29 Concert Pianists Teach Pedaling

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  • čas přidán 13. 06. 2024
  • 0:00 I never learned how to pedal
    1:47 Pedaling mechanics
    5:31 Soft pedal
    7:06 Sostenuto pedal
    8:15 "Half pedal"
    9:41 Pedal in Bach?
    11:17 Pedaling Haydn and Mozart
    12:43 Beethoven's pedal markings
    15:18 Pedaling Schubert
    16:41 Chopin's pedal markings
    20:20 Pedal work in 19th-20th century rep
    23:27 Pedaling Debussy and Ravel
    26:13 You pedal by ear
    For complete lessons and courses, join tonebase Piano today: tonebase.co/piano
    Featured tonebase Artists (in order of appearance)
    Garrick Ohlsson
    Jerome Lowenthal
    Leann Osterkamp
    John O'Conor
    Edna Golandsky
    Nicolas Namoradze
    Seymour Bernstein
    Dominic Cheli
    Frederic Chiu
    Jean-Yves Thibaudet
    Michelle Cann
    Claire Huangci
    Daniela Bracchi
    Asiya Korepanova
    Barbara Nissman
    Gwendolyn Mok
    Evan Shinners
    Anne-Marie McDermott
    Simone Dinnerstein
    Sara Davis Buechner
    Jean-Efflam Bavouzet
    Norman Krieger
    Henry Kramer
    Vadym Kholodenko
    Rebecca Penneys
    Jarred Dunn
    Jeffrey Biegel
    Jon Kimura Parker
    Imri Talgam
    Peter Dugan
    Hosted and created by Ben Laude
    Post-production assistant: Robert Fleitz
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Komentáře • 372

  • @jessevallejo8797
    @jessevallejo8797 Před rokem +496

    Legend has it she is still indicating "Pedal... Pedal... Pedal... Pedal... Pedal... Pedal..." to this very day.

  • @mhermarckarakouzian8899
    @mhermarckarakouzian8899 Před rokem +360

    After 12 years with the same teacher, I switched to another teacher and my first lesson with her was all pedalling. She was on the floor like some crazy person with her hand on my foot pressing on my shoe. On off, on off. My mom was there too and it was such a clown show that I nearly decided to not continue with her. Thank God I didn’t. She ended up changing my life (she had actually studied with Babayan for 6 years, but back then, no one really knew who he was.. we’re talking 2005-2006). I’ve never forgotten that first lesson.

    • @leschatsmusicale
      @leschatsmusicale Před rokem +6

      😂

    • @MrInterestingthings
      @MrInterestingthings Před rokem +9

      I saw Babayan on t.v. when he competed at Chopin competition . Have never forgotten him and now his students everywhere talk about him !

    • @murdo_mck
      @murdo_mck Před rokem +6

      Great story! Garrick Ohlsson has expanded on his at 2:08. Rosina Lhévinne (who was in her eighties) would hold his foot while she was lying on the floor and explain "I'm really serious about this!"

    • @nataliem.8127
      @nataliem.8127 Před rokem +3

      🇦🇲I’m glad that you didn’t change your teacher. In my case I didn’t have that much passionate teacher. Hachoghouchoun Mher 🫶🏻

    • @Checkmate1138
      @Checkmate1138 Před rokem +2

      ...Who is Babayan?

  • @pijlenboog23
    @pijlenboog23 Před rokem +28

    18:58 I spat out my drink. Seymour is such a legend

    • @bassmaiasa1312
      @bassmaiasa1312 Před rokem +1

      But I. wished he'd followed up. What if Chopin wrote a dotted quarter note? What difference would it make between a quarter and dotted quarter if you hold down the pedal? The composers are often so painstaking with their dots -- real pains in the ykw! What happens to the dot details under the pedal?

  • @CodyHazelleMusic
    @CodyHazelleMusic Před rokem +93

    This is very interesting…the first lesson I give to all of my students, assuming there is an acoustic piano around, is just having them look inside the piano and see how the pedals work as I press down on them one at a time. I also inevitably give ( maybe a year or two in) what I call “the pedal lecture” where I spend nearly the whole lesson explaining different contexts of pedaling and how to use your ears.

