OSSIP GABRILOWITSCH
“Modern pianoforte teachers
in many instances seem to make deliberate attempts
to complicate the very simple matter of touch.
In the final analyses the whole study of touch may
be resolved into two means of administering force
to the keyboard, i. e., weight and muscular
activity. The amount of pressure brought to bear
upon the keys depends upon the amount of arm weight
and upon the quickness with which the muscles of the
hand, forearm, full-arm and back permit the key to
be struck. Upon these two means of administering
force must depend whatever differentiation in dynamic
power and tonal quality the player desires to produce.
The various gradations of tone which the virtuoso’s
hand and arm are trained to execute are so minute
that it is impossible for me to conceive of a scientific
instrument or scale to measure them. Physiologists
have attempted to construct instruments to do this,
but little of value has come from such experiments.
A RIGID ARM UNDESIRABLE
“Only a comparatively few years
ago thousands of teachers were insisting upon having
their pupils keep the arms in a still, even rigid,
condition during practice. This naturally resulted
in the stiffest imaginable kind of a touch, and likewise
in a mechanical style of playing that made what has
come to be known in later days as ‘tone color’
impossible.
“At this day the finger touch
as it was formerly known has almost gone out of existence.
By finger touch I refer to the old custom of holding
the hand and forearm almost rigid and depending upon
the muscular strength of the fingers for all tonal
effects. In fact, I so rarely employ the finger
touch, except in combination with the arm touch, that
it is almost an insignificant factor as far as my own
playing is concerned. By this the reader must
not think that the training of the fingers, and particularly
the finger tips, is to be neglected. But this
training, to my mind, is not so much a matter of acquiring
digital strength to produce force as to accustom the
fingers to strike the notes with the greatest possible
accuracy and speed. This belongs rather to the
realm of technic than to that of touch, and behind
all technic is the intellect of the player. Technic
is a matter of training the finger tips to attack
and leave the keys under the absolute discipline of
the brain. Touch has a much broader and wider
significance. It is touch that reveals the soul
of the player.
TOUCH A DISTINGUISHING CHARACTERISTIC
“Touch is the distinguishing
characteristic which makes one player’s music
sound different from that of another, for it is touch
that dominates the player’s means of producing
dynamic shading or tone quality. I know that
many authorities contend that the quality of tone
depends upon the instrument rather than upon the performer.
Nevertheless, I am reasonably confident that if I were
to hear a number of pianists play in succession upon
the same instrument behind a screen and one of these
performers were to be my friend, Harold Bauer, I could
at once identify his playing by his peculiarly individual
touch. In fact, the trained ear can identify
different individual characteristics with almost the
same accuracy that we identify different voices.
One could never forget Leschetizky’s touch,
or that of many another contemporary pianist.
“No matter how wonderful the
pianist’s technic that is, how rapidly
and accurately he can play passages of extraordinary
difficulty, it is quite worthless unless he possesses
that control over his touch which enables him to interpret
the composer’s work with the right artistic shading.
A fine technic without the requisite touch to liberate
the performer’s artistic intelligence and ‘soul’
is like a gorgeous chandelier without the lights.
Until the lights are ignited all its beauty is obscured
in darkness. With an excellent technic and a
fine touch, together with a broad musical and general
education and artistic temperament, the young player
may be said to be equipped to enter the virtuoso field.
COMBINING DIFFERENT TOUCHES
“As I have intimated, if the
fingers are used exclusively a terribly dry tone must
result. The full-arm touch, in which I experience
a complete relaxation of the arm from the shoulder
to the finger tips, is the condition I employ at most
times. But the touches I use are combinations
of the different finger, hand and arm touches.
These lead to myriads of results, and only the experienced
performer can judge where they should be applied to
produce desired effects.
“You will observe by placing
your hand upon my shoulder that even with the movement
of the single finger a muscular activity may be detected
at the shoulder. This shows how completely relaxed
I keep my entire arm during performance. It is
only in this way that I can produce the right kind
of singing tone in cantabile passages. Sometimes
I use one touch in one voice and an entirely different
touch in another voice. The combinations are
kaleidoscopic in their multiplicity.
MECHANICAL METHODS DANGEROUS
“I have never been in favor
of the many automatic and mechanical methods of producing
touch. They are all dangerous to my mind.
There is only one real way of teaching, and that is
through the sense of hearing of the pupil. The
teacher should go to the piano and produce the desired
tonal effect, and the pupil should listen and watch
the teacher. Then the pupil should be instructed
to secure a similar result, and the teacher should
persevere until the audible effect is nearly the same.
If the pupil, working empirically, does not discover
the means leading to this effect, the teacher should
call the pupil’s attention to some of the physical
conditions leading to the result. If the teacher
is unable to play well enough to illustrate this,
and to secure the right kind of touch from his pupils,
he has no business to be a teacher of advanced students.
All the theory in the world will never lead to the
proper results.
“Rubinstein paid little or no
attention to the theory of touch, and, in fact, he
frequently stated that he cared little about such things,
but who could hear Rubinstein’s touch without
being benefited? I believe that in teaching touch
the teacher should first give his model of the touch
required and then proceed from this positive ideal,
by means of the so-called Socratic method of inducing
the pupil to produce a similar result through repeated
questions. In this way the pupil will not be
obliged to resign his individuality, as would be the
case if he followed strict technical injunctions and
rules.
