In Tonebase's Piano Camp (sterling experience), I had two lessons with Sara. She is a power house.
@buckbreaker518522 күн бұрын
*he
@hilanoga1486Ай бұрын
I absolutely love the way she expresses her ideas
@PenFochtaАй бұрын
She s a real Queen of scale play technique who brings enlightning to me. She makes scale practice attractive and interesting more than ever imagined.Thanks❤
@benjaminniemczyk2 ай бұрын
Some of the best teaching/advice one will ever receive! An open-minded, MUSICAL approach to playing an instrument. None of that extra-musical nonsense. Fantastic.
@jonasgoulart2187Ай бұрын
i had the pleasure of watching her play a piano concerto here in south brazil. simply astonishing!
@handdarahanddara-nr6fuАй бұрын
“Even a scale can be beautiful,” what a good story and advice
@nicktranscriptionsАй бұрын
i’ve taken lessons from Sara, and she is one of the most phenomenal pianists i have ever heard.
@matthewbergey7153Ай бұрын
SDB was a great teacher for the piano repertoire class I took at Manhattan School of Music 150 years ago!
@ever-pj9qfАй бұрын
Lol are you a vampire?
@matthewbergey7153Ай бұрын
@@ever-pj9qf yes. I was enrolled in the night school program
@mza3544Ай бұрын
Sorry, how many years?
@bellatopiaaa839721 күн бұрын
I went to MSM too but it was more like 20 yrs ago lol
@matthewbergey715321 күн бұрын
@@bellatopiaaa8397 I was there 2000-2002
@annamariaanastasi575Ай бұрын
Bellissima lezione, grazie mille🌹💕🤗
@anthonyparnther1553Ай бұрын
“Intelligent facilitation” hahaha! I am stealing that! 😂🎉🎉🎉
@aidentheabsurd2 ай бұрын
that Liszt Paganini Etude was lovely!
@ssmith9745Ай бұрын
I agree that it isn't "cheating" (6:10) to intelligently use different fingering or hand-distribution options to make something more playable... except in the case of an etude that has been composed to challenge the player in a specific way. That said, even if you use all the possible assistance your LH can give in Chopin's 2nd Etude, your RH 4th and 5th fingers will still get a pretty good workout!
@leona7522Ай бұрын
Fabulous lesson !! Instantly want to try this. Thank you ❤
@ValnikmusicАй бұрын
The video was really informative and the explanations were really good. Thank you very much!
@pghagenАй бұрын
Very interesting! I always hated practising scales. But now I have a different view on scales. Thank you very much.!
@flitflintАй бұрын
Excellent and informative, explained with kindness and passion. Thank you!
@IslandBАй бұрын
Wonderful! I was curious about Chopin Ballade op23's end scales. When kid, my teacher had said (from Mickiewicz): laugh of the Satan.
@therealtruetwelfth798Ай бұрын
I believe it was Liszt himself who indicated the five-finger scales in Rhapsodie Espagnole, not Cortot or Jonás
@TheModicaLisztАй бұрын
Yes indeed. This was Liszt’s fingering in the first edition.
@willbarenАй бұрын
That was excellent, thank you so much.
@oddopalmusic17 күн бұрын
Phantastic 🧡
@sergeihsiao4011Ай бұрын
I am very appreciate, thank you !❤
@fortissimoXАй бұрын
Amazing!
@adelajademilade77962 ай бұрын
Wow...Just Wow!!
@RhotenXxXАй бұрын
Sarah has been teaching piano for decades now and it’s just funny to come here and read comments critiquing her method. If you don’t like her approach then move on to someone you agree with.
@IsacksonStudioАй бұрын
@@RhotenXxX that’s what we should expect! Musicians are the most opinionated people in the world!
@reynaarias3380Ай бұрын
She’s flawless for god’s sake😅 you notice she’s up to no games😅😅😅
@michaelcooper3633Ай бұрын
@@reynaarias3380on the contrary, she makes many mistakes in the video. The saint-saens scale in particular is fragmented and messy, not a very good advertisement for her advice on how to play it.
@jackdavidpiney8135Ай бұрын
Well said
@buckbreaker518522 күн бұрын
*he
@oscarlidonbas4603Ай бұрын
Thank you very much !!!!!!
@rachmaninoff808Ай бұрын
I like this lady. I’ve always “cheated” by sharing chords and scales between the hands but she gives a great reason and explanation. Bravo!
@DAMusic-qu2ecАй бұрын
Great advice
@musiclover4311Ай бұрын
MARVELOUS lecture. Perfect!
@philpollackАй бұрын
Thanks!
@Nunofurdambiznez29 күн бұрын
I sure wish I'd had these courses when i was taking piano lessons, I would have been a MUCH better pianist later on!!
