right hand plays logitech knee
Published by arioso7: Shirley Kirsten
International Online Piano Teacher, blogger, recording artist, composer, piano finder, freelance writer, film maker, story teller: Grad of the NYC H.S. of Performing Arts, Oberlin Conservatory, NYU (Master of Arts) Studies with Lillian Freundlich and Ena Bronstein; Master classes with Murray Perahia and Oxana Yablonskaya. Studios in BERKELEY, California; Member, Music Teachers Assoc. of California, MTAC; Distance learning by Skype and Face Time with supplementary videos: SKYPE ID: shirley kirsten Contact me at: shirley_kirsten@yahoo.com OR http://www.youtube.com/arioso7 or at FACEBOOK: Shirley Smith Kirsten, http://facebook.com /shirley.kirsten; https://www.facebook.com/skirs.7/ TWITTER: http://twitter.com/arioso7 Wordpress Blog: https://arioso7.wordpress.com Private fundraising for non-profits as pianist--Public Speaking re: piano teaching and creative approaches View all posts by arioso7: Shirley Kirsten


Fancy leg position! (I always ask myself if it’s ‘permitted’ to sit cross-legged – assuming the pedals are not needed of course. One day you’ll have to blog about that. or have you done so already?
So I sat cross-legged just to lift up the Logitech to the right elevated angle to aid the web-caming Greek student. Otherwise, verboten in my piano studios. I keep a keen eye on legs– making them sit properly–One pedal ready, the other back a bit but parallel to the right one. It’s the kids who regress often, not so much, the adults. Thanks for sharing.
We had some slip and slide knee yesterday.. My balance was not there.. had omitted my gym workout preceding.