Piano keys are a fulcrum and as we all know from being children, fulcrums are lightest on the edge. Sit on a see saw and notice if you sit inward, you weigh less and the opposite person has the advantage. Sit on the very outside edge and you weigh more.
So, playing on the outside of the piano key gives you more power and the keys are easier to depress because they require less force. If you play on the inside of the key, in the black area or, closer to the fulcrum, the keys will be harder to depress.
However, this is only predominately true if you have poor technique. There are several ways to give the arm more power to the fingers such as proper alignment, rotation, in and out motions because your fingers are different lengths and a fulcrum unto themselves, gravity and basic laws of physics such as every motion must have an equal and opposite motion. Then, there are things not to do which if we do, will weaken or diminish our virtuosity.
Some teachers just teach dot matching and don’t have a knowledge of physics, biology and ergonomics. If your teacher doesn’t know what a pronator is or how to adjust the elbow so the four and five fingers are just as strong as the other fingers . . . that teacher may hurt you. If you are lucky, you will only be mediocre.
Musician Malcolm Kogut has been tickling the ivories since he was 14 and won the NPM DMMD Musician of the Year award in 99. He has CDs along with many published books. Malcolm played in the pit for many Broadway touring shows. When away from the keyboard, he loves exploring the nooks, crannies and arresting beauty of the Adirondack Mountains, battling gravity on the ski slopes and roller coasters.
Saturday, November 9, 2019
Saturday, November 2, 2019
Q: For guitarists, what type of practicing helps you get your playing skills back the fastest?
I am a pianist but I’m sure that my answer correlates.
Technique is in your brain, not in your muscles. You brain hard wires movement which we call muscle memory but, it originates in your brain. That is why you never forget how to ride a bike or swim because the act of balance and using all those ancillary muscles gets mapped directly into the brain through the initial trial and error.
There are two ways to move: properly and improperly. Virtuosos move properly thus, they have virtuoso techniques. People without virtuosity simply move improperly and those improper movements get in the way of proper movement. Much like two people engaged in a three legged race. Both of you must perfectly sync your movements together in order to move freely and efficiently. If one doesn’t, anarchy reigns. Likewise, within our arms are muscles which must work in sync. If they don’t, we are mediocre at best.
When you first touch your instrument you brain makes those neural pathways and if you move improperly that improper movement becomes your permanent technique. Quite simply, you are using the wrong muscles to play and you will forever battle those bad habits. It is possible to brow beat strength and endurance into those wrong muscles and make progress but the day you skip practice, your body immediately begins to atrophy what it doesn’t need and you will feel rusty.
Proper technique uses the laws of physics and ergonomics and never atrophies because gravity requires no muscle. Pianists, for instance, think they depress the keys with their fingers but the fingers have no muscles. They are moved by the flexor muscles in the forearm and they are all interconnected with each other and also with the extensors. Each muscle moves one bone in one direction and there is an opposing muscle to move it back. If you use two muscles at the same time to move one bone, you will create tension, cramps, fatigue, injury or if you are lucky, play poorly. Even the slightest imbalance will create tension. This often happens when a musician isolates a finger. You can not extend and flex at the same time. Even though you can, you should not because they are still interconnected and they will be pulling on one another creating tension.
Proper playing is actually the result of several movements coming together so no single muscle is taxed through repetition. For pianists, this is called shaping. These multiple muscles include the pronator, supinator, shoulder, elbow and most importantly, gravity. Gravity never fatigues, it is always there. I don’t play guitar but I am going to guess that you never have to strum down because gravity or the weight of the arm will play down. Your only job is to play up. If you remember from HS physics, every motion has an equal and opposite motion. As a pianist, I can’t play down unless I first play up. If you sit at a piano, play a chord. Notice that you must play up, first. Up is the only work because down is effortless. Many pianists go wrong there because they press into the keybed. Since they can’t go any further and it creates no additional tone, then why press? It only creates tension and worse, prevents them from playing up because they are pressing down. You can’t move in two directions at the same time.