  • @nancyandcortaz
    @nancyandcortaz Před rokem +19

    This was one of the most confusingly helpful pedal videos ever. I will be watching this many times! 😂 Thank you for putting it together!!

  • @plvsbpb
    @plvsbpb Před rokem +39

    Ben you are such a gem

  • @theresawolf109
    @theresawolf109 Před rokem +9

    I had a very good piano teacher before I went to college who taught me all sorts of pedal techniques. Not once in college did anyone mention the pedal. Non-piano faculty used to ask me how I was creating so many different sonorities with the pedal.

  • @tchaffman
    @tchaffman Před rokem +5

    27:04 Jean-Yves "what are those!!" Thibaudet

  • @aBachwardsfellow
    @aBachwardsfellow Před rokem +73

    For me, the piano wasn't so bad; it's when I hit 32 pedals on the organ that things started to get ... interesting. 🙂

    • @ronanspiano3187
      @ronanspiano3187 Před rokem +2

      Ikr???

    • @16charlot61
      @16charlot61 Před rokem +4

      I fully understand you

    • @simonepedrazzini7569
      @simonepedrazzini7569 Před rokem +2

      I find it more difficoult with piano pedals though, because it's more sophisticated . With the organ you just press what you have to press and surely it's hard (it's like learning to move a third arm that you never used and knowing how to finely move 3 hands together), but at least you don't have to worry about the sound.

    • @aBachwardsfellow
      @aBachwardsfellow Před rokem +4

      ​@@simonepedrazzini7569 That is a very good point - especially artistically speaking from a pianistic point of view. Piano pedalling is much more nuanced with what is going on with the hands in terms of blending (or not blending) the sounds.
      However, with the organ it's not quite as simple as " ... you don't have to worry about the sound." The organ pedals have to be played every bit as articulated as the manuals, and in conjunction with the manuals -- not just bass notes, but artistically articulated and phrased contrapuntal melodic lines as well - :-)

  • @maxcohen13
    @maxcohen13 Před rokem +34

    All my years of study came rushing back during this video, forcing me to remember two things I learned along the way:
    1. The ability to do and the ability to teach are light years apart.
    2. Performers rarely know what composers wanted - _especially_ when handed detailed instructions on a diamond encrusted platter. 😅

    • @blueridding
      @blueridding Před rokem

      This is what I have to remind myself of all the time. I’m kind of a rubbish classical pianist/performer, but I am a hell of a good teacher

    • @hetedeleambacht6608
      @hetedeleambacht6608 Před 3 měsíci

      @@blueridding i believe you!!

  • @TheBlackD
    @TheBlackD Před rokem +29

    This is clearly the best piano channel of youtube. Thank you for your hardwork !

  • @The_Guy_Who_Asked_06
    @The_Guy_Who_Asked_06 Před rokem +13

    8:03 Thibaudet's shoes 💀

  • @lindafitak
    @lindafitak Před rokem +9

    My first piano teacher, in 1977, taught us in detail how to use the pedal, when not to use it, etc, and I have never forgotten it. ❤

    • @mariagheorghe7139
      @mariagheorghe7139 Před rokem

      You must have had a good teacher then. Most teachers focus on technique for most of the time in the early years and kind of neglect the area of music performance where you bring in dynamics, colours

  • @ikemyung8623
    @ikemyung8623 Před rokem +6

    WONDERFUL! When I taught piano, I noticed that there were some students who used the pedal "naturally" without major problems. Others, were a disaster, and I created exercises to teach them to pedal correctly....because to begin with, pedaling MUST be within a rhythmic context.

  • @itzelguerra2655
    @itzelguerra2655 Před rokem

    Thank you for taking the time to put together a cohesive video from an assortment of tips from the experts. Very engaging video.