@gretareinarsson7461Ай бұрын
Absolutely brilliant 👏👏👏
@Maibrapiano19 күн бұрын
I like to write from scales ❤it makes practice less mundane lol ❤
@GlissandolaАй бұрын
Helpful!
@xavioxАй бұрын
We are soo lucky to live in Sara's time. ❤
@IsacksonStudioАй бұрын
I used to have a similar view on technique like her “technique is like money”, but I really felt my pianism improved once I realized that was such a false way of thinking.
@IMN564Ай бұрын
Thank❤ you!!❤❤
@peterpeper48372 ай бұрын
Some really great advice. Thank you !
@ger.liederАй бұрын
Tomado desde piezas musicales, genial ❤
@PabloEnverАй бұрын
That was amazing
@wardm42 ай бұрын
Sara videos are my favorite!
@MatthewThomasDillon2 ай бұрын
Phenomenal!
@jamel.Ай бұрын
So good
@JeremyDuckMusicАй бұрын
I’m all for finger redistributions in the repertoire…but, the whole point of the Chopin Etude is to play it as its written.
@SimonDanellPianoАй бұрын
There are plenty of letters and changes in editions that shows that composers of the time adapted the written music to their students. If a students had bad octaves and great scales, sn octave passage could be changed into a scale passage, gor example. I understand the argument that it's different regarding etudes, but maybe one should at least consider it..
@thrillscienceАй бұрын
@@SimonDanellPiano I think if you can make it _sound_ exactly as you want it to sound it doesn't matter if you're hitting keys with your nose!
@DrHampieАй бұрын
Can you please make a video/tutorial on rachmaninoff piano concerto 1 pleasssseee!!!! thx
@pohlpianoАй бұрын
The great genius of Buechner!
@pianowingman2 ай бұрын
Very Good Played - See you soon ❤ i Like your Channel ❤
@rullysiswanto4583Ай бұрын
Thanks
@wesleyc.4937Ай бұрын
If it wasn't for my brain, my hands would be my biggest obstacle...
@derekstanyer20 күн бұрын
I personally think anyone complaining about changing the fingering in the Chopin needs to get off their high horse. Pianists change fingering all the time in Chopin’s etudes, no one has an issue with it. How is this really any different? It is music, and the music is first and foremost. If doing it like that serves the music essence of the piece, then great. If it results it in being clunky or awkward, then it’s a detriment. You can play the etudes as exercises, or you can play them as music. It’s different for everyone, and I have no idea how anyone can say ‘this is wrong’. People just love complaining about something.
@BozzigmuppАй бұрын
The piece playing in the background of the intro, is it Saint-sains 2nd piano concerto?
@eddydelrio13032 ай бұрын
Your (and other's) use of "Cheating," I call Procedural Technique, and is consistent with the thought that a score is not a set of instructions for what goes INTO the instrument, but rather a symbol of what comes OUT of the instrument. All of the training a pianist undergoes (especially for independence of the fingers) as well as the differences between many "authoritative" editions of the same work prove this principle.
@em8714Ай бұрын
Idk, I fully agree with music but with Chopin's only study that doesn't sound like a concert study? In practice studies shouldn't really be cheated, in performance it seems fair to cheat, It's just this one is already so musically void (comparatively) most of the joy in hearing a pianist play it comes from their technical finesse
@kia.hadipourАй бұрын
@@em8714 You practice (study) a piece in order to perform it, these are not two different isolated worlds!
@gameclips5734Ай бұрын
@@kia.hadipour i think you've missed the fact that some pieces are designed as studies/etudes. They are to develop a specific technique and not just for performance
@eddygonzalez2328Ай бұрын
A better word my teacher in college used to say. Trick of the trade. He was a concert pianist and they have so many tricks up their sleeves. Some techniques, that even if it didn't seem very relevant at the moment, in the future, made learning some more advanced pieces much easier.
@anand1891Ай бұрын
wow wow what a video
@gojewlaАй бұрын
Rearranging is fine much of the time, especially if it sounds no different, or even better, but one needs to make sure that it doesn’t create problems, such as unwanted accents (as seen in the saint-saens concerto). In the case of op 10, no. 2, I think rearranging those notes to facilitate the piece defeats the purpose of the Etude.
@felleg4737Ай бұрын
I completely agree. You don’t play Op. 10 No. 2 to express feelings; you play it to show off how seamlessly you can perform a chromatic scale with the weaker fingers along with a chord on some notes - and a lot more - using only one hand (plus the accompaniment).
@gojewlaАй бұрын
@@felleg4737 well I don’t mean to not be expressive when you play a Chopin etude. I would never say that. What I mean is that you just are not getting the benefit of the piece if you rearrange the right hand.
