Bach's Partita in A minor for solo flute

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Robin
Posts: 13
Joined: Mon Oct 10, 2011 12:54 pm

Bach's Partita in A minor for solo flute

Post by Robin »

Hi,

I've recently started practising the four movements of this truly epic flute solo. However, being only mediocre in talent I'm finding some of the parts very challenging. Since this is very standard flute repetoire (apparently), I'm hoping someone here who's cracked this can recommend any exercises or tips they found useful when practising it :)

The third part ('corrente') is the one that hurts the most.

Incidentally, there's a great rendition on spotify by Emmanuel Pahud that I'm using for inspiration; worth a listen if you're a Spotify user.

lianeandflute
Posts: 135
Joined: Fri Jun 11, 2010 1:19 am

Re: Bach's Partita in A minor for solo flute

Post by lianeandflute »

what kind of challenges are you facing? so we can possibly give you some more specific advice that you can actually use! haha
"It's happening inside you; not in the flute!" - Emmanuel Pahud (At a masterclass in Sydney, Nov. 2010)

Robin
Posts: 13
Joined: Mon Oct 10, 2011 12:54 pm

Re: Bach's Partita in A minor for solo flute

Post by Robin »

Hi,

The problems are:
  • long jumps (F1# D2 C3 C3)
  • playing fast (for which I'm hoping there are a few things I can do other than just practising the final payload slowly)
  • structuring my practice (I just play bits randomly - practising the first few bars, then the next few + the first few and so on)
Perhaps there are some special scales or known sequences that makes the fingering more natural?

I suppose it's hard to give advice without hearing me, but even sharing your own practice strategy would be of interest to me :)

Thanks

Robin

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Phineas
Posts: 962
Joined: Sat Jan 22, 2005 1:08 am

Re: Bach's Partita in A minor for solo flute

Post by Phineas »

Robin
long jumps (F1# D2 C3 C3)
One good way to get use to doing long jumps is start practicing wide intervals(4ths, 5th,....octaves, ...etc)
playing fast (for which I'm hoping there are a few things I can do other than just practising the final payload slowly)
This is where I am going to get flamed, but here it goes....

Every new piece/tune you learn should be done slowly, and should never be played faster than you are able to play it without a mistake.
This does not mean you should not try to play it faster. However, if you are playing at a given speed, and you start making mistakes, you
should play it at the fastest tempo you are able without mistakes. As you start to memorize and work out fingerings, speed will come.
Most issues I see with speed are memorization issues more than the physical aspect in most cases.(unless someone has a real physical problem of course)

Regardless what some will have you believe, the music you memorize is always to music you perform the best.
structuring my practice (I just play bits randomly - practising the first few bars, then the next few + the first few and so on)
Yes, that is a good practice to a point. However, you are playing a piece/tune, not measures. It is important to attempt putting it all together.
Remember, there are other factors involved besides zipping though the notes. You have to pace your breathing, work out articulation, working out rhythms, etc.....

The key in sight reading is learning a vocabulary, and recognizing what it looks like on paper. This goes for notes, and rhythm patterns. The more you do it, the more you memorize recognizable patterns, the more comfortable you will become with doing it! The only thing that makes a composition hard to play is a lack of knowledge of it.

That is my .20usd on the issue!

Phineas

Robin
Posts: 13
Joined: Mon Oct 10, 2011 12:54 pm

Re: Bach's Partita in A minor for solo flute

Post by Robin »

Thank you. It will be a few months of daily practice but I will crack it! :)

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