There are also muscles we should never use such as the abductors. Again, you can’t use two muscles at the same time. If you flex and abduct simultaneously, you are pulling one bone in two directions and the tendons are what will bear the brunt of this vector force and that is where cramps, fatigue or uneven playing comes from.
Go with gravity. Don’t fight it or try to force it. Remember from HS physics, if you push on a wall, it is pushing back with equal force. The wall will always win. Relaxation only comes from effort but it must be from the equal and opposite direction. Like walking. In order to propel your body forward, one foot is behind you pushing backward. In order to walk up stairs you must lift UP one foot higher than the step then come down on to it, using gravity. Although, I have heard people stomping up stairs. Swing a bat, throw a ball, kick a can . . . they all start with equal and opposite motions. Even your car rolls forward because its tires are pushing backward. Physics is not a useless class in HS that you don’t use in real life. It is everywhere in everything. Use it.
Get the laws of physics into your playing and you will never be rusty. Your technique will be there every day, even with several consecutive off days. Practice doesn’t make perfect. Perfect practice makes perfect.
Technique is in your brain, not in your muscles. You brain hard wires movement which we call muscle memory but, it originates in your brain. That is why you never forget how to ride a bike or swim because the act of balance and using all those ancillary muscles gets mapped directly into the brain through the initial trial and error.
There are two ways to move: properly and improperly. Virtuosos move properly thus, they have virtuoso techniques. People without virtuosity simply move improperly and those improper movements get in the way of proper movement. Much like two people engaged in a three legged race. Both of you must perfectly sync your movements together in order to move freely and efficiently. If one doesn’t, anarchy reigns. Likewise, within our arms are muscles which must work in sync. If they don’t, we are mediocre at best.
When you first touch your instrument you brain makes those neural pathways and if you move improperly that improper movement becomes your permanent technique. Quite simply, you are using the wrong muscles to play and you will forever battle those bad habits. It is possible to brow beat strength and endurance into those wrong muscles and make progress but the day you skip practice, your body immediately begins to atrophy what it doesn’t need and you will feel rusty.
Proper technique uses the laws of physics and ergonomics and never atrophies because gravity requires no muscle. Pianists, for instance, think they depress the keys with their fingers but the fingers have no muscles. They are moved by the flexor muscles in the forearm and they are all interconnected with each other and also with the extensors. Each muscle moves one bone in one direction and there is an opposing muscle to move it back. If you use two muscles at the same time to move one bone, you will create tension, cramps, fatigue, injury or if you are lucky, play poorly. Even the slightest imbalance will create tension. This often happens when a musician isolates a finger. You can not extend and flex at the same time. Even though you can, you should not because they are still interconnected and they will be pulling on one another creating tension.
Proper playing is actually the result of several movements coming together so no single muscle is taxed through repetition. For pianists, this is called shaping. These multiple muscles include the pronator, supinator, shoulder, elbow and most importantly, gravity. Gravity never fatigues, it is always there. I don’t play guitar but I am going to guess that you never have to strum down because gravity or the weight of the arm will play down. Your only job is to play up. If you remember from HS physics, every motion has an equal and opposite motion. As a pianist, I can’t play down unless I first play up. If you sit at a piano, play a chord. Notice that you must play up, first. Up is the only work because down is effortless. Many pianists go wrong there because they press into the keybed. Since they can’t go any further and it creates no additional tone, then why press? It only creates tension and worse, prevents them from playing up because they are pressing down. You can’t move in two directions at the same time.
There are also muscles we should never use such as the abductors. Again, you can’t use two muscles at the same time. If you flex and abduct simultaneously, you are pulling one bone in two directions and the tendons are what will bear the brunt of this vector force and that is where cramps, fatigue or uneven playing comes from.