@felleg4737Ай бұрын
@@gojewla I think we are on the same page :) I’m also not saying that you don’t need to shape a Chopin etude (especially a Chopin etude!) musically. However, the emphasis is on the difficulty/task of certain etudes and how well you can overcome/solve and execute them. In fact, you should perform them so well that their technical challenges do not become an obstacle to expressing your feelings through the etude.
@richardcarnes2834Ай бұрын
What is “the purpose of the Etude”? So far as I know Chopin never stated a purpose, and in any case we are allowed to use the piece for any purpose of our own. So you can use the piece as an exercise to improve your technique or as a beautiful piece to play at recitals or maybe both. So there’s nothing inherently wrong with redistribution in an etude. A Chopin etude is not an athletic event like diving or gymnastics where certain rules must be followed.
@gojewlaАй бұрын
@@richardcarnes2834 the purpose of the Etude is, among many other things, to understand release of chords. If you are unable to attack and release the chords with ease, you will tighten up and be unable to play the piece properly because it will cause the 3rd, 4th and 5th fingers to lock up. Playing a chromatic scale with 3, 4 and 5 is not really that difficult. Many teachers suggest for students to practice this piece without the chords in the right hand, which is a good idea, but ultimately doesn’t solve the problem of playing the piece when you add in the thumb and 2nd finger back in. Chopin etudes are pieces, but they are also etudes. You benefit more greatly from them if you play them in the way they were pianistically intended, which was my original point.
@meyerbeer13Ай бұрын
Listen to Rubenstein or Horowitz do this repertoire it's a whole other world.
@Highinsight7Ай бұрын
GREAT workshop, Sara... the second Chopin Impromptu... what a great work and example for this topic!
@i.ehrenfest349Ай бұрын
Will I get there with 5 min practice?
@oscarmoreno39462 ай бұрын
❤❤❤❤❤❤
@ripleyhrgiger4669Ай бұрын
DAmn Sara, gotta start the video off all flashy and such... Holy hell you're incredible!
The start of this video had me falling off my piano stool and I hurt my hand so sorry I can't play anything on todays lesson sorry.
@ribalslim7685Ай бұрын
8:36 and my mind was blown into shreads
@ribalslim7685Ай бұрын
And they way she flicks those last notes like UGHHHH I'M HYPNOTIZED!!!
@ssmith9745Ай бұрын
(11:23) This passage in Liszt's 2nd Paganini Etude is puzzling: some of the scale-figures are written out more or less as you would actually play them; for others, Liszt's notation is totally unhelpful!
@321347025 күн бұрын
7:02 by this rational, why don’t we play the arpegios in the first etude alternating hands and holding the octaves with pedal??
@92A曹智銘27 күн бұрын
really easy as pi
@mangomerkel20052 ай бұрын
I love playing the B-Major scales with both hands in the 2nd movement of Rach 2! What kills me is playing the scales near the end of Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2, it's awful!
@ChrisBreemerАй бұрын
I'm all for applying the kind of 'cheats' that Sara suggests. Except that in an etude like Chopin Op.10 No.2 it does not feel right to do so. It is very tempting as it's such a bastardly hard piece, but where's the end ? This way I could perhaps finally master Op.10 No.1 by using the middle pedal to hold down the low octaves, and then playing all the arpeggios (or as many as possible) with both hands. I'm sure that would make it a LOT easier. But it would not look right though....
@thrillscience2 ай бұрын
Easy as pie! (?)
@republiccooperАй бұрын
😂
@mirokajevskivelevski8895Ай бұрын
I generally agree with the take on "cheating" in playing piano, but the thing that makes op 10 no 2 one of the hardest chopin etudes is the fact that we have to use the index finger and thumb in order to complete the harmony, and to do this at a recital, concert or any other public playing, to a study which isn't meant to be "cheated" on as you're just "cheating" on yourself and never really learned the technique seems to be a disservice to oneself
@derekstanyer20 күн бұрын
You have to do that pattern a bunch anyway when you can’t take it with the left hand. You aren’t cheating yourself at all by doing that. As much as they are etudes, they are pieces of music first and foremost and in concert doing what you need to to make the music come through is the priority.
@cadriver257015 сағат бұрын
Yeah, so if it's to play and express music -- everything is on the table and nothing is cheating. If it's to get the most out of the etude, it might be best to follow Chopin's instructions.. But at the same time, she ostensibly played this piece for years and years and never felt comfortable without splitting it. Not worth laboring over something so ridiculously minor.
@vodkat07Ай бұрын
0:37 she really said cringe!!
@elwachusАй бұрын
Well, scales are pretty... it makes somebody want to smoke a cigar in the corner. They're difficult to get perfectly
@Adultz94Ай бұрын
It might not be the scales they’re cringing at…….
