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For crying out loud.
If you want to improve your keyboard technique, find a teacher and do what your teacher says.
No one on an internet forum is going to give you the magic answer.
And if you want to know how to improve your technique WITHOUT use etudes and scales, well, change hobbies. Scales and studies are the basic elements of technical improvement. They are designed to improve technique.
Fine, learn a Mozart sonata that has the same scale over and over in it.. you'll get really good at that single scale. When you come to learn a Beethoven piece, that has a different scale, well, you're going to have to work just as hard, and start from scratch, relearning everything you had already learned through that Mozart piece.
Instead, do a study. It contains pretty much all the permutations of a single passage. Once you can play that etude properly, well, there you go... never again wil you have to "relearn" a passage containing that figuration. Your hand has learned the mechanics of it.
But ignore my advice, I'm sure you'll get lots more advice that you'd much rather hear. Stuff that sounds way more cool and lots more fun.
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"Those that know, do;
Those that understand, teach."
-Aristotle-
"toute audace engendrée par l'ignorance cesse d'être une audace et devient une maladresse"
-Debussy-
In musical criticism, when issues of craft and technical consideration are set aside, what remains is more subjective. However, until technical issues are dealt with, the subjective portion bears considerably less weight.
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