Go with gravity. Don’t fight it or try to force it. Remember from HS physics, if you push on a wall, it is pushing back with equal force. The wall will always win. Relaxation only comes from effort but it must be from the equal and opposite direction. Like walking. In order to propel your body forward, one foot is behind you pushing backward. In order to walk up stairs you must lift UP one foot higher than the step then come down on to it, using gravity. Although, I have heard people stomping up stairs. Swing a bat, throw a ball, kick a can . . . they all start with equal and opposite motions. Even your car rolls forward because its tires are pushing backward. Physics is not a useless class in HS that you don’t use in real life. It is everywhere in everything. Use it.
Get the laws of physics into your playing and you will never be rusty. Your technique will be there every day, even with several consecutive off days. Practice doesn’t make perfect. Perfect practice makes perfect.
Wednesday, October 23, 2019
Q: What is “trigger finger” in the thumb, and what is the best way to treat it if you are a musician that uses his fingers a lot?
A: You didn't mention your instrument.
Trigger Finger or, stenosing tenosynovitis, is a condition where your finger gets stuck in a bent position and you have to snap it open.
Various tendons originate in your forearm and run down to the tips of your fingers. Your tendons are encased in a sheath and everywhere where there is a bend, like a garden hose, your tendon sheath can kink. Your tendon can also develop scar tissue or nodules on them causing them to get caught in those kinks and this can lock them in place. Your tendons actually glide through the sheath and stretch.
The cause for this scar tissue or nodules or kinks is misuse of the fingers and has nothing to do with overuse. If you move improperly all movement is overuse. Move properly and overuse doesn’t exist.
There are four basic muscles which move our fingers; abductors which spread them apart, adductors which pull them together, flexors which flex your fingers and extensors which straighten them out.
Abductors are weak muscles and when, say, a pianist, abducts and flexes at the same time, most do, they are using two muscles to move one bone in two directions. This creates a dual pull or vector force and one or both of the tendons become strained. This can create tension, cramps, fatigue, pain, uneven playing or micro tears to the tendon. Since tendons don’t have a direct blood supply, they are VERY slow to heal and the body places scar tissue there as a quick fix. Scar tissue does not stretch and the next time you strain the same tendon, it tears further creating more scar tissue. Since the scar tissue is cumulative, eventually the fatigue and uneven playing becomes sharp pain or the fingers lock.
The solution is to learn to move properly by working with a teacher who actually knows what they are doing. This requires a knowledge of physics and anatomy - not just music. Good luck finding such a teacher. Many THINK they know about technique but they don’t. Pedagogy is often rooted in what virtuosos feel and how it appears they are playing, not the actual invisible movements under “the hood.”
An example of this is the Carrezando technique. When a pianist moves properly with in/out, up/down motions, as the arm moves the hand around there is a sensation of caressing the keys. The caressing is the end result of the arm movement but this was not understood so they taught pianists to force caressing into their playing which created tension. Relaxed fingers is the result of other larger muscles working. You can’t relax the muscles you are trying to use. So when a student complains of cramps an unknowing teacher might suggest they relax but, relax what? The better teacher will instruct them on the proper muscles to use so that they can actually relax the improper ones causing the cramps.
Your flexor muscles are strong but fatigable. Your abductors are very weak. Regarding the thumb, if you are a pianist, many pianists are taught to cross the thumb under the palm for scales and arpeggios but the thumb’s tendon intersects with the index finger’s long flexor tendon. When you cross under, they grind together resulting in nodules. In addition, the thumb’s flexor is under the palm. The thumb was designed for gripping and that is why its flexor is there. When pianists play down on a key with the thumb, they use its abductor, its weakest most fatigable muscle.
So instead of using the wrong and weakest muscles, a good teacher will teach the student to use indefatigable muscles to play. For instance, gravity combined with a forward shift, combined with pronation and up/down, the thumb can then play effortlessly and with great speed without using any of its grasping muscles.
Isolating any finger is bad for our anatomy because they are interconnected. That is why playing an instrument must involve the combination of several muscles so that no one single muscle or tendon is misused.
