| It looks like you're at bar 56 in the last movement, using Oscar Zimmerman fingering.
OK, 2 is on F on the D string. Since we're shifting to the G string, think of where 4 is on the G. 4 is at Gb on the D, and at Cb (B) on the G. (this gets tough because the key is Eb, therefore we should talk flats rather than sharps. Also, you've just run a Bb minor arpeggio. You are shifting up to put 3 on Ab. When that happens, 1 will be on Gb (Wow. I can see you're shifting tonality, going to a sharp key) On an upshift, you describe where 1 will land in respect to the prior position:
1 goes 3 1/2 above 4, i.e.
Gb is 3 1/2 above Cb
Cb to Db = 1
Db to Eb = 1
Eb to F = 1
F to Gb = 1/2
You picked a difficult example, in isolation. As I said earlier, initially this seems insane, but you'll see it working in a short time. It's best learned with a teacher who uses the concept.
P.S. If you want to think in terms of B rather than Cb, it works the same way
2 on F, 4 on B of the G string. In the shift, 1 lands on F#.
B to C = 1/2
C to D = 1
D to E = 1
E to F# = 1
Either way, 1 goes 3 1/2 over 4
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Certified to teach the Alexander Technique. see donaldhigdon.com
Last edited by Don Higdon : 04-02-2001 at 06:32 AM.
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