  •  Před rokem +3

    Maybe this channel is strong and widespread enough to teach young pianists about pedalling in baroque music. Just please do never forget that the damping in any harpsichord action is very rudimentary, to say the least. So even if all the registers are in the ON position with the dampers on the strings, there will be some amount of constant sympathetic resonance. If any of the registers is/are in the OFF position, the dampers won't even touch the strings so you get a lot of sympathetic resonance, the more registers in the OFF position, the more sympathetic resonance the instrument will produce, since the strings share the same bridge and all the undamped strings will vibrate as well. Plus in historical instruments there were often stops that just did not have any damping at all and could be used as a special effect. (N. B. CPE Bach says that the best way to play a free fantasia on an early fortepiano is if you do it on the undamped stop). So no matter what you do on an early keyboard instrument, whether they be harpsichords, clavichords, early fortepianos, spinets etc, you will always have a bit of a pedal in the sound. The amount can of course vary, but there will always be some constant "pedal" in the sound. Andras Schiff is just utter nonsense to me. Playing baroque music on the piano in a horribly flat way and then use the harpsichord as an excuse... Awful.
    We also know from a letter by G. F. Duarte Antwerp 1648 to Constantijn Huygens (father of Christiaan Huygens) that harpsichords were set up in a way that the dampers of the registers in OFF position did not touch the strings:
    "The extreme length of the large clavecimbels is 8 voeten more or less, the pitch Chorista, with 3 registers - that is, three different strings of which 2 strings are at unison and one at the octava and all three of which can be played together or each string separately, with or without the octave, like the ordinary clavecimbels that your honour mentions. But they have a better tone because the unused strings which is not played moves of its own accord, producing such a sweet quiet tone through the principal sound, which does not occur when all three strings are played together."
    You may be interested to check this: czcams.com/video/MOITmxlKesg/video.html - without dampers
    czcams.com/video/t0gW5hJsZwk/video.html - the same piece played with dampers

  • @jeffaldridge4051
    @jeffaldridge4051 Před rokem +4

    Informative and beautifully constructed! A real treat to hear these great pianists teaching us.

  • @dees3179
    @dees3179 Před měsícem

    That was excellent. Thanks and congratulations to the editor for the brilliant work.

  • @oldschoolchartist
    @oldschoolchartist Před rokem +21

    Nobody really mentioned flutter pedaling... That is a very quick half pedal that can be 3-4 pedals per second that is particularly useful in more modern music that contains a lot of atonal passage work. Also useful in some of the more chromatic passage work in romantic compositions.

    • @spiewajit4ncz
      @spiewajit4ncz Před rokem

      That is some higher lvl crazy shit

    • @rafiqp8800
      @rafiqp8800 Před 11 měsíci

      That' the editor's fault.

    • @hetedeleambacht6608
      @hetedeleambacht6608 Před 3 měsíci

      I can see why. chromatic fast notes after each other easily give a blurry tart sound, you cannot hear anything anymore. Only I wonder hoe good that is for the feet muscles

  • @vaadwilsla858
    @vaadwilsla858 Před rokem +9

    12:45 blows me away. Incredible sound.

  • @e.d.1642
    @e.d.1642 Před rokem +2

    Another great video ! You're definitely one of the best classical piano channels out here ! I just wih they spoke a bit about Satie too !

  • @davidhomer78
    @davidhomer78 Před rokem +9

    I tried pedaling with my ears and my hair got caught in the bike chain. I don't recommend it.

  • @udonsschaach
    @udonsschaach Před rokem +1

    I didn't expect this video to be that helpful . I am truly thankful

  • @christianknuchel
    @christianknuchel Před rokem +22

    Bach was highly interested in new developments in the realm of keyboard instruments. It's silly to think that he'd forgo the use of the pedal on a modern piano.

    • @gojewla
      @gojewla Před rokem

      Bach ended up liking the piano late in his life. He didn’t own one because they were not widely available

    • @spicy7302
      @spicy7302 Před rokem +2

      ​@@gojewla Keep in mind that it didn't sound or look anything like the modern piano so yeah.

    • @gojewla
      @gojewla Před rokem

      @@spicy7302 No, they didn’t, but they basically did what a modern piano does. Hell, a Clavichord basically does what a modern piano does (minus the pedal).

  • @manueladevilliers5301
    @manueladevilliers5301 Před rokem +9

    I love the " not Gary's foot"😂😂

  • @BenSadounJeremie
    @BenSadounJeremie Před rokem +2

    Thank you tonebase ! ❤

  • @clementcomposer
    @clementcomposer Před rokem +1

    Wonderful video! So much excellent wisdom in here, and demonstrative of a huge variety of situations--really valuable, thank you!