Most musicians’ first teachers often don’t know what they are doing and allow their students to develop these improper motions or bad habits and these errant movements instantly become hardwired into our brains. It has been my experience that most people either don’t have the intelligence, patience, discipline nor dedication to rewire their brains to move properly. It can take time to undo years of misuse.
Another movement never to do is pinching with the thumb. Especially with the index because, again, the intersecting tendons. This also isolates two fingers. All five fingers are designed to move in the same direction at the same time. When a pianist gets that into their playing, they will develop effortless playing. It is sometimes called “tapping.” Likewise, they must never press into a keyboard for when you push into an immovable force, it is pushing back. This will only strain the player. It would behoove a pianist to learn to play to the point of sound, not the keybed. Point of sound is that little “bump” you feel when you slowly depress an ACOUSTIC piano key down without making a sound. You will first feel a point of resistance then it gives way. That is the point to play to. No further. The end result of that? Carrezando.
A good technique is the end result of proper movement. You can’t brow beat it into your hands. A teacher who prescribes exercises, demands more practice or says to relax doesn’t know what they are doing. Problems of technique are fixed by adjustments and fixing what you are doing wrong.
-Malcolm Kogut.
Trigger Finger or, stenosing tenosynovitis, is a condition where your finger gets stuck in a bent position and you have to snap it open.
Various tendons originate in your forearm and run down to the tips of your fingers. Your tendons are encased in a sheath and everywhere where there is a bend, like a garden hose, your tendon sheath can kink. Your tendon can also develop scar tissue or nodules on them causing them to get caught in those kinks and this can lock them in place. Your tendons actually glide through the sheath and stretch.
The cause for this scar tissue or nodules or kinks is misuse of the fingers and has nothing to do with overuse. If you move improperly all movement is overuse. Move properly and overuse doesn’t exist.
There are four basic muscles which move our fingers; abductors which spread them apart, adductors which pull them together, flexors which flex your fingers and extensors which straighten them out.
Abductors are weak muscles and when, say, a pianist, abducts and flexes at the same time, most do, they are using two muscles to move one bone in two directions. This creates a dual pull or vector force and one or both of the tendons become strained. This can create tension, cramps, fatigue, pain, uneven playing or micro tears to the tendon. Since tendons don’t have a direct blood supply, they are VERY slow to heal and the body places scar tissue there as a quick fix. Scar tissue does not stretch and the next time you strain the same tendon, it tears further creating more scar tissue. Since the scar tissue is cumulative, eventually the fatigue and uneven playing becomes sharp pain or the fingers lock.
The solution is to learn to move properly by working with a teacher who actually knows what they are doing. This requires a knowledge of physics and anatomy - not just music. Good luck finding such a teacher. Many THINK they know about technique but they don’t. Pedagogy is often rooted in what virtuosos feel and how it appears they are playing, not the actual invisible movements under “the hood.”
An example of this is the Carrezando technique. When a pianist moves properly with in/out, up/down motions, as the arm moves the hand around there is a sensation of caressing the keys. The caressing is the end result of the arm movement but this was not understood so they taught pianists to force caressing into their playing which created tension. Relaxed fingers is the result of other larger muscles working. You can’t relax the muscles you are trying to use. So when a student complains of cramps an unknowing teacher might suggest they relax but, relax what? The better teacher will instruct them on the proper muscles to use so that they can actually relax the improper ones causing the cramps.
Your flexor muscles are strong but fatigable. Your abductors are very weak. Regarding the thumb, if you are a pianist, many pianists are taught to cross the thumb under the palm for scales and arpeggios but the thumb’s tendon intersects with the index finger’s long flexor tendon. When you cross under, they grind together resulting in nodules. In addition, the thumb’s flexor is under the palm. The thumb was designed for gripping and that is why its flexor is there. When pianists play down on a key with the thumb, they use its abductor, its weakest most fatigable muscle.
