5 TIPS on How to Play Chopin's Fantaisie-Impromptu BEAUTIFULLY with Pianist Duane Hulbert

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  • čas přidán 27. 06. 2024
  • Dr. Duane Hulbert gives five tips on how to make Chopin's Fantaisie-Impromptu lyrical and lovely. Many pianists play this piece but how can one take it to the next level? (Hint: don't play this as an etude!; it needs to SING.)
    1) Follow the contour of the lines. 2:20
    2) Use the RH thumb to bring out the melody. 3:12
    3) Accent the offbeat notes. 4:02
    4) Connect the melody lines. 4:43
    5) Contrast the loud and soft passages. 7:34
    To hear this piece played in its entirety, go to our companion video: • Chopin's Fantaisie- Im...
    To hear Nikolai Lugansk play this piece at a rapid 84 beats per minute: • Lugansky - Chopin Fant... (But still he shapes the phrases!)
    If you value classical music and enjoy content like ours, be sure to subscribe (it helps us know we're on the right track) . And like and COMMENT; we LOVE hearing your thoughts!
    Thanks for watching!

Komentáře • 69

  • @philmann3476
    @philmann3476 Před rokem +8

    So nice to hear you say speed isn't everything. This is a piece to be performed for its beauty, not to show off gratuitous keyboard gymnastic skills.

    • @LearnLoveMusic
      @LearnLoveMusic  Před rokem +2

      As I've grown older, it seems that I'm more interested in musicality and making a piece beautiful. Speed should not be the goal, even if you can play it fast. Maybe when I was 20, I thought differently. I heard Arthur Rubenstein play when he was about 88, and he played with all of his heart. That's my goal.

  • @corneliusfriedel5579
    @corneliusfriedel5579 Před 2 lety +15

    What a real gem this man is. Videos with so much good content. Structure so good. It’s really more than worth it to listen. Thank you so much. God bless!

  • @jimgu2578
    @jimgu2578 Před 2 lety +6

    I never learned to play this piece, but I have heard my fellow student play it many times. I remember I got to my session early one day and my piano teacher was in a session with her. The lesson he taught her - it was really the same as your fourth tip, that the middle section can be more expressive and less restricted by tempo. My teacher then played that part to show her and it was beautiful indeed. Hearing your understanding and rendition of this piece really brings me a lot of nostalgia.

  • @teresavasey1041
    @teresavasey1041 Před 2 lety +2

    Very informative, thank you.

  •  Před 2 lety

    Amazing tips. Thanks for sharing 👍

  • @shaon8896
    @shaon8896 Před rokem

    Incredible video, your teaching style is so helpful!

  • @jimgu2578
    @jimgu2578 Před 2 lety

    This is one of the most beautiful piece I’ve ever listened to. Glad to listen to your thoughts on that.

  • @Joshua-dc1bs
    @Joshua-dc1bs Před 2 lety

    This is amazing 😍

  • @shivcharanchavanpiano5134

    Very good tips thank

  • @brviking
    @brviking Před 2 lety

    Just one word: love!

  • @nisookh
    @nisookh Před rokem +2

    This has been such a moving emotionally filled detailed description of how to play this amazing piece by such an amazing teacher . Thank you kindly .

  • @billiehunter7603
    @billiehunter7603 Před 2 lety +2

    Very nice video! Keep going!

  • @mariadaconceicaooliveiraca2423
    @mariadaconceicaooliveiraca2423 Před 8 měsíci +1

    great performance ❤

  • @menta364
    @menta364 Před 2 lety

    L’ho appena scoperto e trovo che lei suoni in modo davvero emozionante. Grazie per i preziosi consigli e complimenti davvero!

  • @wayneharmon4485
    @wayneharmon4485 Před 4 měsíci

    Very nice! I had never picked up on tip number 5 before, but i will now.

  • @LucasFMelo-op4rg
    @LucasFMelo-op4rg Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the video, I just learnet to play this piece.

  • @ruthreuben1235
    @ruthreuben1235 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you so much for this video! It is very encouraging, because i couldnt play this peace so fast, i nearly gave up on peace, and waching your video it gave me hope that peace can be also beautiful in slower motion and played beautifully as you explain. Your video encourage and gives hope not to give up and to give life to notes and not only technicly. All blessings!

  • @user-yb7nk4lo2i
    @user-yb7nk4lo2i Před rokem

    Yes, excellency I find you for a long a time this is the right speed to enjoy such beautiful song by Chopin some parts of this song made me crazy all the time

  • @jumiduss
    @jumiduss Před 2 lety +7

    Amazing content. Found you a couple days ago and all your videos have great depth into the songs you choose. Can't wait for this channel to get big.

  • @linglingpianista
    @linglingpianista Před 8 měsíci

    Amazing ❤

  • @leowald1
    @leowald1 Před 5 měsíci

    Great tips! The harmonies and the beauty of the piece are more clearly heard at a lower tempo. "Impromptu" implies a sense of searching. Perhaps, a kind of searching attitude in the beginning could be employed as well. It's like answering the question: where are we going? It's as if the piece was composed in the moment of being played.

