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Music
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Pianists
Pain-Prevention Tips
Simple
changes in keyboard technique will prevent injury for
keyboard players. These helpful free tips are offered
from Sound Feelings. If your piano playing is not
pain-free, constant, automatic and effortless, you are
doing something wrong. This free information explains
how-to improve biomechanical efficiency, relaxation,
avoid tension by making a few small changes to your
approach to the instrument. These suggestions provide
necessary injury-retraining support to performing arts
medicine treatments to insure that the pain will not
return.
Pain-Free
Playing Should Be Effortless.
Pain-free
playing should be constant, automatic and effortless.
Unfortunately, the way piano is often taught, pain-free
playing becomes rare, deliberate and difficult. There
are many reasons why this is so.
Combining
Two Methods Offers Greatest Advantage.
I
feel grateful that my own training included top teachers
of both the “Russian School” and the “German
School” of piano technique. Generally, the Russian
School teaches how to play with gravity and relaxation.
The German School teaches how to play with hand
placement and fingering efficiency. There are other
piano “schools” but these are usually just a
combination of the two main ones described above. Each
approach has good and bad aspects. In my own playing and
teaching, I have incorporated the good aspects of each
and have discarded the bad. The result is a blueprint
for biomechanical efficiency.
Strive
for Preparation and Relaxation.
Essentially,
pain-free keyboard playing depends on two primary
elements: 1) preparation and 2) relaxation. People who
strictly follow the German approach are great at
preparation of the hand position, playing close to the
keys, but neglect to relax the hand at regular
intervals. The problem is that tension builds up and
leads to injuries. People who strictly follow the
Russian approach are initially great at relaxation, but
often make many mistakes because their hands simply are
not prepared, being further from the keys. This
indirectly leads to anxiety and tension in the long run,
which also leads to pain and injury.
Learn
the B Scale First!
From
the beginning of piano training a mistake is often made.
Most teachers teach the C major scale on the very first
lesson. It is true that this scale is the easiest on an
intellectual level because of the absence of
accidentals. However, it is actually the hardest to play
from a physical standpoint because the distance the
thumb must cross from ‘E’ to ‘F’ is much greater
than its counterpart in the B scale (which I like to
teach first.) This is setting the student up for a
lifetime of bad habits because it encourages the very
worst qualities from both schools. Right from the
beginning, the student learns how to angle the hand to
position the thumb, instead of crossing the thumb under
a non-moving hand. Also, with the obligatory “curved
fingers,” there is absolutely no room for acquiring a
natural sense of relaxation. It would be better to first
teach thumb-stretching and hand-relaxation drills.
Sit
Far Enough Away.
Distance
to the piano is crucial to pain-free playing. Most
people sit too close to the piano and wrongly establish
this as the correct distance. Notice if you keep raising
your shoulders when you play. This is usually because
you are sitting too close and your own body simply
blocks the mobility of the arms. The best guideline here
is to see if your elbows can touch one another when your
hands are placed on the white notes directly in front of
you. If not, move back.
Sit
So Your Elbows are Just Below Key Level.
Height
is also extremely important. Most people sit too high or
too low. We really have to be more respectful of our
natural body-type. Are you long-legged or long-torsoed?
Usually women have long legs and a short torso, and men
have the reverse. The problem is that standard piano
bench height is for the short-torso person. This means
that the person with a long waist will tend to tower
over the piano. Why is this bad? It means that the
elbows are positioned above the key level when they
actually should be positioned slightly below the key
level. The reason for this is that the hand, wrist and
forearm should all be in a straight line, to allow the
least friction on the tendons of the forearms which
actually control the fingers. People who sit too
high, too low, or with a “low wrist” or with a
“high wrist” usually acquire pain and ultimately
tendinitis, or carpal-tunnel syndrome. This is really so
unnecessary! The solution is to get an adjustable bench,
or sit on a chair, so that the correct height is
achieved.
Practice
Fast First!
Another
traditional myth is to practice slowly and then to
gradually speed up the passage. The problem here is that
at the slow tempo, certain bad habits go unnoticed
(extra tension, bad fingering) because they do not
interfere with the execution at this slower tempo. But
once the tempo becomes faster, all this inefficient
choreography has already been built in, and it is too
late. It would be better to practice very fast, in small
little groups, right from the beginning, to better get a
sense of what fingering and hand position will be
needed. Then go back and practice it slowly, with this
in mind.
Softer
Equals Faster.
Many
injuries lately are specific to people who play
electronic keyboards. One would think that these
lighter-action keyboards would be easier to play, but in
fact, they are harder. This is because most people have
a tendency to press harder than they would on a
naturally-weighted keyboard to overcompensate for the
lack of resistance. Also, we get fooled by the
artificial sound levels. Because of the electronic
aspect of the instrument, we become reliant on the
actual volume versus the perceived volume. If we are
recording, for example, the ultimate dynamic level may
be very loud, but to us as performers, in our monitor,
it may seem very soft. So we instinctively try to play
harder to create a louder sound, when it really
doesn’t help. Meanwhile, the louder we play, the
stiffer our fingers become. The stiffer our fingers
become, the slower we play and the more we push. The
more we push, the more pain and damage we inflict on
ourselves. The solution here is to keep mentally
reminding ourselves as we play that “softer equals
faster.” This keeps the muscle system very relaxed.
Let them set the levels in the mix.
Once you establish the correct habits, you will be able
to play for hours at a time and never get tired.
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