So I've been adhering to my desired regimen of aesthetically driven practice. I never allow a note to leave my fingers without first subjecting the joints to some kind of disciplinary action. I'm really trying to wring as much delicacy as possible out of my fingers' action upon the keys. This means a lot—lot—of slow, controlled note-strikes, where I try to imbue my joints with something like shock absorbers (which I expect is just a generally increased sensitivity of the muscles controlling them). But this means I don't allow my fingers to bang upon the keys anymore. I try to let every one down easy in its turn.
And it's not just difficult, but it's also sort of arresting in a certain sense. I realise I have to sacrifice progress (in a direction toward the final note of the score) for progress in a more vertical direction regarding my ability to get various levels of sound from each strike of a note. I like it, because it means I am now able to produce the soft sounds I've wanted. But I keep wondering how long it will take for me to produce these sounds without having to think about it. How long before I can take that increased dynamism for granted and move on to gaining more technique? I really haven't been committed to this for all that long—it's been exactly seven days!—so my impatience is kinda unwarranted.
This new form of practice also means something for the way I move my hands and the kind of support my wrists provide. I find the motions—even contortions—are more deliberate and quite extreme. Still, I am always careful that everything I do is ergonomic, and I think it's even helped with a weird crick I'd had in my wrist for about a week or so. I move my hands as though outlining a lemniscate (rather than a circle), and that seems to create the most fluid motion on the keys. The circling of the wrists (which is often recommended as prophylaxis against carpal tunnel, etc.) actually seems to hurt, not help. So I don't do it.
I'm a bit surprised at how committed I've become to this type of fluid wrist and finger action in my practising. It's making a real difference in the aesthetic of my playing, though, which is actually really important to me. I mean, it's actually making me play in a way I wasn't sure I'd ever be able to—though as yet ever so slowly and tentatively. I want to make not clangy noises on the piano but music. I don't want simply to strike a string of correct notes; I want them to depend from a string of fluidity whose aesthetic is both audible in the texture of the sounds as they light upon the tympanum and visible in the motion of my hands across the keys. And because I dare to dream of poetry, I'm willing to wait to play a song until I have the delicacy of touch necessary to truly make it sing. (Chopin's Raindrop Prelude is a case in point. I've loved that song for two years now, have acquired and looked at the score, but haven't touched it.) Consequently, I'm still working with Maykapar's Toccatina, Bach's Little Prelude in F, Loeschhorn's The Juggler, Haydn's Menuetto, and recently I added CPE Bach's Solfeggietto. These are pretty much all songs I'd played before, but with much less grace and aesthetic sensibility. This time I won't be done with them until they sound really fluid and light, like I'm playing with a feather for fingers, and with the utmost legato, even with my feet off the pedal!
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