The same is true with going up in the right hand - the thumb goes under your entire hand and you are using different muscles to control it. This alone will slow considerably how fast you can play scales until you learn a better technique. ![]() What about the others though? The hardest by far is going thumb under on the way down in the left hand. And this is what you should do - roll over with one smooth motion, not two or three (for example, roll with your finger above the key, then strike the key). The thumb under motions going down in the right hand and going up in the left hand feel more natural because your third/fourth finger can roll over your thumb. The ones that slow players down the most are 1) The thumb under going up in the right hand and 2) The thumb under going down in the left hand. Since the thumb under parts are the ones that create problems they are the parts that should be tackled. ![]() ![]() If you break down a scale, the parts that slow you down are the thumb under parts - everything else typically gives nobody difficulty to play quickly.
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