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Teaching Organ Techniques in a Holistic Manner Presentation for AGO National Convention, Boston Friday, June 27, 1:00 p.m. Annie Laver, Eastman School of Music [email protected] Topics covered in first year of Healthy Keyboard Technique course at Eastman • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

Healthy habits: the benefits of taking care of your body (sleep, nutrition, exercise, meditation) Getting to know the body and how it works (body mapping) Body warm-up exercises to use before daily practice Finding a healthy playing position at the organ Comparison of sound producing mechanisms on piano and organ Keyboard basics: how to use gravity and natural alignment to produce sound without harming the body Piano basics: scales, arpeggios, strengthening exercises Organ basics: controlling releases Introduction to other keyboard instruments: pedal piano, French harmonium, pedal clavichord, harpsichord Use of the pedal clavichord as a tool to reinforce good technique habits Making gestures with figures: historical fingering/pedaling Making gestures with lines: legato playing Preparation for 10-minute jury on the pedal clavichord Mentally preparing for performance

Useful resources for teaching technique, an annotated list www.bodymap.org Website for Andover Educators, an organization founded by Barbara Conable with the aim of spreading awareness about body mapping and Alexander Technique. Excellent website with links to articles, recommended reading, useful links, licensed teachers, and schedule of events and workshops.

www.pianoandorgantechnique.com Barbara Lister-Sink’s website describing her method for injury-preventive piano technique. Includes description of method, an annotated resource list, information on workshops and courses, and video clips.

Cisler, Valerie and Maurice Hinson. Technique for the Advancing Pianist: An Essential Collection of Progressive Exercises and Etudes. Van Nuys, CA: Alfred Publishing, 2004. This practical volume draws from numerous recognized piano methods and organizes exercises and etudes into skill sections, such as scales, chords, agility, etc. Includes traditional scale and arpeggio fingerings. All exercises and etudes are cited, so it is easy to look up the original volume if you are eager for more.

Conable, Barbara and William Conable. How to Learn the Alexander Technique: A

Manual for Students. Columbus, OH: Andover Press, Third Edition, 1995. Concise and easy-to-use manual explaining the principles of Alexander Technique. Includes chapters for teachers (“How to help students with their maps”), as well as a chapter on types of exercise, body mapping, and recommended reading, among others.

Conable, Barbara and Benjamin Conable. What Every Musician Needs to Know About the Body: The Practical Application of Body Mapping to Making Music. Revised edition. Andover, 2000. Based on concept of body mapping and the Alexander Technique, this book focuses on body awareness in a compelling visual format. Each page includes multiple helpful pictures and diagrams with text boxes to explain body construction. Tips for all instruments and voices are included. Great for use with students who do well with visual learning, or younger students who don’t yet have the attention for Thomas Mark’s book.

Godandsky, Edna and Dorothy Taubman. The Taubman Technique. 10 volumes. Edited by Shirly Schnitzer. Produced by the Taubman Institute, 1995. Videocassette. Dorothy Taubman was a pioneer in the field of body awareness and its relation to piano technique. This video set documents a two-week course on the Taubmen Technique given at Amherst College by one of Taubman’s pupils, Edna Godansky. Format is a video of lectures and masterclasses given at the course, interspersed with footage of masterclasses with Taubman from the 1980s. A valuable resource for those who want to explore piano technique in depth. Best used together with a more recent resource, such as Mark Thomas’ What Every Pianist Needs to Know about the Body.

Lister-Sink, Barbara. Freeing the Caged Bird: Developing Well-Coordinated, InjuryPreventive Piano Technique. Produced by Don Kirk and Barbara ListerSink. Directed by Barbara Lister-Sink. 160 minutes. Wingsound, 1996. Videocassette. Excellent place to start for keyboardists who want to learn more about the body and how to use it efficiently and naturally when playing. Lister-Sink struggled with injuries but was able to retrain herself to use her body well. Video addresses body awareness and how to practice good body coordination with helpful visuals and examples of exercises based on Alexander Technique. Then, the video takes you step-by-step through “the basic stroke,” a way of producing sound that is based on good alignment and natural gravitational pull. Note: Lister-Sink recommends the following resources for when working on developing technique: Progressive Sight Reading Practices for Piano by Hannah Smith, Mikrokosmos by Bela Bartok, Album for the Young by Robert Schumann.

Mark, Thomas. What Every Pianist Needs to Know about the Body. With supplementary material for organists by Roberta Gary and Thom Miles. GIA Publications, 2003. Videocassette also available under the same title.

 

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Every keyboardist should own this important reference book! Readers will come away with an accurate body map after having read through the book. Organized systematically (bones, joints, muscles) and with numerous guided exercises that help readers get to know they body better. This book piggy-backs on Barbara Conable’s What Every Musician Needs to Know about the Body, using many of the same pictures and figures, but it fleshes out concepts with extensive and informative explanation. Comment boxes and an additional chapter written by Roberta Gary and Thom Miles make this book especially useful for organists.

Oortmerssen, Jacques van. Organ Technique. Gothenburg, Sweden: GoART Publications, 2002. First half includes essay on connection between technique and expressivity, including many historical quotes. Second half consists of examples of passages from the repertoire with suggestions for practice. This and the next item are available at www.oortmerssen.com

_____. A Guide to Duo and Trio Playing. Sneek, Holland: Edition Boeijenga Sneek, 2000. Practical studies in historical fingering, pedaling, coordination, articulation, and polyphonic playing composed by the author.

Ritchie, George and George Stauffer. Organ Technique: Modern and Early. New York: Oxford University Press, 2000. One of the few modern method books that presents a variety of techniques (“modern and early”). Designed for beginning to intermediate organ students who have had previous background at the keyboard. Includes exercises and practice pieces for both legato technique and early technique (ca. 1700) with fingerings and pedalings. Additional practical material, such as discussions of position at the keyboard, hymn-playing guide, and introduction to various organ building traditions.

Soderlund, Sandra. How Did They Play? How Did They Teach? A History of Keyboard Technique. Chapel Hill, NC: Hinshaw Music, 2006. A valuable collection of commentary on historical sources dealing with keyboard technique, organized chronologically from the 15th to the 20th centuries. Soderlund reprints many exercises, prefaces, and quotes from the sources in English translation. A great place to start if you want to check on fingering systems or other technique-related performance practice issues for a specific repertoire.

Speerstra, Joel. Bach and the Pedal Clavichord: An Organist’s Guide. Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press, 2004. Includes discussion on how to produce good sound on the clavichord, exercises to help a student play with more arm and leg weight, articulation, fingering and pedaling, and playing figures with gesture. The book also includes chapters on the history of the clavichord, reception history, and discussions of J. S. Bach’s trio sonatas and passacaglia.

 

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Figure 2 Barbara Conable, What Every Musician Needs to Know About the Body, p. 22 & 50.

 

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Figure 3 Jacques van Oortmerssen, A Guide to Duo and Trio Playing, p. 5.

Figure 4 Joel Speerstra, J. S. Bach and the Pedal Clavichord, p. 121 & 123.

Figure 5 Joel Speerstra, J. S. Bach and the Pedal Clavichord, p. 96.

 

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Figure 6 Johann Sebastian Bach, Toccata in F.

Figure 7 César Franck, L’Organiste.

 

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