smoothly connected (and heavily pedalled). About the time the movie "Amadeus" came out, we started to get short phrases and percussive detached notes. Was this to sound more "authentic?" "

i usually don't use a pedal in mozart. it makes it too "heavy". mozart needs a very light touch.

"Doesn't the wedge-shaped staccato suggest a slight accent and more duration than notes with dots?"

yes.

i forgot to mention the part about hands separately! that is a very important aspect. hands separately, extremely slowly, then hands together.

how slowly? as slow as you must go to have all fingerings, notes, dynamics, and counting exactly correct. slow enough so that it is solid under your hand and you are relaxed and confident.

iow: pretty darn slow!

wink


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#483199 09/17/01 05:31 AM
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Thanks alot of all the feedback. I have tried playing K545 but have not really master it. As I fell in love with k533 ,I got very fustrated after pratising for quite sometime but unable to play decently. I think that I may want to try Chopin But heard that the pieces have chords that require big hands for one to reach, so if anyone can give any advice on that?

#483200 09/17/01 09:40 AM
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Quote
Originally posted by MacDuff:


It seems through the late 70s and early 80s, Mozart was played more smoothly connected (and heavily pedalled). About the time the movie "Amadeus" came out, we started to get short phrases and percussive detached notes. Was this to sound more "authentic?"


Possibly...I was but a wee lad in the early 80's, so I can't say for sure. I'll listen to some recordings before and after and see.

Quote
By the way, have we ever had a debate around here about the meaning of wedge-shaped versus dot staccato in Mozart? Doesn't the wedge-shaped staccato suggest a slight accent and more duration than notes with dots?


I agree with the first part. The wedge appears more in Beethoven than it does in Mozart, and I've always interpreted it to mean more attack and a more focused, rigid sound than stacatti notes.

I know there's little comparison between the composers, but Bartok and Messiaen use it almost exclusively to mean that. I can't remember encountering it very much in Mozart...I'll leaf through some Sonatas again one of these days.

[ September 17, 2001: Message edited by: Brendan ]

#483201 09/17/01 10:31 AM
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about Chopin's big chords, generally it isn't quite true... some of the more virtuosic works like some Polonaises and the Ballades may have some large chords, but most of his works like the Nocturnes, Waltzes and Mazurkas don't... this shouldn't be a reason not to touch Chopin's music...

#483202 09/17/01 03:15 PM
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Rachelle,

If you were unable to play K545 successfully (and that piece is not as easy as it's made out to be) you probably will find it hard to make progress with K533, which is a very hard piece. For a very nice Mozart piece which is not too hard, you could try the first movement of K282 in E flat - the only sonata to begin with a slow movement. Overall, I think K283 in G is Mozart's easiest complete sonata, but it is not his best.

Another idea would be to try a shorter sonata by Haydn, or a sonatina by Clementi or Kuhlau. Many of these are charming and a lot of fun to play and will develop the sort of technique required in Mozart (musically and mechanically) while not being quite so demanding.

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