So instead of using the wrong and weakest muscles, a good teacher will teach the student to use indefatigable muscles to play. For instance, gravity combined with a forward shift, combined with pronation and up/down, the thumb can then play effortlessly and with great speed without using any of its grasping muscles.
Isolating any finger is bad for our anatomy because they are interconnected. That is why playing an instrument must involve the combination of several muscles so that no one single muscle or tendon is misused.
Most musicians’ first teachers often don’t know what they are doing and allow their students to develop these improper motions or bad habits and these errant movements instantly become hardwired into our brains. It has been my experience that most people either don’t have the intelligence, patience, discipline nor dedication to rewire their brains to move properly. It can take time to undo years of misuse.
Another movement never to do is pinching with the thumb. Especially with the index because, again, the intersecting tendons. This also isolates two fingers. All five fingers are designed to move in the same direction at the same time. When a pianist gets that into their playing, they will develop effortless playing. It is sometimes called “tapping.” Likewise, they must never press into a keyboard for when you push into an immovable force, it is pushing back. This will only strain the player. It would behoove a pianist to learn to play to the point of sound, not the keybed. Point of sound is that little “bump” you feel when you slowly depress an ACOUSTIC piano key down without making a sound. You will first feel a point of resistance then it gives way. That is the point to play to. No further. The end result of that? Carrezando.
A good technique is the end result of proper movement. You can’t brow beat it into your hands. A teacher who prescribes exercises, demands more practice or says to relax doesn’t know what they are doing. Problems of technique are fixed by adjustments and fixing what you are doing wrong.
-Malcolm Kogut.
Thursday, January 10, 2019
Playing With Fire #9: Part One - Bad Teachers
I am often told
that I am harsh, unfair and judgmental toward piano teachers. It is
true. While many teachers may have much to teach regarding the
artistry of playing the piano, it is also true that many of them do
not know what they are doing mechanically. The body is a machine
with levers, pulleys, rubber bands, torque and fulcrums. We learn
about these things in Physics and Biology classes and it is too bad
that our educational system doesn't use Physical Education class to
combine it all together. It is also too bad that our teachers only
know what they are taught and do not seek answers to problems other
than relying on what they were taught: practice more, relax, work on
finger exercises, build strength and endurance, you have no talent
or, they just keep taking the students' money. Often, the cure for
technical inefficiency or various syndromes is an adjustment to our
movement but that is rarely addressed because a teacher only knows
what they were taught and often that is practice more, relax, work on
finger exercises, build strength and endurance. I have a friend who
can't play tremolos because he tries to play them from his fingers.
If he played them from his elbow, they would be instantly effortless.
But, what do I know, his teacher told him to practice more and build
strength.
I may not be able
to pick up and move an 800 pound boulder across my yard but, with a
crowbar and another rock, I could make a fulcrum and inch it over.
Better yet, if I can nudge it up onto a dolly with wheels, I can then
easily roll it over. My strength and endurance doesn't change, but
how I use the laws of physics can make all the difference.
I took lessons from one of my area's
leading concert pianists with the sole intention of improving my
technique. He was one of those virtuoso pianists who simply moved
properly. He had an ergonomic technique and didn't know how or why
he could play with great ease. He called it talent. Students
flocked to him hoping to become as good as he but he didn't know how
to help his students find their true potential. Many of his lessons
were spent with him playing hoping his students would imitate him
but, the actual movement of playing is invisible and shared by
several muscles many teachers are oblivious to because they don't
know they exist. We think it is the fingers that play the piano but,
it is first and foremost the arm. The unenlightened teacher focuses
on the fingers, which have no muscles BTW.
This teacher has long since died and
his daughter has taken over teaching. I had the opportunity to work
with one of her students and his technique was dangerously close to
crippling him. Sadly, he only wanted a magic lesson so he could play
well and didn't want to put in the work of relearning how to move.
There was nothing I could do for him. In order to relearn how to
play one must abandon all previously learned movements and start
over, which many pianists are not willing to do.
