Hmph! Now, looking again at the score and recognising that it begins in the bass clef, I'm wondering if I even started Solfeggietto in the correct register. (I did. Disaster averted!)
I was actually a little terrified to get to this song because I'd heard several renditions of it on YouTube in which the pianists play extremely fast! I wasn't sure I would be able to do that, so I panicked, but not enough to let it deter me. I guess I secretly figured that since Alan Chan didn't play it so ridiculously fast, those persons were either just showing off, or playing it at a level higher than expected of me at this stage. Of course, prestissimo doesn't mean "go slow,"if you know what I'm saying.
It turns out that this song is perhaps easier to play fast than it seems. The scales are mostly shared between the hands and, along with the arpeggios, are usually descending. This makes a huge difference regarding difficulty, since it is much easier to play runs going in the direction of the thumb than toward the pinky.
It turns out that this song is perhaps easier to play fast than it seems. The scales are mostly shared between the hands and, along with the arpeggios, are usually descending. This makes a huge difference regarding difficulty, since it is much easier to play runs going in the direction of the thumb than toward the pinky.
This isn't to say Solfeggietto is easy. On the contrary, it's been quite a lot of work getting the passages even. That's what I've been focusing on: evenness. My fingers tend to go fast when they are out of control. So I use slow playing (and it take lots of it!) to try to get some control over my fingers so they don't just do whatever they want. It's been a journey, and I'm nowhere close to being finished.
Right is one of the earlier passages of the text. It completes the first phrase's repetition, with a full 11-note run down the keyboard. You play the ascending form of the melodic minor backward, and it is the first of several. The patterns are usually the same, though executed in different keys. This one is in the home key of C Minor. I had trouble with getting the final three notes even. Getting from that F over the E♭ hump took some work. It's funny because even though you put in the time for precisely that (and other) reason(s) while doing scales, it seems refinement is always necessary whenever actual pieces require those techniques.
These two-note slurs represent a transition from the first C-Minor section (which had terminated in a group of eight 4-note arpeggios) to a similar passage in G Minor. I worked long and hard on that arpeggio section along with this pictured here. I'm still working on it, even, because before the speed can come, the precision and the evenness have to be there. That takes time... for me, anyway.
It took some work to get my fingers to these broken octaves (played first in G and immediately after in C). It's a bit of a jump. The hand positioning causes some difficulty as both hands are in the treble clef and the left hand must get out of way in order to allow the right hand access to its notes. And vice versa. Such rapid threading of hands and fingers requires some manoeuvring and precision that I first had to figure out and then try to replicate over time. I think I've finally found a way to do it.
Right is one of the earlier passages of the text. It completes the first phrase's repetition, with a full 11-note run down the keyboard. You play the ascending form of the melodic minor backward, and it is the first of several. The patterns are usually the same, though executed in different keys. This one is in the home key of C Minor. I had trouble with getting the final three notes even. Getting from that F over the E♭ hump took some work. It's funny because even though you put in the time for precisely that (and other) reason(s) while doing scales, it seems refinement is always necessary whenever actual pieces require those techniques.
These two-note slurs represent a transition from the first C-Minor section (which had terminated in a group of eight 4-note arpeggios) to a similar passage in G Minor. I worked long and hard on that arpeggio section along with this pictured here. I'm still working on it, even, because before the speed can come, the precision and the evenness have to be there. That takes time... for me, anyway.
It took some work to get my fingers to these broken octaves (played first in G and immediately after in C). It's a bit of a jump. The hand positioning causes some difficulty as both hands are in the treble clef and the left hand must get out of way in order to allow the right hand access to its notes. And vice versa. Such rapid threading of hands and fingers requires some manoeuvring and precision that I first had to figure out and then try to replicate over time. I think I've finally found a way to do it.
These arpeggios flank the broken octaves. I find it interesting that they begin as ascending-to-descending chords in the minor mode, then reverse their directions and convert to the major mode. It's as though they're being turned inside-out! And it doesn't even sound weird switching modes in the tonic like that.
This marks the transition to an interesting portion of the text. Arpeggios in various inversions of F Minor "walk" the piece down the keyboard. The D♭ octave changes the character of the melody (and harmony). It represents a true key change: a dramatic one you can really hear, and not just some adjustment to a dominant or subdominant key. The accidentals are a tell-tale sign.
This marks the transition to an interesting portion of the text. Arpeggios in various inversions of F Minor "walk" the piece down the keyboard. The D♭ octave changes the character of the melody (and harmony). It represents a true key change: a dramatic one you can really hear, and not just some adjustment to a dominant or subdominant key. The accidentals are a tell-tale sign.
Some fast finger work follows. I haven't really applied myself to the work of mastering this part yet, as it's near the end of the song. But I've played it quite a few times and done quite a few reps. The "finger work," in actuality, isn't really faster than the rest. The entire text is in semiquavers. But here much of the burden is placed on a few fingers rather than being spread evenly over all five (in each hand). So it feels a bit like more work. Note the group of five semiquavers at the end of the bar. There the fingers have to move a tiny bit faster than they have for the whole piece. Luckily, it's the work-horse fingers 1, 2, and 3 that bear this burden. They're equal to the task, and that's probably been the easiest part of the piece for me so far! After this, there's another bout of broken octaves, a descending C-Minor arpeggio in two inversions, and then it's a return to the opening run. Halfway through that run, the piece ends.
Alternatives
This piece was originally written to be played with just the left hand. I checked, and it's feasible. Maybe I'll try it some day. Also, an alternate ending exists in which the original C-Minor run is executed all the way through and ends on Middle C, I think. That's two octaves lower than the one pictured. I've heard it once, and I don't like it. Glad J. T. chose this version for his text.
Alternatives
This piece was originally written to be played with just the left hand. I checked, and it's feasible. Maybe I'll try it some day. Also, an alternate ending exists in which the original C-Minor run is executed all the way through and ends on Middle C, I think. That's two octaves lower than the one pictured. I've heard it once, and I don't like it. Glad J. T. chose this version for his text.
Alan Chan's rendition
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