  • @mfurman
    @mfurman Před rokem +1

    This is an amazingly important episode. Tonebase is the best on line piano platform (I am a life subscriber).
    Michael

  • @aBachwardsfellow
    @aBachwardsfellow Před rokem +1

    What an excellent compilation -- thank you!

  • @HighlyShifty
    @HighlyShifty Před rokem +4

    Tonebase piano content is consistently fantastic.

  • @robertstrzelecki1568
    @robertstrzelecki1568 Před rokem

    Thank you for all what was included into this very video. So many great comments on pedaling. ANd yes, this is so true we have never been taught how to use all three pedals.

  • @sianavassileva403
    @sianavassileva403 Před rokem

    thank you for your hard work! nice assembly, enjoyed thoroughly

  • @militaryandemergencyservic3286

    A typically entertaining and yet instructive video. well done!

  • @scottjoyce100
    @scottjoyce100 Před rokem +3

    This is great. The only lesson in pedal use I got was when they put a book under it. This video confirms that everyone is different. Great job.

  • @annazully2680
    @annazully2680 Před rokem +1

    i just began learning and decided to tackle one of chopin’s nocturnes and immediately realized how important the pedal was to creating his somber sound and also realized how uncoordinated i was regarding pedaling. very helpful video!

  • @garykuovideos
    @garykuovideos Před rokem +1

    This was awesome! As a composer, I’m always happy to learn about the myriad of techniques implemented by specialists, although it can be a bit overwhelming to choose what exactly to notate. So, I took the suggestion of a pianist friend and simply indicated “con pedale” in a new work instead of clogging the page with information. Liked and subscribed!

  • @pianolink
    @pianolink Před rokem

    This video is absolutely brilliant, thank you.

  • @wendychu8539
    @wendychu8539 Před rokem

    Great episode! I am glad I have learned about pedaling while at school.

  • @coreygarrett9545
    @coreygarrett9545 Před rokem

    This was so well made, excellent video

  • @markv1006
    @markv1006 Před rokem +1

    I love this knowledge when applying pedal mechanics that can extend to other instruments or pedal-likes. knowing your equipment when getting into pedal effects for amplifiers, expression pedals for volume or parameters on delay rates, and even other forms of modulation in glide ribbon controllers, pitch wheels and resonance knobs on synth keyboards.

  • @BrianOxleyTexan
    @BrianOxleyTexan Před rokem

    Incredible. You've given me more to think about

  • @AL-pu7ux
    @AL-pu7ux Před rokem

    This was unbelievably enjoyable. I love hearing everyone’s opinions put together. They all may actually agree on something - pedal with your ears

  • @konstantin1943
    @konstantin1943 Před rokem

    What an exciting video! Thank you very much

  • @nylophone5730
    @nylophone5730 Před 4 měsíci

    Great selection of clips and placed in a good order

  • @Patty-bv8jq
    @Patty-bv8jq Před rokem

    I learned a lot of artistic technique. Thanks for this video.

  • @Masood.Hassani
    @Masood.Hassani Před rokem

    The Most Informative
    Thank You !

  • @onethousandtwonortheast8848

    Got my first Steinway finally. The fun is now getting it tweaked so I can play it correctly. Adjusting the pedal settings is so important.

  • @eddydelrio1303
    @eddydelrio1303 Před rokem +5

    Fascinating compilation! I find it interesting how many pianists seem not to be intimately familiar with the mechanism* of the action’s parts and the “innards” of the pedals. For example, it doesn’t take much depression of the damper pedal to have released all engagement of the strings, after which all further depression (or lifting of the dampers) has absolutely no effect. The range of pedal movement that actually spans from reducing damper pressure on the strings (which is not always equal across all sections) to no longer touching the strings, is far more limited than the full travel range of the pedal itself. This trait is usually unique to each instrument and advanced pianists adjust to it immediately and intimately as if a second nature (which it is by then).

    • @MrInterestingthings
      @MrInterestingthings Před rokem +2

      I knew if I searched I find a treasure and your words are indeed that! Hofmann they say and Cherkassky also could take a piano apart and put it back together . Many students nowadays are required to learn about the machine itself !

    • @ecpgieicg
      @ecpgieicg Před rokem

      Why do you think the pianists don't know it? I've never seen anyone making a distinction between the literal half way depression and full depression on the pedal. The furthest extent of half pedal indeed means you want the dampeners to be almost disengaged but still touching.