This kind of teacher may be fine for
the student who just wants a taste of music, learn a little theory or
be able to plunk out some notes for themselves but, a teacher's
ignorance can stifle a student's progress, enthusiasm and even set
them up for eventual injury. Mediocrity is not related to talent, it
is a symptom of teachers who don't know about the physics of movement
and our skeletal system.
You would not take your car in for an
inspection only for the mechanic to tell you your brakes or tires are
going bad but you can get a few more months out of them. Well,
actually people do. That mechanic is putting your life and everyone
you share the road with in danger because you probably won't come
back in in a few months. Sure, you are saving a few bucks today but
at what cost in the future? If your brakes are bad, get them fixed,
don't drive more. Driving more won't fix them. If you technique is
bad, get it fixed, don't practice more. Repeating improper movement
only hard-wires it into the brain.
A piano teacher who does not understand
that a student is using the wrong muscles or how to teach them to use
the correct muscles is setting them up for problems or a career of
mediocrity. Every technical problem has an ergonomic solution, and
it isn't “practice more.” If walking knock-kneed causes knee
pain, the solution isn't to walk more, it is to walk correctly. If
your pinky and ring finger feel weak and in-coordinate, you don't
need to strengthen them, you only need an adjustment to your forearm
alignment.
I have had all the wrong teachers and
although they made me who I am today, they set me up to be crippled
with pain and to struggle with a mediocre technique. It has taken me
years to relearn how to move but I am now pain free and syndrome-less
because I stopped fighting the laws of physics and started using
them. Although I have much more work to do, my technique has
improved significantly.
Tuesday, January 1, 2019
Playing With Fire #8
Look down at your fingers. If you
haven't noticed they are all different in length. Many pianists and
typists are taught to equalize their fingers by curling them so that
all five are touching the keys at the same time. This places your
fingers in a constant state of flexation. It is impossible for a
musician to relax their fingers if they are holding them in
contraction. In addition, you can only move a bone in one direction
at a time but we all have several muscles that can pull them in
several opposing directions. So if you are trying to move a finger
up or in a certain direction but another muscle is pulling the hand
in an opposite direction, there is going to be strain or at the very
least, in-coordinate movement. This is why some pianists struggle
with scales, arpeggios or speed.
It behooves the pianist to play on the
edge of the keys for the keys are lightest on the outside edge. If
you have ever played on a see saw as a child, you know that
regardless of weight, if one kid sits on the outside edge of their
seat and the other kid is sitting forward, the kid on the outside
will “weigh more.” Just like the see saw, the piano key is a
fulcrum. Such as using a board and rock to move another rock, the
further out you are on the board, the more power you will have. Your
shoulder, elbow, wrist, knuckles and each phalanx of your fingers are
all fulcrums.
If you were to place your middle finger
on the outside edge of a white key, all your other fingers will be
hanging off the keys in the air. This is counter intuitive to most
teachers but by using your shoulder and elbow to move in and out to
place each finger, it not only reduces how much you need to move a
finger but, it gives the finger the power and weight of motion and
gravity without having to use the sluggish flexor muscles. Indeed,
the piano is forward so the pianist or typist needs to have a
constant forward shift momentum to their movement. If they static
load, since the body wants to contract, they risk falling off the
keys or cramping. When that begins to happen, the pianist contracts
even more in an effort to grasp at the keys and this just creates a
downward spiral of technical inefficiency and tension.
To equalize the length of all your
fingers you need to get in/out motions into your arm. The pianist
who does not risks playing on the inside of the key where the keys
are heavier, thus is born, the myth that the pianist needs more
strength to play or, they might complain that the action of the piano
is stiff. The keys feel stiff because the pianist is playing too far
in. Again, this is counter intuitive to most teachers but the arm is
much faster at placing a finger than a flexor is at playing.