  • @philosophicallyspeaking6463

    I agree completely! I always play slower when performing for 'non'-player enthusiasts in order to aid their musical consumption, digestion, metabolization, and more fully-accounted appreciation of any given work. Otherwise, they appreciate the performer instead of the music, generating 'fans' (such as are everywhere on CZcams) rather than actual lovers of music. Blinded by the flash of technique, those who have not interacted with the piece themselves fail to discover the other...'greater' Chopin that pianist come to know: not the one who says banal things beautifully, but the one who says beautiful things profoundly. "Cannons in flowers!"
    To fail to 'evidence' the profundity is to fail Chopin. I teach my students that the correct speed is approached as the phrases begin to appear and the individual notes begin to disappear (unless their is 'intended' contrapuntal intent). Correctly phrased, nuanced and pedaled, on a fine instrument, it is always a much slower tempo both than you'd expect, and than the composer 'ever' indicates; for suffering the obligation to suggest at, or give opportunity to virtuosity and a license to advertise itself; usually above or at the expense of the music. Liszt himself said that, "Chopin can't play as fast as he seems to." LOL...Liszt!
    Reduced tempos also more effectively evidence the oft unaccounted harmonic and contrapuntal genius of Chopin (who is too often dismissed as a shallow melodist) that, otherwise, only the performers experience, for having come upon each chromatic 'shading' at much slower speed while learning the piece, and therefore too becoming sensitised to their presence in the undergrowth of the rich humus of its harmony played at speed. This revealing point is also the speed at which, ironically, if it is precise, sounds the most exciting even though it is not particularly fast.
    Bernstein said this to us in rehearsal of the Bartok 2nd, and John Browning talks about this too, likely as he received it from the Lhevinnes.

  • @grantveebeejay535
    @grantveebeejay535 Před rokem

    Thank you Dr Duane. I'm going to come back to this piece now after 40 years emboldened by these tips! I really enjoy and appreciate your efforts. Thank you.

  • @carpediem4179
    @carpediem4179 Před 7 měsíci

    Good teacher

  • @elishaba
    @elishaba Před 9 měsíci

    Bonjour Monsieur
    Merci pour vos conseils.

  • @jerrychau94
    @jerrychau94 Před 2 lety

    I just subscribed, sir.
    I wish there are more videos to come.

  • @michaelsmith697
    @michaelsmith697 Před 2 lety +1

    Very good tips indeed! I agree with everything you said here. The first part must never sound like it’s being rushed. And the second section can definitely afford some rubato and expressiveness! Excellent video!

  • @eronalmeida2904
    @eronalmeida2904 Před 18 dny

    ...uma das mais belas de Шопен!

  • @pghagen
    @pghagen Před 2 lety

    Thank you for these tips! I think I have to re-study this piece completely again. Specially the repeat of the melody at the end I use to play completely different. And indeed I used to play the piece too fast.

  • @Nunofurdambiznez
    @Nunofurdambiznez Před 2 lety

    Said it before, gonna say it again.. the tone from your piano is absolutely magnificent.. and of course, it goes without saying, your playing is fantastic!

  • @tomcat5467
    @tomcat5467 Před 2 lety

    Hello 5 tips.you are best tip

  • @rubberplantsandwich
    @rubberplantsandwich Před 6 měsíci

    good video

  • @gerardbedecarter
    @gerardbedecarter Před rokem

    Most interesting.

  • @briancoveney3080
    @briancoveney3080 Před 11 měsíci

    I like you, Sir. You're all-right.

  • @yvonne9881
    @yvonne9881 Před 2 lety

    Tx heaps for the helpful tips!! 👍👍 Can you please give us some tips on Chopin Etude Op10 no5 too? 🎹🎹🎹

  • @graham2342
    @graham2342 Před 2 lety

    Having listened to your lesson, I think you should be forced by demand to play the whole piece. How beautifully you play.

  • @monsieur171
    @monsieur171 Před 2 lety +18

    Fun fact: most of the stuff you point out isn't actually what Chopin wrote, but what Fontana changed after he died. I recommend checking out an urtext edition.

    • @rogerg4916
      @rogerg4916 Před 2 lety +1

      Would you know where to find the urtext edition?

    • @ROBERT-ml7ml
      @ROBERT-ml7ml Před 5 měsíci +1

      "Fontana changed it AFTER he died" lol.

    • @TheSeaTortoise
      @TheSeaTortoise Před 3 měsíci

      Fun fact, it wasn’t published until after he died.