@derekstanyer20 күн бұрын
Sorry why is that surprising?
@risiaconfessordeaguiardoam9592Ай бұрын
❤👏👏🇧🇷
@maxhynam1031Ай бұрын
Wonderful presentation! Thank you so much Sara. : )
@johnb6723Ай бұрын
If one has to drop a note, do so. Hardly a soul will notice.
@i.ehrenfest349Ай бұрын
Preaching to the choir, here. I’ve dropped more notes than you’ve played in your life, baby.
@REAGANSSEWAGUDDE-bk6px2 ай бұрын
Hi am Reagan ssewagudde from Uganda am an intermediate pianist i teach my self but how can i practice scales to take away tension in my fingers and i have to first master one key to it at a terrible speed and then i shift to another key i don't know what to do but really i appreciate your teaching thanks
@matheo72272 ай бұрын
Start really slow, try to play with a metronome, train the motion of changing keys slowly, try to loose your muscels and play with your arm and wrist instead of using only your fingers.
@marquislewis9063Ай бұрын
12:27
@lightningbolt4419Ай бұрын
🤨
@markbujdos5842 ай бұрын
8:53 in what study of Ignaz Friedman does he explain the choreography...?
@evarsingersongwriter6228Ай бұрын
Great 🌈🦋🫶🏽
@RosalindHarlan-r1hАй бұрын
Young Karen Smith Edward Brown Jason
@SoraKlinefelterАй бұрын
She came to my Highschool and performed several pieces!
@christophedevos3760Ай бұрын
Did Liszt really played it this way I wonder?
@markus7894Ай бұрын
She has admirable ultra-speed in her scales. But the way to that speed is still unclear to me after the video!
@christinearmingtonАй бұрын
Redistribution. Not cheating.
@peter5.056Ай бұрын
It's very interesting how different hands find one technique easier or harder. I tried Sara's suggestion for the 2nd Chopin Etude, and it's a nightmare, lol. The way Chopin wrote it is much easier to me.
@bethl29 күн бұрын
I think that’s the point…different hands require adjustments. Whatever works best!
@noiseworks2 ай бұрын
WAY above my skill level, but wow
@strykebolten4485Ай бұрын
His ability to to relay so much information with such clarity is admirable
@mediumsizedgrapeАй бұрын
Her*
@jakubrojek3652Ай бұрын
Only intelligent people can afford this amount of fecetiousness and humor as this woman did.
@carlmagnussen7773Ай бұрын
Easy as pie? Oh stop it you!!!!
@llwydanwylАй бұрын
quite an aggressive style of playing
@MiloSatoriАй бұрын
Well, obviously.
@ciararespect4296Ай бұрын
7:34 but that's definitely cheating. The whole idea of the etude is a study using precisely those fingers Chopin wanted.. Fair enough uf it's easier to use different fingering and sharing notes in other types of music but not in this case
@derekstanyer20 күн бұрын
I disagree. A pianist can do what they want with it to convey the music as Chopin intended. No notes or dynamic markings or articulations are being changed. I always think if it’s indistinguishable on an audio recording that the fingering is changed, go for it. People change fingering all the time in the Chopin etudes, not a big deal
@gameclips5734Ай бұрын
'cheating' in an etude does seem a bit incongruous
@tylerthecreation1877Ай бұрын
I wasn’t expecting to see her play that fast, jaw bout fell off.
@johnb6723Ай бұрын
Scales are a bit.......fishy. (joke)
@RootinrPootineАй бұрын
Scales are like money-they are the root of all evil
@ThePianoman999-n2hАй бұрын
Waste of time
@plokhokhoroscho2599Ай бұрын
Useless suggestoins.
@NovellAllen18 күн бұрын
The fingering in the Chopin etude is absolutely cheating because it is not a mere piano piece it's an etude to address the very same problem she's avoiding.omg...so silly. If you can't play it as is, then you have an almost unlimited resource of other repertoire to choose from. Every pianist finds their specialty overtime based on what works best for them musically and technically. Chopin etudes live performances are not required to have a concert career
@maestro7PLАй бұрын
There are 2 problems I have with this tutorial: 1) Why does she constantly pedal thru all the scales? That is a no-no. She has such great fingers, but the scales are not clear because of this terrible pedalling. 2) She emphasizes speed over clarity. This is usually not a good thing. Listen to the eveness of her fast scales. They are not even. The sweep is there, but that should not be at the expense of the clarity abd rythmic definition. The best part of her advice I agree with--always re-arrange to make the passage easier when you can, but if you use two hands in a written-single-handed scale, it must sound to the listener like one hand.
@paulmeisel339Ай бұрын
You may be right - partly - , but from a practical point of view she's doing alright. I think, she's a master in playing and teaching, with very good musicality.