Using the C scale, place your thumb on
the outside edge of the C. When you play the index finger, come out
from the elbow and play straight down. Because you are coming out,
you need to replace it with a forward shift. The arm will come out,
up and forward all at the same time. This is where the wrist and
forearm work together. It is also what gives many pianists a look of
grace. Even though you are coming out, you are also moving in, up
and down. When you play the middle finger, you come out even more.
When you play the ring finger, you simply shift forward without
needing to use the actual flexor. The same thing happens with the
pinky. You just shift inward but stay on the outer edge of the key.
Be careful you know about forearm alignment first. I'll discus that
later. That is another fulcrum.
Every scale has different patterns of
in/out. Actually, many scales are easier to play because the black
keys are already forward so there is less “out” to employ.
However, since the black keys are higher, you need more forward
shifting with an “up” in order to come straight down on the key.
This too is where pianist create tension grasping for keys. The
finger does not strain and stretch to reach keys, the arm places them
where they need to be which is directly over the key. Singers are
taught to sing higher than their target note so they don't sing flat.
Likewise, when you walk up stairs, your ascending foot raises higher
than the next step then comes straight down onto it. Notice also
that when your leg raises up, the down muscles are actually relaxed
and your up muscles are engaged. Then, you don't stomp on the step
but rotate to the next leg. This is important for the pianist to
know. They can only relax if they play up then let gravity play
down. The moment they press down into the key they corrupt the arms
ability to go back up. A dual tension occurs and anarchy of
technique ensues.
Without up/down and in/out, the
musician will risk strain and uneven playing. Up/down and in/out
movements give the arm (fingers) a lot of power allowing the
pianist/typist to truly relax the fingers/hands/long flexor muscles.
Most hand and wrist strain is caused by using more than one muscle at
a time to move one bone in two or more directions simultaneously. It
is imperative to learn to use one muscle at a time. This can only
happen by relaxing the flexors which are the very muscles most
pianists are taught to use.
When you walk, you don't flex your toes
with each step. The toes just go where the leg places them.
Likewise, the fingers go where the arm places them. The fingers
don't operate independent to the arm and they surely don't drag the
arm behind them. When you are washing a window, writing on a chalk
board or waxing your car, the hand goes where the arm places it and
the fingers do as they are told, with no effort.
Thursday, December 27, 2018
Playing With Fire #7
In Playing With Fire #5 I mentioned
that stretching is not all it is cracked up to be. Let me recap
this. Many people are taught to warm up by stretching. What is
stretching and warming up?
When you stretch a muscle, you create
micro tears to the muscle fibers and the body rushes warm blood to
the site to begin immobilization and start repairing the damage.
This rush of warm blood gives us the illusion of warming up. Body
builders like this feeling because as the muscles inflame with tissue
repairing blood it makes them feel bigger and their clothes tighter.
Actors and models will often do pushups or other exercises before
being photographed for it indeed makes them look slightly larger or
more muscular.
Your muscles become tendons which are
then attached to your bones. When the muscles are cold, they are
contracted and tight. If you force your muscles to move when they
are contracted, the tendon is caught between the forces of the muscle
and bone. Most often, the tendon will strain or tear. Tendons, just
like like muscle, contract and expand. Like uncooked spaghetti, bend
it and it will break but add a little heat . . .
The greatest danger to any musician or
athlete is the high school gym teacher or ignorant music teacher.
Indeed, muscles operate at peak efficiency when they are warm, blood
is flowing freely and they are expanded. You can't force that by
tearing tissue. A better way to warm up is to sit in a warm room.
You also can't spot warm up. If you
stretch your legs in an attempt to warm up, the blood that you are
using quickly circulates to other parts of the body. The only way to
safely warm up the whole body is to actually warm up the whole body.
You can not force warming up by stretching. Micro tears to the
tendons may feel good on first stretch but over time the scar tissue
that is placed in those tiny tears will build up to become full blown
tendinitis.
In place of stretching, I would suggest
gentle movement in your mid range of motion. When you static move to
the extreme range of motion where you feel that satisfying stretch,
you are creating damage.