  • @murraywilloughby7116
    @murraywilloughby7116 Před 2 lety

    Nice! You helped me think of playing the Thumb more legato (tip no. 2) and then the little finger more legato to bring out the melody rather than just relying on dynamics.
    I have the same feelings about the Waldstein: It's much more beautiful at a slower tempo. Beethoven wasn't much of a Horseman (which is what the first movement is all about: a Triste on horseback during a Hunt, Beethoven riding the beautiful chocolate mare the Count had given him specifically for the purpose) so breaking into a gallop wasn't natural to him and really all he could manage was a very fast trot.

  • @billligon4005
    @billligon4005 Před 2 lety +5

    Please show how put hands together 3 against 4 et al.

    • @jfpary7336
      @jfpary7336 Před 2 lety +2

      Yes yes! This is the real challenge here!

  • @pchabanowich
    @pchabanowich Před rokem

    💐

  • @EranM
    @EranM Před 2 lety

    my left ear is grateful.

  • @peterectasy2957
    @peterectasy2957 Před 16 dny

    Duane Hulbert could have video about chopin`s balades

  • @cutguyz
    @cutguyz Před 5 měsíci

    First of all, I found your 5 tips very informative. The trouble with Chopin is that many editions are heavily edited and I fear the edition you are playing from is one of those. I do not know whether it is available in the US, but the 'go to' edition for Chopin's works are published by PWM and edited by Jan Ekier (who is now dead). This is the only edition which is accepted for the Chopin Competition held in Poland, which as we all know has been won by the likes of Marta Argerich and Marizio Polini to name but 2 winners. His edition does not have any 'off beat' accents in bars 17 - 22 and there is no 'pesante' marking for the introduction of the middle section. However, I am aware they are in Schirmer's edition edited by Mikuli.

    • @LearnLoveMusic
      @LearnLoveMusic  Před 5 měsíci

      I'd love to take a look at the PWN edition. It's fascinating to see how different editors interpret in subtle ways a composer's work.

  • @dr_ned_flanders
    @dr_ned_flanders Před rokem +1

    I would like to know how to play the 4:3 polyrythms. Is there a good way that doesn't bogle the mind?

    • @LearnLoveMusic
      @LearnLoveMusic  Před rokem

      Count aloud while playing. 1-2-3-4,1-2-3, 1-2-3-4, 1-2-3.

  • @AlvinTOS
    @AlvinTOS Před 2 lety

    I really want to learn this piece, but I can never grasp the rhythm in the right hand for bars 13-24, playing the thumb and pinkie first before the index and middle finger messed up my rhythm so badly, and I always ending just jamming the index and middle fingers with the pinkie subconsciously. No matter how hard I practise, I couldn't nail the timing. Any suggestions?

    • @LearnLoveMusic
      @LearnLoveMusic  Před 2 lety +1

      I assume that you're talking about the four-against-three rhythmic pattern between the hands? If so, the composite rhythm is quarter, 8th, quarter, quarter, 8th, quarter....thus the pattern between the hands using R for right hand and L for left hand should be: RL(hands together) , R L, R, L, R. If you do it correctly you will have 4 quarters and three triplets in each pattern. I hope this helps.

    • @AlvinTOS
      @AlvinTOS Před 2 lety

      @@LearnLoveMusic Hi, thanks for the reply. Unfortunately I was not talking about the left hand at all. I was referring to the right hand notes only in bar 13-24, where it alternates between an octave (using the thumb and the pinkie), and two consecutive notes (using the index and middle finger). No matter how hard I try, I ended up jumbling up this sequence and ended up playing it as 1235-1235-1235 instead of 1523-1523-1523. Are there any tips on how to resolve this conundrum?

  • @charlottewhyte9804
    @charlottewhyte9804 Před 2 lety +1

    how do I play the 16 against 12???

    • @LearnLoveMusic
      @LearnLoveMusic  Před 2 lety +1

      Learn to play 4 against 3 first. (both right-left right left-right). good luck with that!

  • @LuisitoNotifica
    @LuisitoNotifica Před 3 měsíci

    I love how he misses some notes and he doesn't give importance, even if he can do the shot another time, I wish k had that much confidence on myself 😅

  • @petertyrrell3391
    @petertyrrell3391 Před 2 lety

    But it is an allegro, not a presto or a prestissimo. Whole Beat metronome practice makes so much sense, 1/2 note = 42. or if you consider it a fast 4/4 piece, then 1/4 = 84.

  • @billligon4005
    @billligon4005 Před 2 lety

    All music is an 'etude' or study until you learn it and then it's not an etude anymore, but music to be enjoyed, yes? Except, joyfully, Hanon et al.

  • @stevencat2994
    @stevencat2994 Před rokem

    Should play with emotion instead like finger drilling exercise!

  • @rthomas1031
    @rthomas1031 Před 2 lety

    Wow, 84bpm was way too fast. Like he says, it’s not an Etude.

  • @RuJigglo
    @RuJigglo Před rokem

    0 dollars MasterClass

  • @briancoveney3080
    @briancoveney3080 Před 11 měsíci

    It sounds like watching s small dog chase his tail...