Piano playing skills are as follows:
Scale: The 24 tonic tones of a scale are more important and useful. Many large sonatas, music and concertos have scales in many places, so we should master the scales well. When playing scales, you should pay attention to making all the notes sound the same, neither light nor heavy. Be sure to pay attention to the control ability of your fingers. If you still play with some heavy or light scales, you may not be able to play your satisfactory timbre and melody.
Arpeggio: Arpeggio includes 24 major and minor arpeggios, belonging to 7 minus 7 arpeggios. This is something based on scales, which is mainly used to practice the stretching ability between fingers, and it is also a very important exercise. The arpeggios in piano music account for a large part, and all kinds of arpeggios will appear, but they all belong to 24 major and minor arpeggios of 7 chords and minus 7 chords, so it is very useful and necessary to play the basic arpeggios well.
Octave: There are two playing techniques for 8 degrees. 1 Only use the wrist technique, and the second is to use the arm and wrist together. It takes wrist skill to play the 8-degree segment, and arm strength to play the last 8-degree segment, so as to pop up the magnificent effect. If it is an 8-degree segment with the same hands, it needs the cooperation of wrist and arm. If you only use your wrist or arm, it is difficult to pop up the power of ff and jump well.
Wheel fingers: commonly used wheel fingers are three fingers and four fingers. The particle size of the bullet should be good, and there should be no vague and chaotic components in it. For example, at the beginning of Mozart's "Turkish March", a very coherent wheel finger is needed.
Chords: Chords are mainly a matter of practice methods. No matter how many chords you play, you should play them neatly, without going back and forth. The chord of P should be played very lightly and neatly. The chord of F should have a metallic sound, and the played chord will sink. The chords that can't be played give people a feeling of floating.
Jump: To put it bluntly, this is a very mechanical action, especially the two jumps above 8 degrees, which are purely technical. It is important to practice slowly at first. Only by practicing slowly can you relax your muscles. Remember the position of playing arpeggios in octaves. You need radians when practicing slowly, so that there will be no more mispronunciations when playing fast.
Finger independent practice: mastering this skill requires a certain understanding of piano playing. Schmidt's piano course is a piano fingering exercise with certain difficulty, but after playing it, you will find that the technical problems that could not be solved are no longer difficult. Liszt's Nightingale is a very nice little tune, but many people can't play it neatly, that is, the problem of finger independence has not been fundamentally solved.
Third and sixth chord exercises: this is one of the more difficult skills, and the important thing is the flexibility of fingering and fingers, which is also an important skill. For the right hand, it is easy to practice, and the scales of 3 and 6 degrees can be played clearly, and the speed is no problem. However, for the left hand, the speed can only be 1. Although it is difficult to hit 3 or 6 degrees, it will be very rewarding to keep practicing.