Bulletproof Peter and the Wolf with Hand Position

This video was always intended as a Par 2 to the Wisdom of Robert Marcellus video ( • The Wisdom of Robert M... ) but I didn't know it was going to be about Peter and the Wolf until we played it in my Duquesne rep class. This isn't just about Peter and the Wolf, it's about organizing information.
If you're interested in music at Duquesne University or Carnegie Mellon University, go to www.duq.edu/academics/college... or www.cmu.edu/cfa/music/ and search ny name for contact info.

Пікірлер: 9

  • @allanjmcpherson
    @allanjmcphersonАй бұрын

    This is something I've realized I'm inconsistent about. Once my A clarinet comes back from the shop, I'll pull out my Peter and the Wolf and practice preparing my fingerings.

  • @txsphere
    @txsphere4 ай бұрын

    So beautifully explained.

  • @josegarciataborda1829
    @josegarciataborda18294 ай бұрын

    Thank you, this is a very useful and perfectly well-explained approach.

  • @jackhowell8708

    @jackhowell8708

    4 ай бұрын

    Thank you, Jose, nice to hear from you! I hope you’re well. The view duration on this one is a bit discouraging, but I guess, as Abraham Lincoln said, “People who like that sort of thing will find it to be exactly the sort of thing they like.”

  • @medusa210562
    @medusa2105624 ай бұрын

    I have been playing the clarinet for 50 years and I have passed LTCL PERFORMANCE in clarinet and when I was young I played in several Symphony orchestras, I performed the Webber concerto n 1. I This topic can be very confusing. My tactic for good virtuosity is NOT TO ANTICIPATE. Most people and students who anticipated a hard passage "nervosly" prepared, the shape of their hands changed while approaching the difficult part, everything when wrong. I was known for good technique. My aim was to not prepare, talking about a preparation that kind of comes from fear of playing the hard part. Not what this man in this video is teaching might have a lot of value. But it's not always black and white

  • @normalizedaudio2481
    @normalizedaudio24814 ай бұрын

    I want to get this for my piano playing.

  • @jackhowell8708

    @jackhowell8708

    4 ай бұрын

    You’ll have to report how that works. I know piano players think shapes because we’ve talked about it, but there’s so much more real estate to cover on piano, and the percussive nature of dynamics means that often fingers are arriving from some distance. Also, finger arrival and attack/articulation ARE the same thing, unlike clarinet. It’s always interesting what we can learn from other instruments.

  • @425gabe
    @425gabe4 ай бұрын

    I have found that sometimes when anticipating finger position in order to set myself up for accuracy my fingers can get stuck. Does this happen to you?

  • @jackhowell8708

    @jackhowell8708

    4 ай бұрын

    I see it with students transitioning from “just-in-time” playing. When the entrenched program is to get the finger to the key just as it is needed, the brain will try to fire the “push” signal whenever it gets there, and if you’ve gotten it there early there can be a battle between the old (just in time) and new (get it there early) programs. Part of the brain wants it to push, part knows it’s not yet time. It takes creativity to defeat habits sometimes. Alternating half tempo (with super fast, super prepared fingers) with full tempo can help. There are dozens of “tricks.”