    • @hetedeleambacht6608
      @hetedeleambacht6608 Před 3 měsíci

      @@ecpgieicg i think all this stuff you can hear whilst playing, if you listren carefully

  • @Woodward23
    @Woodward23 Před rokem +3

    This is such a well made video .

  • @w3sp
    @w3sp Před rokem +17

    Love these videos where you bring in so many different pianists for their opinions! If you could choose 3 pianists who haven't been on this channel yet, who would it be? 🙂

    • @gatesurfer
      @gatesurfer Před rokem +1

      Yuja, Kissin, Richard Goode.

  • @isabelleparienty4082
    @isabelleparienty4082 Před rokem +1

    Great video even for someone like me who never touched a piano in my entire life. And btw the editing work done on this video is amazing !

  • @andrewtessman9921
    @andrewtessman9921 Před rokem

    Excellent choice of subject matter.

  • @Samsarathebodhi
    @Samsarathebodhi Před rokem

    Great video. Learned more than just pedals.

  • @nicholaskrienke9463
    @nicholaskrienke9463 Před rokem

    This was a great video. I learned a bit and it was very entertaining

  • @texanfrog1750
    @texanfrog1750 Před rokem +1

    this was a really nice video!

  • @LondonarabS
    @LondonarabS Před rokem +1

    I have never had lessons and I ha d always pedal by ear and I can create sounds that is simply bliss

  • @nilsfrederking62
    @nilsfrederking62 Před rokem +1

    Very interesting. Actually my teacher spoke about pedalling at the conservatory, but it was my second instrument while harp was my first; piano was obligatory for my composition studies. He was a great teacher, even if I was not so good, it helped a lot to understand the piano technique.

  • @alonamaloh
    @alonamaloh Před rokem +2

    I'm not a professional pianist, just an advanced amateur. I use the middle pedal in several pieces I play, usually to hold the bass while allowing my right pedal the liberty to clear the harmony when moving lines make it too blurry. Two examples that come to mind are Debussy's Claire de Lune (in the section starting on bar 15) and Albéniz's Corpus Christi en Sevilla (both in the beautiful section in the middle with lots of ppp markings and in the final section).

  • @massimilianovettore6669
    @massimilianovettore6669 Před rokem +1

    But this Is pure Gold of a channel

  • @chrissinger24
    @chrissinger24 Před rokem +1

    That’s actually the first lesson I give to every new student

  • @brent3522
    @brent3522 Před rokem +15

    I'm not sure if this is applicable for all grands, but in the piano I use, the middle pedal doesn't just sustain the lower part of the piano, but it also makes sympathetic harmonics from the opened strings, which gives an interesting effect to some pieces of music like recitative sections or Bach organ transcriptions for piano, for example. Kind of like harmonic pedal.

    • @mstalcup
      @mstalcup Před rokem +2

      You can also silently depress the keys with both your hands, hold down the middle pedal, and strum the strings like an autoharp.

    • @nathangale7702
      @nathangale7702 Před rokem +1

      Yes, I´ve seen several different mechanism for the middle pedal, seems like it´s not exactly standardized.

    • @Aqua_1014
      @Aqua_1014 Před rokem

      That's awesome

    • @oldschoolchartist
      @oldschoolchartist Před rokem +1

      @@nathangale7702 This is correct. No upright that I know of has a proper sostenuto pedal. Only grands. Some have no middle pedal at all. Some of the uprights make the middle pedal a notched locking mechanism that moves a 'practice felt' between hammers and strings. And I do not recall having ever seen a notation in any work calling for the sostenuto pedal but my knowledge is mostly up until the early 20th century.

  • @michelprimeau4531
    @michelprimeau4531 Před rokem +4

    THE quote is : "All guilt tends to disappear when you pedal (romantic music)" Seymour Bernstein

    • @hetedeleambacht6608
      @hetedeleambacht6608 Před 3 měsíci

      there is some truth in that for sure!! I m a louzy piano player but when I use pedal, I m less hard on myself, which in itself helps to continue playing and hopefully get somewhat better

  • @gabrielwolfcolor
    @gabrielwolfcolor Před rokem

    Thank you!

