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21 mar 2010 · Scarlatti sonatas are very delicate that require a certain lightness in touch and that's the main difficulty I believe. Which is even more challenging for the left hand for most people. If you like the K.1, I recommend giving it a try, it will improve your left hand in many ways.
In other words: if you can't play trills with all finger combinations of your left hand, this may not yet be the piece you should work on. Solve your trill problems first at the intended tempo of those tremolos.
The less elegant and time consuming solution is to start incorporating hand stretches into your practice. If you can almost reach 9ths it's worth doing, even if 9ths are rare you will come across them every now and again.
Use your sustain pedal. Once a note is played, holding down the key does nothing but stress the hand. Play the C first (with pedal) and then release it so that the hand is free to play the triplets. You should be able to play this passage without any feeling of stretching or discomfort.
In this article, we will learn how to play the notes of Moonlight Sonata on the piano. First, we will discuss the notes to play with the right hand. In a second time, we will see those of the left hand. Finally, we will see how to play the song with both hands at the same time.
If I try to do this passage with my left hand using the same fingerings (reversed) as my right hand, then my fingers land awkwardly on some of the black keys, and there is no way to cross over my thumb to continue the phrase.
22 maj 2021 · In bar 20, I am using the tremolo, but in the passage of the chord there are 2 doubts: do I need to keep finger 1 pressed D # while I bring the other fingers to the next chord or should I move it up first to make the passage later? The other question, is in bars 21 and 22, I must shake between the fingers of the extremities (finger 1/5 in bar ...