Free Course: The Secret to Mastering Scale Fingering

Free Course: The Secret to Mastering Scale Fingering

In her 5-part course "Major & Minor Scales," pianist Juliana Han shows you a new way to look at scale fingerings.

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Mastering the A minor scale on piano is a task every pianist will have to accomplish at some point in their journey, as much of our common repertoire is based on the components of this scale.

Here, we’ll dive deeper into ways for you to practice and perfect your A major scale on the piano.

Click here to watch the tonebase lesson on this topic for FREE!

Overview

Let’s practice the A major scale with the help of Grieg.

Here’s an excerpt from Grieg’s monumental Concerto in A Minor, Op. 16:

Grieg A Minor Example (Monumental Concerto)

And here’s an excerpt from Chopin’s Étude Op. 25 No. 11 in A Minor, “Winter Wind”:

Chopin A Minor Example (Winter Wind)

Here, we will identify the pure form of the scale common to both excerpts, before using them as the basis for multi-purpose practice: sight reading and fingering, coordination and technique, theory and ear training, and musical expression.

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Multi-Purpose Practice

The exercises in this lab are marked with symbols helpful for practicing different technical and musicianship skills. In particular, you are encouraged to employ “play and sing” techniques to internalize musical relationships while developing physical coordination.

Fixed-do Solfège

fixed-do solfedge

Provides a singable syllable to match each of the seven letter notes in every scale. In Fixed-do, the note “C” is always identified and sung as “do”, regardless of key.

To keep a flowing line, omit accidentals when sight singing (D - E - F♯ is sung “re mi fa”).

Scale Degrees

scale degrees

Scale degrees number the notes of a scale in order from 1 to 7.

Here, scale degree numbers are enclosed in circles, with tonic (1) and Dominant (5) scale degrees colored purple for reference. Chromatic tones are enclosed in red circles.

While singing in fixed-do solfège tracks the absolute pitches of a given musical line, singing in scale degrees tracks the position and role of the notes with respect to a key center. Employ both at different times in your scale practice for best results.

Fingerings

1 2 3 4 5

Do not confuse scale degree numbers with fingering numbers.

Scale exercises are labeled with standard fingerings for both hands. Note that repertoire passages can deviate from the standard fingering. Try the fingerings marked in each excerpt, but also explore alternatives and ultimately choose what’s best for your hand.

Roman numeral analysis

1 5 7 1

Labels harmonies according to the root, with chords built on a given scale degree assigned a roman numeral corresponding to that number.

Tonal phrases tend to move from tonic (roman numeral I, built on scale degree 1) to dominant (roman numeral V, built on scale degree 5), and back, with other harmonies, especially ii and IV, used to prepare the dominant.

Pay attention to how composers use these functional harmonies with respect to the scalar lines within each passage.

How to approach the exercises

As mentioned before, these exercises go hand in hand with our comprehensive video lab, which you can access for free here. Feel free to check it out for a more in-depth look into this process.

Depending on your current skill level and practice goals, you can approach this lab in different ways.

Beginner and intermediate players:

Take your time: feel free to slow down the video using the settings and replay activities until you’re comfortable with a given skill. Don’t feel the pressure to complete all the exercises lab in one sitting.

More experienced players:

Try using the simpler activities to warm up your fingers or to reinforce your musical understanding. You may even repurpose the whole lab to target a single skill, like sight reading or ear training, or to warm up for a piece you're practicing in the same key. Feel free to speed up the videos to try drills at faster tempos, and repeat replay activities as needed.

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A minor scale elements

Notes and scale degrees

These are the nuts and bolts of the scale: note names, scale degrees, and solfège syllables.

a major scale piano

Right-Hand Fingering

This is the standard right-hand, one-octave scale fingering for this key.

a major scale piano right hand

Left-Hand Fingering

This is the standard left-hand, one-octave scale fingering for this key.

a major scale piano left hand

Hands Together

These are the standard hands-together, two-octave scale fingerings for this key.

To help you think ahead of your fingers, only fingerings for changes of hand position are shown.

a major scale piano hands together

A Minor Exercises: Grieg Concerto

Grieg: Exercise 1

This right-hand exercise introduces “stops” on every G ♯, allowing you to think ahead while holding the long note.

Grieg A Minor Example 1

Grieg: Exercise 2

This exercise transforms the scale into a series of dotted rhythms, which are excellent for developing your reflexes. 

Grieg A Minor Example 2

Grieg: Exercise 3

This exercise includes a harmonic skeleton of the original texture, and also repeats the note held during each stop to refine your coordination for a larger group of notes.

Grieg A Minor Example 3

Grieg: As Written

Grieg A Minor Example As Written

A Minor Exercises: Chopin “Winter Wind” Étude

Chopin: Exercise 1

This exercise isolates the right-hand scale figure, adds stops on every G ♯, adds fingerings, and highlights the tonic (in purple circles) and the chromatic alterations (in red circles) that make this the melodic minor scale. Scale degree 1 shows how the tonic is emphasized at both ends of the scale.

Chopin A Minor Example 1

Chopin: Exercise 2

This exercise is analogous to Exercise 1, but focuses on the left hand.

Chopin A Minor Example 2

Chopin: Exercise 3

This hands-together exercise features stops on A (instead of G ♯), emphasizing the tonic and building up your coordination for a larger group.

Chopin A Minor Example 3

Chopin: Exercise 4

This exercise features thinned-out harmonies (the As in the middle of the texture are omitted).

Chopin A Minor Example 4

Chopin: As Written

Chopin A Minor Example As Written

Conclusion

Now that we’ve gone through these examples, you should have all of the tools necessary to play an A minor scale and related passages with ease.

If you’d like to watch the lesson we mentioned earlier for free, just click here.

If you’re ready to learn more about piano scale technique and get to the next level on the piano, start your tonebase membership with a free 14-day trial.

Inside tonebase, you’ll find 100s of in-depth lessons and structured courses, LIVE weekly workshops, and tons of digital PDF scores and workbooks to help you become the pianist you’ve always dreamed of being. 

Get complete access to everything tonebase has to offer by starting your trial today!

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