Just because your teacher said that
stretching is good, that does not mean they are correct. It only
means that their teacher was wrong, too. However, if you do have
scar tissue on your tendons which will result in inflammation and
sharp pain when you move, breaking up the scar tissue is the first
step to healing. Instead of stretching and risking augmented damage,
get a deep tissue myofascial massage and let the therapist break it
up for you without you risking another stretch and further
amplification of damage.
Tuesday, December 25, 2018
Playing With Fire #6
The point of sound can be felt on an
acoustic piano. Electronic pianos and organs have them but they are
pretty much indiscernible.
Slowly press down on an acoustic piano
key without making it sound. At one point you will feel a little
bump. If you press beyond that bump, the key will give way and you
will be pressing into the keybed. If a pianist wishes to achieve
that pearly sound of fast and light notes, they need to learn to play
to the point of sound.
As previously mentioned, pressing into
the keybed will force a stretch to the long flexor tendon which
creates strain. Not to mention, if you are pressing down into the
keybed, you can't move your hand or fingers up to the next note
because before you can play down you must first play up. Every
motion has an equal and opposite motion. This is where some pianists
and typists run into trouble because they are trying to maintain a
“still and quiet” or relaxed hand. It is in their relaxation
they are creating tension because when they use the wrong muscles,
they create tension, then they try to relax the very muscles they are
using.
When you kick a ball, you first back
kick. Swing a bat and you will first back swing. Cast a fishing
pole, back cast. Walk forward, press backward. Punch someone, back
swing. When you walk forward, as your left leg reaches forward your
right hip rotates backward. As your right hip rotates backward, your
right shoulder rotates forward. Every motion has equal and opposite
motions and your body is designed to work with other parts for
balance, relaxation, power and efficiency. When you isolate a part,
you will create problems. Pianists and typists are rarely taught
this. They think playing comes from the fingers but it shouldn't.
It should first originate from the larger muscles of the arm. When
the arm does most of the work, it frees the fingers to do some of the
more fine tuned movements and, to truly relax. BTW, the fingers
don't have muscles. They are moved by the muscles in the forearm.
When a pianist or typist tries to originate movement from the
fingers, they will strain the tendons.
In order to type or play down on a
piano, you must have an up movement to harness the power of gravity.
If you play with your fingers pressing down on the keys, you will not
have the power, speed and accuracy of the arms. You have probably
seen pianists playing with graceful movements. They are not just
putting on a show, they are feeling and moderating the weight of
their arm. Ideally, most of the up motion should be minimized once
it is in the brain. Even playing a simple scale, the arm might
change directions via the pronator and supinator muscles up to six
times. This is invisible to the eye but must be there in the player's
arm. If not, they will static load and create tension, cramps and
fatigue.
This law of physics also pertains to
other muscles such as your pronator and supinator muscles. If you
are rotating your arm to play a downward scale, your must first
counter rotate to give the arm both power and to control its
direction. Keeping all five fingers together and moving in the same
direction will provide great facility. Even the fingers you are not
using must go in the same direction and play down at the same time.
Some piano teachers call this “tapping.” It is when we stretch
our fingers out and pull in opposite directions at the same time we
create cramps and fatigue.
Keep in mind that all movement, once
learned and ingrained into the muscle memory of your brain, it must
be minimized to being invisible. The opposite motions are all there,
they just can not be seen anymore, however, the pianist will feel
them and it will be a feeling of power and effortlessness because
they are not using the wrong muscles to play. Most of us are taught
to use the wrong muscles, or, we are not taught anything. It is a
dangerous teacher who simply says to practice more, relax or
prescribes silly exercises to build unnecessary strength and
endurance, both which everyone already has aplenty within their arms.
The reason teachers think a student requires strength and endurance
is because the incorrect muscles a student may be using are indeed
weak and fatigable. Strengthening them reinforces improper movement
and sets the stage for the mythical beast called “repetitive strain
injury.”
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