Let me start by saying that technique was a struggle for me. You may have heard me talk before about how my double-jointed fingers wouldn’t do what my teacher wanted, let alone what I wanted. I had been playing the harp for nearly ten years before I was able to develop proper mechanics, to make my fingers play with the form and strength necessary for the level of playing I aspired to. Granted, I was still a teenager at the time, so my fingers have endured decades of technical work beyond that, but I want to tell you that harp technique is still something I work on daily, not because I want to, but because I have to.
It’s true that our technique gets stronger and more reliable over time. That’s the good news. The more we focus on developing the proper mechanics, along with flexibility and speed, the more dependable our technique becomes. However, the results of our technical work can leave us in a moment.
There is a well-known quote attributed to the celebrated violinist Jascha Heifetz about this very thing. He said, “If I don't practice one day, I know it; two days, the critics know it; three days, the public knows it.” Granted that most of us aren’t playing regularly in the same concert halls that Heifetz was, but we notice the same disheartening phenomenon: our technique requires constant attention.
I’m going to make a big assumption here, that you don’t have hours every day to spend on your harp technique. Frankly, I don’t either. I have to put time into my technique daily, but it’s never as much time as I’d like, or as much time as my technique needs. But having spent years working through my own technique challenges and guiding students through the ones they face, I have three specific aspects of technique that many of us don’t spend enough time on.
These are three very specific and actually very basic technical skills. If you pay attention to these three things, you will be on your way to solving many common technique glitches that prevent your music from flowing the way you want. These aren’t cure-all remedies. They are three basic skills that truly matter to your playing. Most exercise books include them, but they don’t tell you why they matter. That’s what I want to tell you today.
Here’s the thing: if I simply told you what the skills were, you’d probably dismiss them, thinking you already know how to do them, or at least two of the three. The difference comes once you know why they are so important, what they really mean for your playing. Even better, when they show up in a piece you are learning, you’ll spot them and know exactly how to make that tricky passage smooth. Are you intrigued a little, maybe a lot? I hope so.
Links to things I think you might be interested in that were mentioned in the podcast episode:
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