  • @Thomas11611
    @Thomas11611 Před rokem +1

    Frederic Chiu is phenomenal. I’ve seen him live before when he came to my University. Really nice guy!

  • @moniquelemaire5333
    @moniquelemaire5333 Před rokem

    I teach mostly beginner and intermediate students....mostly young children. "Miss Monique what are those???". They often ask. I demonstrate what each pedal does and then say, "When your legs are long enough to reach them then you may learn pedaling..🙂.
    With older students, I will demonstrate the techniques of the pedal...and eventually when they need to use a pedal in whatever they are working on the technique will be taught.
    One student was a retired nurse who played rather well. (as long as "Arthur -itis" wasn't visiting her fingers.'). I took her to a Newport Classical Festival concert just to watch the pedaling technique of a Mr. Aneivas.(I hope I spelled his name correctly!!). What a
    marvellous concert....he played the entire repertoire of the Chopin Preludes.
    We sat so we could see his right foot on the sustain constantly .......up down up down.... constantly..... beautiful..that was probably the best lesson she had for the pedals. After that experience, she actually started listening to what her pedaling was producing....it changed the level of her ability almost instantly. I said to her after she purchased a new piano that had a sostenuto pedal and was getting closer to finishing the Rhapsody in Blue : "You now need a new teacher!!!". I couldn't do much more than that for her.
    Amazing what people will do....even as a piano student with Arthritis 😁🙏🌷💗🎶🎉😁🙏💗🎶🎉🎆🕊️🎉💕☺️😇 Miss Monique

  • @mitchnew3037
    @mitchnew3037 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Beautiful 😊❤

  • @robinthomsoncomposer
    @robinthomsoncomposer Před rokem

    That was very useful so thank you

  • @benharmonics
    @benharmonics Před rokem +1

    23:10 I wish everyone played that part of Feux Follets like that!

  • @in.stereo
    @in.stereo Před rokem

    I loved this thank you 😊 🎹🦶

  • @ivor000
    @ivor000 Před rokem

    fantastic video 🎉

  • @gabewaller3999
    @gabewaller3999 Před rokem +1

    Thank you

  • @jerryvan8799
    @jerryvan8799 Před rokem

    V interesting and v useful. A rare topic!

  • @cadriver2570
    @cadriver2570 Před rokem +1

    16:35 epic transition back to Garrick.

  • @daniellu8282
    @daniellu8282 Před rokem +3

    Wish there was more talk about finger pedaling but that gets deep into harmony and orchestration.

    • @meyerbeer13
      @meyerbeer13 Před rokem

      Finger pedaling is where you start. If you can make legato with the fingers, you shouldn't use the sustain pedal.

    • @daniellu8282
      @daniellu8282 Před rokem

      @@meyerbeer13 It's more than a starting point. There are lots of expressive choices when ten fingers and complex harmonies are involved. It takes writing orchestral scores to understand the depths of pedaling.

    • @MrAquilina420
      @MrAquilina420 Před rokem +1

      Finger pedalling? Didn’t know there was a name for it. Indeed it should be prioritised above sustain pedalling.

    • @bassmaiasa1312
      @bassmaiasa1312 Před rokem +1

      @@meyerbeer13 But always conscious of injury, though. That's the danger of anti-pedal orthodoxy, you could cripple yourself.

  • @josephinebrown6631
    @josephinebrown6631 Před rokem

    Thank you kindly🤍

  • @sunnyprk100
    @sunnyprk100 Před rokem

    That's a really great point. I've never used the pedal when playing Bach's Sinfonia but whenever I took piano lessons for sinfornia, my teacher would sit next to me and use the pedal for me. It really bothered me because she never told me whether I should be using the pedal in that piece. If she asked me to use the pedal, I would have practiced using it too. 😅

  • @anthonydecarvalho652
    @anthonydecarvalho652 Před 6 měsíci

    My first piano teacher (my mother) was a superb teacher. She as a child (now 96) had studied with one of Liszt last students. As a result the study of the pedal was taught from almost the beginning. Also the was emphasis on the development of the left hand.

