Piano (Photo credit: MagnuZ) |
Israel and garindra have shared with me a common complaint
with their fingering during practice of the piano, along with
coordinating the l.h. and r.h. Many beginners and intermediate
piano students struggle with piano fingering... you're not alone!
Since our fingers have different lengths
Reading Fingering To Piano Music
You will see numbers 1-5 written above or below notes in piano scales
and songs with sheet music. The numbers match and go with your fingers
and let you know what finger presses the key of the piano.
A Guide To Finger Placement
So, the fingering is the same for both hands:
Thumb: 1
Index Finger: 2
Middle Finger: 3
Ring Finger: 4
Pinky Finger: 5
Our fingers are of different lengths; the thumbs are shorter than the other
fingers. Generally speaking, the thumb is the strongest finger of all. The
thumb, index finger (2nd) and middle finger (3rd) are used the most for
piano playing. The fourth finger is the weakest and least used. The following
are some tips on how to play piano with correct fingering by Yoke Wong.
1. Restrict the usage of thumb on black keys. You may consider using thumb
on black keys when the following occurs:
- Playing a piece that has all black notes
- Playing chords with all black notes, for example: Gb major chord.
- Playing chords with black and white notes, and the lower note happens to
- be black note.
2. When playing the melody with the right hand and some keys are out
of reach, you may move the whole hand to play the note. If the key is only
a couple of steps down from the thumb, you may use the thumb as an anchor and
cross the second finger over to reach the note on the left side of the thumb. You do
not need to move the hand. Just move the second finger over. Once the second finger
plays the key, the thumb will cross over to play the other note to the left of the key.
Suggestion: Practice the piano scales often to know what finger to use.
3. The same rule applies to the left hand.
4. Watch other experienced pianists whenever possible, look at their fingering and
imitate their movements.
Practicing The Piano
The easiest way to be able to play an entire piece of music with hands
together is to play the song in small sections and also to do plenty of
segments with separate hands in practice.
Wrapping Up With Rules for Fingering
1. It's most natural to use the middle fingers for the black keys.
2. It's knowing all of your scales without ever having to think about
the proper fingering.
3. It's essential to learn the standard fingerings for arpeggios in all chord inversions.
4. It's natural to change hand position at the same time in both hands, moving in
opposite directions. It's easier to remember passages in which the thumbs coincide.
5. It's often best to keep a consistent fingering, even if it sometimes means breaking
other rules; even if a motive or figuration is repeated in another key.
6. It's true that changing your fingering for a given passage can subtly and sometimes dramatically affect the resulting sound.
7. It's o.k. to write down the fingering that you're using during piano practice.
"The beautiful thing about learning is that no one can take it away from you." B.B.King