Video není dostupné.
Omlouváme se.
How To Develop STAMINA for Long Pieces or Programs
Vložit
- čas přidán 31. 05. 2020
- View Josh's new FREE webinar training, "10 Unusual Tips To Take Your Playing To The NEXT LEVEL!": event.webinarjam.com/register...
View Josh's premiere course, ProPractice Lifetime Access, and get instant access to every previous and future ProPractice video, forever! joshwrightpiano.teachable.com...
View the VIP MasterClass Series here, featuring videos not seen on CZcams: joshwrightpiano.teachable.com...
To view ALL of the gear Josh uses, click here: kit.co/joshwrightpiano
To download Josh's FREE ProPractice video pack (which he released at the beginning of the COVID-19 quarantine to help pianists continue to develop their skills in the possible absence of regular piano lessons) containing full-length ProPractice tutorials in all levels of study (Early Beginner, Mid-Late Beginner, Intermediate, and Advanced levels) click here: joshwrightpiano.teachable.com...
In this video, we discuss some of my favorite strategies for building up stamina in taxing pieces, or large sets of works in order to conserve energy and be able to get through your piece or program effectively.
🔔 Subscribe for more videos like this: czcams.com/users/joshwrightpia...
Loved the mood of this video. It was like having a nice chat about such a crucial topic!
Here is a tutorial on a topic I've been asked about a lot via email - how do I have the energy to get through my longer pieces, or a large program? I hope you all enjoy the tips presented here. Have a great week of practice!
Josh, Can you please make a video on how to play the left hand softly and speedy for the Revolutionary etude? Thank you in advance!
Andrew C I think he goes over it in his pro practice a while back
@@user-tg7ii4ft4f Ok, Thanks!
Andrew C he hits on that etude in three different videos
You played that program last January, the 4 Ballades etc when you were ill? Heavens, talk about stamina!! And excellent discussion about stamina in this video! Thanks so much.
I find that it’s my brain that gets tired, as opposed to my body.
Was just about to post that very same thing. It's probably to do with the material I'm playing but I'm putting together a 30 min program just now and it drains my brain.
@@colinyoungscot I’m a lightweight, anyway, more accustomed to playing pieces that are five or six minutes long.
.
Yes me too, i find often i hit a wall, i’m exhausted.. its almost physical sensation. I’m hoping it’s just about getting enough sleep the night before. If I have a particularly intense long practice session that leaves me feeling very fulfilled and satisfied about my playing, I find I want to do the same thing the next day and I can’t. At that point I basically mechanically go over the pieces sometimes slowly and then just call it a day
Me, too
Speaking of stamina, Daniil Trifonov's transcendental etudes on CZcams made my brain glitch. How can someone have that much energy to play the entire set & encores in one seating? And that too with such precision & expressiveness. Shocks me whenever I think of it.
Its his mind set
Josh is a Chopin scholar
Wow! I’ve gone back to seriously practicing the Winter Wind after a few decades and everything you said about having stamina made perfect sense. Thanks for your inspiration and your advice on playing “correctly”. Love your videos:)
Argentina Danzas Op. 2 No. 3 absolutely killed me.
Good topic I especially like the reminder to work from the back of the work and add to the ending. Even though I’ve done the first couple pages on a sonata I think I’m going start at the end tomorrow and build inwards so I don’t get bogged down. That same concept can be done with phrases and can be done with whole pieces, it’s such a good idea!
Thank you for answering this both personally and with a video!!
Transcendental Etudes tutorial series? that would be so epic
Российская Федерация totally second this, although that means Dr. Wright would have to learn all the etudes. I think that might be too much to ask.
@@vipinbhat6971 He's done all of the Chopin Etudes. I'm suggesting sparsely not all in one. Although I wouldn't mind either
Josh is adding Mazeppa to his repertoire...Feux is ridiculously hard, Wilde is still quite tough... need tons of practise...and patience...
Thank you very much Josh!
Great video.
Great topic! I’m struggling with this issue now
I have been playing piano for 6 years and I’m trying to play moonlight sonata 3rd movement which is wayyyyy beyond my still level. The biggest issue is how tired my hands get after 3 seconds of it. Im getting there though!!!
Haha i just saw an advertisement of yours, very well made! My compliments
Superb Josh !
love U always 🤗
Sam 🎵✌🏻
Great video!
So good!
Again, as with the octave lesson, I appreciate the real world pragmatic advice from a real world performing pianist. Now, this guy at 3:10 - "If you just synchronize your lungs to your mantra, you can run a marathon without training." Yeah, right. Of course, world class Olympic runners apply subtle, expert, microscopic techniques to shave milliseconds off their time to break the world record. But they also put in the roadwork. It's not a dirty secret.
Awesome !
I don’t know if you would endorse this but I noted I still got quite a bit of fatigue (which I equate to simple lactic acidosis buildup) on the lateral dorsum of my R forearm when playing Chopin 10.1 and 10.2. I can play the pieces pretty well but the fatigue can get real by the end. What I have been doing is actually targeting a faster tempo (usually that means just playing at tempo Chopin indicated lol) for the sole purpose of building stamina. I am obviously not as successful in the musicality or accuracy but when doing so the burn comes on faster and when it does I take a just take a break and restart where I left off. Over the last few months I have less and less fatigue. Also proper warmup I have noticed is extremely important in reducing fatigue. You don’t want to just sit down and play a taxing piece cold.
Great vid
Nice life advice 👌
I saw you at the 2015 Chopin Piano Competition, nice job
Would love a paid pro practice video on chopin's minute waltz in the near future if you ever get the time to do it ;P
Hardest piece I've dealt with this on is Bartók's Three Etudes. Also heard András Schiff saying recently his fingers literally bleed after Bartók's 1st and 2nd piano concertos. Any tips for some of these more rhythmically demanding pieces? Thinking particularly about cultivating a metronomic dance-like feel with odd meters and displaced accents amidst extremely drawn out technical sections. Thanks!
Hi Josh!
Josh, Can you please make a video on how to play the left hand softly and speedy for the Revolutionary etude? Thank you in advance!
I believe he has three different videos out addressing different aspects of the revolutionary étude he covers it pretty thoroughly
Hey Josh, do you have any thoughts on Interleaved practicing as opposed to Blocked practice?
This is very challenging
Have you ever played the Beethoven sonata op 2 no.3? If so, do you have tips on it?
Hi Josh, I love your videos, but why are they all so quiet?
Who would you say is more difficult to play, Franz Liszt (in the 1830’s-50’s repertoire) or Maurice Ravel?
Ravel has tons of pieces that are easy to play whereas liszt only has a few
@@wangobrigado3864 yes but toughest Ravel can easily hold its own against hardest Liszt.
Sir, can u raise your talking volume little bit higher...
Igor Levit played Satie’s Vexations all the way through, 840 times.
My left arm tenses up and I feel like I’m doing push-ups when playing songs that just don’t lighten up
the sound is low
3rd
There's no activity that when done 6 hours straight won't get you tired. Artists tend to BS a lot.
💯