STUDENTS SHOULD HEAR VIRTUOSOS
“For the same reason it is advisable
for the pupil to hear many fine pianists. He
should never miss an opportunity to attend the concerts
of great virtuosos. I can frankly say that I
have learned as much from hearing the concerts of
great performers as I have from any other source of
educational inspiration. The pupil should listen
intelligently and earnestly. When he hears what
appeals to him as a particularly fine tonal effect,
he should endeavor to note the means the pianist employs
to produce this effect.
“He must, however, learn to
discriminate between affection or needless movement
and the legitimate means to an end. Consequent
upon a relaxed full arm is the occasional dropping
of the wrist below the level of the keyboard.
A few great players practice this at a public recital,
and lo! and behold! a veritable cult of ‘wrist-droppers’
arises and we see students raising and lowering the
wrist with exaggerated mechanical stiffness and entirely
ignoring the important end in which this wrist dropping
was only an incident.
METHODS, AND STILL MORE METHODS
“I am continually amused at
the thousand and one different ways of striking the
keys that teachers devise and then attach with the
label ‘method.’ These varied contortions
are, after all, largely a matter of vision, and have
little effect upon the real musical results that the
composition demands. Touch, as I have previously
said, all comes down to the question of the degree
of weight applied to the keyboard and the degree of
quickness with which it is applied. In rapid octave
and staccato passages the hand touch is largely used.
This is the touch most dependent upon local muscular
activity. Aside from this the combination of
muscular and weight touch almost invariably obtain.
DON’T NEGLECT EAR TRAINING
“I desire to reiterate that
if the ideal touch is presented to the pupil’s
mind, through the medium of the ear, he will be much
more successful in attaining the artistic ends required.
The pupil must realize clearly what is good
and what is bad, and his aural sense
must be continually educated in this respect.
He should practice slowly and carefully at the keyboard
until he is convinced that his arm is at all times
relaxed. He cannot make his sense of touch too
sensitive. He should even be able to sense the
weight or upward pressure which brings the pianoforte
key back into position after it has been depressed.
The arm should feel as if it were floating, and should
never be tense.
“When I am playing I do not
think of the arm motion. I am, of course, absorbed
in the composition being performed. A relaxed
arm has become second nature to me. It comes
by itself. Players are rarely able to tell just
how they produce their results. There are too
many contributing factors. Even with the best-known
performers the effects differ at different performances.
It is impossible for the performer to give a program
repeatedly in identically the same manner. If
he did succeed in doing this, his playing would soon
become stereotyped.
“The teacher should, from the
very beginning, seek to avoid stiffness and bad hand
positions, such as crooked fingers or broken-in knuckles.
If these details are neglected the pupil is liable
to go through his entire musical career greatly hampered.
I would earnestly advise all teachers to discourage
the efforts of pupils to attain virtuoso heights unless
they are convinced beyond the possibility of a doubt
that the pupil has marvelous talent. The really
great performers seem to be endowed with a ‘God-given’
insight in the matter of both technic and touch.
They are unquestionably born for it. They possess
the right mental and physical capacity for success.
No amount of training would make a Normandy dray horse
that could compete with a Kentucky thoroughbred on
the race course. It is a pitiful sight to watch
students who could not possibly become virtuosos slave
year after year before an ivory and ebony tread-mill,
when, if they realized their lack of personal qualifications,
they could engage in teaching or in some other professional
or mercantile line and take a delight in their music
as an avocation that they would never find in professional
playing.
ARTISTIC INTERPRETATION PARAMOUNT
“To some, the matter of touch
is of little significance. They are apparently
born with an appreciation of tonal values that others
might work years to attain in vain. Those who
imagine that touch is entirely a matter of finger
tips are greatly mistaken. The ear is quite as
important as the organs employed in administering the
touch to the keyboard. The pianist should in
reality not think of the muscles and nerves in his
arm, nor of the ivory and ebony keys, nor of the hammers
and strings in the interior of the instrument.
He should think first and always of the kind of tone
he is eliciting from the instrument, and determine
whether it is the most appropriate tonal quality for
the proper interpretation of the piece he is playing.
He must, of course, spend years of hard thought and
study in cultivating this ability to judge and produce
the right touch, but the performer who is more concerned
about the technical claims of a composition than its
musical interpretation can only hope to give an uninteresting,
uninspired, stilted performance that should rightly
drive all intelligent hearers from his audience hall.”
QUESTIONS IN STYLE, INTERPRETATION, EXPRESSION
AND TECHNIC OF PIANOFORTE PLAYING
SERIES VII
OSSIP GABRILOWITSCH
1. What are the two means of administering touch?
2. State the effect of a rigid arm upon piano
playing.
3. Can a pianist’s playing be distinguished
by touch?
4. How do the muscles of the
shoulder come into action in piano playing?
5. How should the sense of hearing
be employed in piano playing?
6. How did Rubinstein regard the theory of touch?
7. When is the hand touch generally employed?
8. How should the arm feel during the act of
touch?
9. Does the virtuoso hamper himself
with details of technic during a performance?
10. What should be the pianist’s
first thought during the moment of performance?