  • @Legomyegoorj
    @Legomyegoorj Před rokem +2

    The thing about this wonderful series is that because they are all pianists playing Steinways or Steinway-type pianos, they don’t discuss the history of the pedals, nor how different piano makers throughout history made different mechanisms for different things depending on the country and its unique sensibilities of the time. Dear Tone Base editors, I think your audience would gain so much by featuring the work of early piano specialists as well, so that there’s not just one perspective.
    It’s like asking a bunch of Italian Americans to explain the regional cuisines of Napoli vs Venezia, when they’ve never visited, eaten that food with those ingredients, or even bothered to read original recipes. Sure, Italian American has some similarities and is certainly delicious, but you should ask someone from NAPLES to explain a Margheurita pizza.

    • @hypogaion_psykhes
      @hypogaion_psykhes Před rokem +2

      I was thinking the same thing. I feel like modern pianists miss out on so much in neglecting to give any attention to the pianos the composers themselves knew and played. Older pianos typically had much lighter dampers and damper mechanisms, resulting in a "leakier" sound where the notes would continue to bleed through as the damper struggled to dampen the string. If you were to play a loud staccato chord, without pedal, on the typical historical fortepiano, you'd hear a wash of sound still lingering after you release the notes. This might explain the premature pedal-lifting called for by Beethoven in the Appassionata Sonata example.
      On the other hand, those early pianos also typically had a markedly shorter or weaker sustain than modern pianos, so this wash of sound lingering after the release of the notes wouldn't be so muddy. I imagine this is why Beethoven called for the sustain pedal to be held completely throughout the entire first movement of the Moonlight Sonata. It's barely doable at half-pedal on a modern piano, but on Beethoven's 1814 Nannette Streicher piano, full pedal would very much have been doable.

  • @gatesurfer
    @gatesurfer Před 6 měsíci

    When my piano technician came to work on my piano, he said “you use the soft pedal a lot. That’s good.” He noticed all the grooves on the hammers. This guy worked on the pianos for all the touring concert pianists who came to town. My piano is over 100 years and has original Steinway hammers. If I move the soft pedal just right, it hits the string kind of between grooves and get an almost electronic sound.
    One thing regarded using the sustain wpedal with Bach. I studied harpsichord for many years and used to be deadset against it. But the harpsichord is in fact a very resonant instrument. Even when you lift the key, there is often a slight ring afterward. You have a very small piece of felt or leather dampening the string so it doesn’t kill the sound, unlike the piano, which have thick, heavy dampers. So a harpsichord note doesn’t completely die when you lift the key. So I use pedal a bit now on piano, but not enough to blur anything. Also, having that extra ring can also help give a slightly different color to notes that are sustained over others, which helps with voicing.

  • @daniellu8282
    @daniellu8282 Před rokem +1

    Treat the dampers like the bow on a violin string. Makes a huge difference for modern repertoire like Messiaen. There are extra overtones created from vibrating strings interacting with the damper.

  • @garygimmestad4272
    @garygimmestad4272 Před rokem

    My principle teacher, Duncan McNab, did give pedaling it’s due. He also studied with Mrs. Lhevinne and quoted her often!

  • @BrianAndersonTT
    @BrianAndersonTT Před rokem

    Ok, this sold me on Tonebase.

  • @iceboorg9737
    @iceboorg9737 Před rokem

    Im self-taught and did not know what the other 2 pedals even do
    So thankyou... that was well overdue

  • @maultooga
    @maultooga Před rokem

    Big fan of this video

  • @blingmeblingme101
    @blingmeblingme101 Před rokem +4

    I also get down on the floor and have my students remove their shoes and I place my hand on their foot.....yes it's weird and sometimes stinky, but I find it is the most thorough way to teach pedal work. The older I get the more of the lesson I use to get back up from the floor!!!😅

  • @modakshantanu
    @modakshantanu Před rokem +1

    Thanks!

