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Beethoven Ecossaise quick tips from
players two.
So this piece one of the things that your
going to watch is the phrasing,
it has a syncopated rhythm.
Measures two, four, and six in the A
section.
[SOUND] We're your going one and.
So make sure that downbeat is always
short, and
that you really do a nice drop into that
end.
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Short drop.
Here comes it again, short drop.
And I just use my whole weight of my arm
very, very easy.
Don't-
[SOUND] You know get stiff or just really
let that, that hand drop and then that
float following it on each of these.
Another tricky part is measure ten,
measures ten and 12.
it's the same.
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Right?
So two tricks to keeping this nice and
even is one is doing that drop with your
arm.
So feeling the weight of your arm on this
key, this key.
So, keep it dropped until that very last
float on the A.
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Really push,
like a good [INAUDIBLE] on the 16th.
The other way you should practice this for
sure is those steps in the full chart fast
piece, which is medium speed or even just
play it nice and loud, every note, and
then also the muscle builders,
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That will help.
Left hand octave section.
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Make sure they're equally short, so
feel those with your arm.
Practice the left hand.
Go slowly exaggerate that feeling of the
bounce with the arm, and
also up the tempo so you can feel how that
is.
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At a quicker tempo.
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But not
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Or
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That can easily get uneven, so
feeling that equal bounce.
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So
my arm is just feeling that equal bounce
every single one.
Those are the trickiest pa, parts in the
piece.
Notice that the A section is all soft and
that the B section is all forte.
Typical classical phrasing also should be
dropped and should be floated and
soft, but other than that you should be
ready to go le, and
learn in G major without a problem.
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