How To Teach Bach Invention No.14 in B-flat Major, BWV 785
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 9 มิ.ย. 2024
- Today we’re talking about how to teach Invention No.14 in B-flat Major by Johann Sebastian Bach. Editions that I mentioned: Henle urtext: amzn.to/3FZcsLO and Masterwork Classics book 8 amzn.to/3V6bJN9
To further help you determine the difficulty of an individual piece such as one of the Inventions, please download my free Repertoire Difficulty Worksheet. www.jannawilliamson.com/blog/...
Looking for more support as a piano teacher? Check out my Resources page here www.jannawilliamson.com/resou...
For more general information or to schedule a teacher consultation, please visit my website at www.jannawilliamson.com/
Follow me on social media here:
Instagram: / jannaonpiano
Facebook: / jannawilliamsonpiano
Disclaimer: Some of the links above are Amazon affiliate links. As an affiliate, I earn a small commission on qualifying purchases at no cost to you.
0:00 Introduction
0:43 Difficulty level
2:49 Editions
3:22 Key signature and harmony
4:12 Rhythm
6:17 Subject (main theme)
9:01 Practicing the ending
10:01 Parallel motion m.14-16
11:51 Articulation
Do you have other pieces in the intermediate repertoire that you'd like me to cover in a future video? Or do you have another favorite sonata movement that you'd like help teaching? Leave a comment here!
I'm using Essential Piano Repertoire edited by Keith Snell. Have you taught Sonata Op. 49 No. 1 in G minor by Beethoven? It is in book 8 of EPR.
@@heatherknezevichpiano6825 Yes, I've taught that multiple times. The first movement is a nice, melancholy alternative to some of the more "cheery" similar-level sonata movements. I will consider that for a video! Let me know if you have specific questions/issues. (I personally find the slurs problematic for students....) Thanks.
Thank you for this video. I’m an adult student returning to lessons after many years away. I found this Invention technically challenging. I appreciated your suggestions for articulation.
Thank you for watching!
Thank you so much for this articulate teaching! I've never taught this particular piece before but do have a student ready for a 2nd invention.
Great video! Thank you
For more videos covering how to teach pieces by JS Bach, click here: th-cam.com/play/PLyxlD3l1usT6fnTwrDYNcUvNIgr1QN82w.html
Thank you! I appreciate the helpful practice suggestions. I find most of my students at this level struggle with fingering, so we end up doing a lot of hands separate practice until it's comfortable.
Yes - and that's always a good choice for contrapuntal music in general!
I have recently started this piece in my first year of piano playing and found this video very useful, especially the bit about articulating in the baroque style. I would love to have one question answered if possible: there's a bunch of places in the piece where a 123 fingering for the 32th notes seems the logical choice but that often puts my thumb on the black key with the other fingers having to squeeze between the black keys. Is this weird for me because it is pretty new or do you recommend picking for example 234 which let's me stay lower in the keys? Thanks a lot!!
I really think this is up to you. If it sounds light and even, I don't see why you can't use your thumb. It's not ideal because you have to slide in towards the fallboard, but it could simplify some things.
the warm up and excersizes fro becoming comfortable in the key, do you have any resources? thank you!
If you're learning this piece, then you should know standard B-flat major scale fingering, arpeggio fingering, as well as chords in the keys. If those are unfamiliar, I'd suggest working with a teacher and learning some of these basics before tackling something like a Bach Invention. I do have information about how I teach technical patterns here: th-cam.com/video/3a7KWmdaMLs/w-d-xo.htmlsi=BqH_5Vqtjln0awZ_
I'm looking for the information you mentioned on how to choose the correct level of difficulty. Thanks!
I hope you find it helpful. Let me know if you have any questions!
Perhaps you edited your comment - at any rate, if you didn't find what you're looking for, please check out this video: th-cam.com/video/BGHFTlnWYBQ/w-d-xo.html