Saturday, November 5, 2016

Two-Year (Late) Check-in

I haven't posted in a few weeks, but I've been practising! That, at least, hasn't stopped.

It's been two years, one month, and (almost) two days since I started this journey, and I'm still happy I'm doing it. I've struggled with a lot of things, not the least of which are the technical aspects of practisingscales and especially arpeggios. I've been finding my progress with the latter to be slow and they are in general just harder than scales. Motivation to do them lags behind that of scales, which I do in small bits (but thoroughly) every day. I might end up doing arpeggios only 4 or 5 times a week. Maybe 6. 

I've recently (two days ago) switched the fingering for playing minor arpeggios that begin on white keys with a black in the middle (like Cm and Gm). This has made a huge difference in my ability to play accurately. I'd been doing 1-2-3-5 in both hands as with their major counterparts, and switching to 5-4-2-1 in the left hand has decreased a lot of the awkwardness and mild contortionism involved. (This was usually in the "descending" motion toward the low end of the keyboard, when the fingers 1-2-3 would find the gap between notes a tad too wide.)

I've also just now (in the past week or two) detected a general improvement in my body's ability to move in such a way that it facilitates the speed with which arpeggios cover the keyboard. Before, I wasn't moving my torso sideways fast or evenly enough, and I also didn't move automatically closer to the piano at either end of the six-octave arpeggios. Now I find my body more limber and almost eager to moveeven shift!for the sake of the exercise. That's heartening to me, because in general I'm too phlegmatic and, well, lazy actually. Even my elbows have begun to raise themselves and remain that way throughout my practice session. 

Scales have their challenges too, of course, not the least of which is the fact that so many of them exist! I'm working on G Major in contrary motion and have been for quite a few weeks. It's hard. I'm to the point where I play them without errors (but not fast) if I look at my hands, but mess up about once or twice when not looking. I did have a feeling of near mastery yesterday, though, when I was playing G minor harmonic in contrary motion. I had it down so well the dynamics were starting to come out: I was almost playing it with style!
O that G Major might become like that one day... 
I've also been working on D Major along with the G, but it has proved a bit easier. I do need to give it more attention though. Still haven't really touched the black key minors yet. The volume!!! (cf. The horror!)

Having found my level (RCM 7), I've been working on one of the studies, and I've sight read Beethoven's Bagatelle a couple times. I'd like to work on Bertini's C minor study too, but right now I'm still memorising Maykapar's Toccatina, so... (sigh). It'll happen though, especially since my sight reading has improved enough that I don't fear reading at all anymore. (I'm at the end of the Piano Adventures 3B booksalmost the last page, since I'm skipping the Pachelbel Canon in D entries because I despise that damn song.)

I hope to return to blogging about my John Thompson series soon. I'll be revisiting many songs I've played before because I've demoted myself. I may have to begin again with the fourth grade book actually, even if I start somewhere in the middle. Schubert's Scherzo in B (the second entry of the fifth grade book) is a level 8 RCM exam piece, so the second half of the fourth grade book seems about right. 

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