  • @mariagheorghe7139
    @mariagheorghe7139 Před rokem +1

    What Maestro Jon Kimura Parker mentiones about lifting pedal for resolution does happen frequently in piano Jazz

  • @MrInterestingthings
    @MrInterestingthings Před rokem +3

    Golandsky and Taubman made names for themselves with relaxation technique and scientific updates on this phenomenon that was discussed as far back as Liszt and his pupils. I remember reading somewhere there were only 6 gradations for one of the pedals meaning depressing pedals is not tied exactly to how the dampers lift off the strings . So does this mean the key itself cannot as older German training taught that moving the key had an effect on the string and that one could mimic the string player's vibrato. There is a lot of nonsense involved with instrumental playing in general . 7:42 shows middle pedal being used for legato upper register chords!!!??? Thiswas completely new to me ! I can't wait to try it on that same DMSonata I played last year of highschool .O'Connor knows a great deal about music and the piano.He must know that Hadyn's small delicate pianoforte's cannot be compared to today's Steinways .Has he played Mozart's Stein.He knows holding the pedal continuously will be and was a new effect in Hadyn's daty but it won't sound the same on today's stronger pitchholding steel strings.I was disconcerted that he did not explain himself better.I've watched him teaching here and have a cd of him!Flutter pedal ? I've heard about this before . There may be some nonsense about shaking keys at bed for a vibrato sound or other things but these people have spent their entire lives many before the age of 6 at the piano and at very knowledgable teachers . This is scarier than most things at piano because you MUST LISTEN or you can't discover . People talk about Michelangeli's pedalling only experts can tell these things and when most of us listen someone would have to lead our ears to it . The high levels of expertise required in every profession ...

  • @ErnestSDavis1
    @ErnestSDavis1 Před rokem +1

    For those who subscribe to Tonebase: Claire Huangci's discussion of the Lizst transcription of Beethoven's 6th Symphony has a lot of fascinating discussion of using the pedal there. They really should have included some excerpts of that here.

  • @NickolasBerdzenishvili
    @NickolasBerdzenishvili Před rokem +2

    I'm not piano player, but when i was playing with my grandma's piano, right pedal always sounded like mint for me ) it made sound feel like mint or menthol :D

    • @methyod
      @methyod Před rokem +1

      Etched into my memory is the best music theory teacher I ever had playing a wonderful chord (some big extended add 9 kinda deal IIRC) and announcing to the class "smoooooooth like a menthol cigarette"

  • @byaccidental
    @byaccidental Před rokem +1

    Chef's kiss to the editor for following on the over soy sauced fish with Seymour's unfinished tuna fish sandwich.

  • @JakobArnar
    @JakobArnar Před rokem +1

    thank. you. sir.

  • @myless789
    @myless789 Před rokem

    Thank you so much for this very informative video! The pedal feels so much more difficult to master then actually playing the keyboard itself! this video game me a lot of insight; thank you of that:)
    Also every time I hear Mozart K545 all I'm going to hear is pedal...pedal...pedal..pedal...😂😂😂😂.

  • @georgecurtis3322
    @georgecurtis3322 Před rokem

    8:02 I was NOT expecting Thibaudet to have such drip

  • @GutenStrephenHassen
    @GutenStrephenHassen Před rokem

    How is it that every word this people are saying is mesmerizing. I just want to hear them talk. Obviously, the playing is top notch too. It's impressive just how easy they can pick up a piece at any bar because for them is second nature to play with such an ease after all those years of practice and polishing their craft. Just wow

  • @mourgoukos
    @mourgoukos Před 6 měsíci

    I started learning again as an adult at 22 with a Russian teacher in Greece. First lesson was on pedal.

  • @LearnThaiRapidMethod
    @LearnThaiRapidMethod Před rokem +1

    I never knew that there was a middle pedal, but then I’ve never had the opportunity to own a grand piano. The thing I have in the middle of my upright(s) is a piece of cloth to dampen all the notes, and it makes everything sound like playing with gloves on.
    Someday I’ll get me a digital piano that has a sostenuto piano - and at least now I know to ask this question. :)

  • @rusticagenerica
    @rusticagenerica Před rokem +1

    Tonebase library should be FREE and downloadable as a big archive via some file sharing protocol.

  • @danwebster5439
    @danwebster5439 Před rokem +1

    Excellent lesson, could use a demonstration of the dampers action to explain what physically happens when we apply the right pedal. I can see that there can be slight changes when slightly pressing the pedal, but if you watch the dampers, they're either in contact with strings, muting them, or not. Not exactly on or off, but close to it. No way there are many gradations

  • @ackamack101
    @ackamack101 Před rokem +1

    In all the years I have been studying the piano, I had one person show me how to pedal in one session. Otherwise I have been on my own figuring it out for most of my life.