Focus on even tone and smooth thumb tuck under fingers
Hands Together6 min
One octave at ♪=50–60
Isolate any sloppy thumb-tuck passages and repeat slowly
"Pass" = 2 clean runs in a row before moving on
Cool-down3 min
Play your best scale once pp (very soft), eyes closed
Mark a scale "ready" when clean hands-together at ♪=80
Tip: Add only one new scale per week. Master C before adding G, G before D, and so on.
Intermediate Routine
25–30 min daily · All 12 major scales, 2 octaves
Warm-up4 min
Chromatic scale hands-together, 2 octaves at ♪=80
Isolated thumb-under drill: practice crossing the thumb slowly under each finger
Technique Blocks12 min
4 scales per session, 3 min each
HS slow → HT slow → HT fast (♪=100–120)
Rotate all 12 across the week — e.g. Mon: C G D A · Tue: E B F♯ F · Wed: B♭ E♭ A♭ D♭
Articulation8 min
Legato at ♪=100
Staccato at ♪=100
Accent patterns: every 3rd note, then every 4th note
Application6 min
Find a scale passage in your current repertoire piece
Play the matching scale 4× fast to prime the fingers
Jump straight into the passage
Tip: Use a metronome app with gradual tempo ramp (+2 BPM every 2 bars) rather than jumping straight to the target tempo.
Advanced Routine
30–40 min daily · All 12 majors, 4 octaves, performance tempo
Warm-up5 min
One scale, 4 octaves at ♪=40 hyper-slow — focus entirely on body awareness and sound
Same scale staccato at ♪=60
Velocity Work15 min
Start at ♪=80 in semiquavers; ascend to ♪=144 in 4-BPM steps
Must be clean before advancing — no rushing or sloppy notes
Alternate rhythms: dotted long-short → short-long → even
Contrary Motion8 min
Both hands start on the tonic, move outward then inward simultaneously
Fingering mirrors symmetrically — excellent for muscle memory reinforcement
Required for ABRSM / RCM exam grades
Musicality8 min
4-octave scale with crescendo ascending, diminuendo descending
Play the same scale entirely pp (pianissimo) throughout
Record once a week to track tonal development over time
Tip: If tension appears at any point, drop 20 BPM immediately and shake your hands loose before continuing.
Scale Order — Circle of Fifths
Recommended learning sequence with cumulative accidentals
#
Scale
New Accidental Added
Key Signature
1
C major
—
No sharps or flats
2
G major
F♯
1 sharp
3
D major
C♯
2 sharps
4
A major
G♯
3 sharps
5
E major
D♯
4 sharps
6
B major
A♯
5 sharps
7
F♯ major
E♯
6 sharps
8
F major
B♭
1 flat
9
B♭ major
E♭
2 flats
10
E♭ major
A♭
3 flats
11
A♭ major
D♭
4 flats
12
D♭ major
G♭
5 flats
Circle of Fifths pattern:
Sharps follow the sequence C → G → D → A → E → B → F♯, each step moving up a perfect fifth (7 semitones) and adding one new sharp to the key signature.
Flats follow the sequence C → F → B♭ → E♭ → A♭ → D♭ → G♭, each step moving down a perfect fifth (equivalently up a perfect fourth) and adding one new flat.
Learning scales in this order minimises the number of new accidentals introduced at each step, making each new scale feel like a small extension of the previous one rather than a blank slate.