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As we know, composers tend not to be considerate of us poor pianists, especially if they have no intention of playing the music they write grin - whether placing exorbitant demands on our technique, or size or shape of our paws, or flexibility of our joints, etc, etc.

I've been looking at Youtube recordings of the finalists of the 2010 Chopin Competition to see what paths their careers have taken since, and discovered Hélène Tysman's fine performance from December 2011 of Ravel's D major Piano Concerto with a student orchestra (Liszt School of Music, Weimar). I noticed her bleeding middle finger during the closing cadenza, and realized that the injury occured during the ff upward glissando at the end of the opening cadenza, after which she grimaced and wiped her fingers on her handkerchief. In the subsequent glissandi, she used only her thumb.

When I practise pieces with glissandi, I usually 'play' them silently, sliding my fingernails lightly over the keys without depressing them. Do you do the same, or have you sustained injuries similar to Tysman while playing or practising them?


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I stubbed my toe playing once, oddly enough.

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Originally Posted by bennevis

When I practise pieces with glissandi, I usually 'play' them silently, sliding my fingernails lightly over the keys without depressing them.


Me too. I ripped up my finger on Alborada del gracioso, so I quickly learned how to practice with gliding over the notes.

I also sneezed while playing one time and messed up my shoulder pretty bad.

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I wore the wrong shoes once and thought I felt a calf cramp coming on during pedaling. Agh. I think it would've sent me right off the bench.

Isn't it better to play in a flat shoe than a heel? (I assume only females will answer this, but......ya nevah know.)


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Often, during the dry winter months, my skin will crack and separate from the nail, causing pain and sometimes bleeding. It's not really a "piano" injury, per se, but it certainly causes problems. When I had more time in front of the keys, this problem used to occur with greater frequency, and I used a liquid band-aid product religiously during those months.

Lately, since I have no performance obligations, and no piano, when I notice it happening, I just stop and wait for it to heal.


I've never cut my hand open on glissandi, despite playing some nastily sharp old/cracked-ivory-key pianos. If that's a major issue, you can try the rock-n-roll solution: thumb rings. I tend to use my nails--middle finger on the way up, thumb on the way down (opposite for LH). Make sure you have a nice angle on the keys so your hand glides easily and doesn't "cut" into any one key.


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Funny story. I was playing Jeaux D'eau in a masterclass a couple years back. The teacher demonstrated how the black key glissando should be played. And he demonstrated over...and over again. Eventually some skin tore off and he started to bleed on the piano. It wasn't much and I didn't notice until he asked me to play it again...which I did -_-


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I remember watching an old movie about Chopin - he coughed blood onto the keyboard with his TB. Bleeding onto the keys after playing glissandi can be even more messy....


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"A Song to Remember" is what the movie is called I believe. Love that movie!


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Originally Posted by Cheeto717
"A Song to Remember" is what the movie is called I believe. Love that movie!
Oh me too! I've always remembered the (rather apt) description of it I once read: A wild piece of gorgeous junk.


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My third finger is cursed I think. Two weeks ago I shut it in a heavy door giving me a bruise on either side of the knuckle; last week a binder of music falling on it cut it, and I was afraid it would start bleeding during a performance just 30 minutes later ; and yesterday something started hurting internally, either because of playing some Prokofiev too aggressively or because of a nerve problem that I had a while back.

There was another performance I went to in which two pianists had to perform. When the second pianist came out, he sat down at the piano, looked at the keys and then went back offstage. He came back with a wet rag and proceeded to clean the blood off the keys from the previous performer.


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Originally Posted by Arghhh
There was another performance I went to in which two pianists had to perform. When the second pianist came out, he sat down at the piano, looked at the keys and then went back offstage. He came back with a wet rag and proceeded to clean the blood off the keys from the previous performer.


Sounds like the first guy snapped a nail off maybe?

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I "stubbed" my RH fifth finger on the sloped front of a black key practicing the last mvt. of Mozart K. 283 several years ago. Stayed sore for a summer.

It didn't help holding a violin bow, also, as the pinky often supports the weight of the bow.

The end of Debussy's "L'isle joyeuse" is notorious: I bruised a finger tip firmly hitting wood a few times instead of that A at the end of the keyboard when I played that work several decades ago.

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Accidental injuries are mostly what I'm seeing...am I the only one who bruises my fingertips from hitting notes too hard? shocked

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I tried to pull a Lang Lang and I got a severe muscle cramp in my face.

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I've hurt my own morale when I've played terribly.

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Originally Posted by currawong
Originally Posted by Cheeto717
"A Song to Remember" is what the movie is called I believe. Love that movie!
Oh me too! I've always remembered the (rather apt) description of it I once read: A wild piece of gorgeous junk.


Could also have been La Note Bleue, a French Chopin "biopic" (a weird piece of grotesque junk) In that one there's a positive gusher onto the keys which he frantically attempts to mop up with his hankerchief.

I've transiently injured both wrists from too enthusiastic reaches, nothing that hasn't gone away by itself.



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I have developed painless, situation specific involuntary movements, restricted to piano playing, on two occasions. Both took a lot of discipline and time to get rid of. The funny thing was that they were inaudible and invisible to everyone but me. Of course through the internet I know now what they most likely were, but not knowing, I devised methods for myself which fixed them. I have never experienced pain through playing and hope I never do.


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Originally Posted by Cheeto717
"A Song to Remember" is what the movie is called I believe. Love that movie!


I do love those melodramatic movies, especially when pianists and l'amore are involved grin. They don't make 'em like that anymore, more's the pity - probably because few people play the piano these days and don't understand the looniness (sic) of the long-distance pianist. Thanks for reminding me what the title of that movie is - must get the DVD for Christmas - need a break from the umpteenth viewing of The Sound of Music....


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I can't play a glissandi yet, I am a beginner - I can barely a tuck a thumb under !

I do experience great pain everytime I play a wrong note.


I have had the piano only a few months and they told me it was tuned recently but for me to tune after it turns cold and I turn the heat on in the house. So I haved tuned it yet - probably later this month or in December.

When I play two notes together and one of the notes is wrong - I stupidly think immediately that my piano needs to be tuned!

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Just my pride ha


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At first, she only flew when she thought no one was watching.

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