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Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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Topic: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying. (Read 3093 times)
debussy symbolism
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Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
«
on:
April 07, 2007, 01:16:40 AM »
Greetings.
Today I received a very thoughful, to me at least, and a very pensive comment from none other than my own mother about my playing of a couple of Chopin Waltzes. She commented on how my playing lacked musicality, if I should use that word. She also however commented on how well I play the technical material such as Moszkowski etudes, so naturally the question for me arises: playing musically is much harder than playing technically, even if the "musical" piece is easier. I would much rather perform the difficult Moszkowski etudes to a public than a technically easier, but musically difficult Chopin Waltz. I always knew that playing musically is very important, but I never actually realised just how difficult it is. I do have to admit that I am working on the Moszkowski etudes (I know 5 so far) for much longer than the Waltzes (I just started them), but the technical demands are very different. I guess I just need to focus also on not just the notes, but the meaning behind the notes, or for a more technically precise term, articulation, tone and dynamics.
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opus10no2
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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Reply #1 on:
April 07, 2007, 01:40:56 AM »
If the piece is more difficult to play 'musically', then it must be inherently a less interesting piece of music?
It demands more from the performer because it isn't much alone by itself.
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debussy symbolism
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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April 07, 2007, 01:45:39 AM »
Quote from: opus10no2 on April 07, 2007, 01:40:56 AM
If the piece is more difficult to play 'musically', then it must be inherently a less interesting piece of music?
It demands more from the performer because it isn't much alone by itself.
I am going to pretend to ignore that comment...
If it demands more from the perfomer then how on Earth can it possibly be not much by itself?
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opus10no2
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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April 07, 2007, 01:49:44 AM »
Because excellent music sounds great in a midi.
If it is not excellent music, it needs alot of expressive input from the performer to sound good.
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debussy symbolism
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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April 07, 2007, 02:29:49 AM »
Quote from: opus10no2 on April 07, 2007, 01:49:44 AM
Because excellent music sounds great in a midi.
If it is not excellent music, it needs alot of expressive input from the performer to sound good.
Then you should be very capable of supplying me with a definition of "excellent" music. If you so wish, why don't you just enter the notes into a midi and listen to that instead. Heck, you could even speed it up a 100 times so that it will truly be as fast as you wish.
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jre58591
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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April 07, 2007, 02:53:52 AM »
Quote from: opus10no2 on April 07, 2007, 01:49:44 AM
Because excellent music sounds great in a midi.
If it is not excellent music, it needs alot of expressive input from the performer to sound good.
comme gtfo.
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Mozartian
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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April 07, 2007, 02:54:53 AM »
Quote from: opus10no2 on April 07, 2007, 01:49:44 AM
Because excellent music sounds great in a midi.
If it is not excellent music, it needs alot of expressive input from the performer to sound good.
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thierry13
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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April 07, 2007, 03:05:09 AM »
Quote from: debussy symbolism on April 07, 2007, 01:16:40 AM
Greetings.
Today I received a very thoughful, to me at least, and a very pensive comment from none other than my own mother about my playing of a couple of Chopin Waltzes. She commented on how my playing lacked musicality, if I should use that word. She also however commented on how well I play the technical material such as Moszkowski etudes, so naturally the question for me arises: playing musically is much harder than playing technically, even if the "musical" piece is easier. I would much rather perform the difficult Moszkowski etudes to a public than a technically easier, but musically difficult Chopin Waltz. I always knew that playing musically is very important, but I never actually realised just how difficult it is. I do have to admit that I am working on the Moszkowski etudes (I know 5 so far) for much longer than the Waltzes (I just started them), but the technical demands are very different. I guess I just need to focus also on not just the notes, but the meaning behind the notes, or for a more technically precise term, articulation, tone and dynamics.
In fact I think if you are really comfortable with technique, it is much easier to play musically, because you only have to think about it. Technique is only a huge help to play more musically.
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prongated
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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April 07, 2007, 03:05:31 AM »
...aaaha I will be writing a paper on this sometime this year...
hmmm atm I do think technical playing is easier than musical playing. Put simply, there is a foreseeable limit to which one can perform technically. Yet, artistic qualities in a performance know no bound.
However, just because technical playing is 'easier' than musical playing, doesn't mean technical playing is easy. Pianists with brilliant technique like Lang Lang, Hamelin, Godowsky etc. don't get there without lots of practise. Technical playing is also very difficult!
People who are "musical" or appreciate "musicality" can't dismiss this. Many are probably snobs who themselves don't have technique for one reason or another, and got beaten (despite "musicality") in comps because of it.
And so they should be. In a performance, musicality can't substitute wrong notes.
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prongated
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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Reply #9 on:
April 07, 2007, 03:08:13 AM »
Quote from: thierry13 on April 07, 2007, 03:05:09 AM
In fact I think if you are really comfortable with technique, it is much easier to play musically, because you only have to think about it. Technique is only a huge help to play more musically.
...then it comes down to definition of technique doesn't it?
I personally define it as a tool to which one achieve musical goal. Come to think of it, if fast and furious is your musical goal...
Quote from: opus10no2 on April 07, 2007, 01:49:44 AM
Because excellent music sounds great in a midi.
If it is not excellent music, it needs alot of expressive input from the performer to sound good.
...then I suppose we might as well let computer do concert performances...
Haha 'tis so like human challenging pong in tennis.
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Bob
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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Reply #10 on:
April 07, 2007, 03:19:47 AM »
hmm... I thought it was common knowledge. I think it uses more or a different part of the brain.
I think it's a lot easier and more objective to talk about the concrete elements in music. When it's musicality though, it begins to boarder on the subjective, but that's where the good stuff is.
To have your mom say that is kind of harsh though. Kind of like the noivce with an inciteful comment though -- which makes it all the more painful.
How would a computer do a performance?
This is one of the best threads I've seen on PS in awhile, btw.
Bravo!
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opus10no2
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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Reply #11 on:
April 07, 2007, 03:29:38 AM »
Quote from: prongated on April 07, 2007, 03:08:13 AM
...then it comes down to definition of technique doesn't it?
I personally define it as a tool to which one achieve musical goal. Come to think of it, if fast and furious is your musical goal...
...then I suppose we might as well let computer do concert performances...
Haha 'tis so like human challenging pong in tennis.
That wasn't the point I was making.
A pianist with ZERO creative musicality, and only a technical command of the instrument , mechanically and musically (ie - musical capibilities, not choices), is a human equivelant to a MIDI.
A MIDI correctly assimilates everything written in the score, completely and literally.
To reproduce everything on a page, as written - is all TECHNICAL difficulty.
What I DIDN'T say, and which is obvious - is that ANY piece benifits from creative musical input from the performer, be it a great piece or not.
"Musical" difficulty is simply a misnomer, if a piece is more musically difficult than another you must either simply not like it as much, or find it more difficult to find the musical essense of(or make up your mind from the myriad of possibilities).
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brewtality
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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April 07, 2007, 03:46:11 AM »
Quote from: debussy symbolism on April 07, 2007, 01:16:40 AM
Greetings.
playing musically is much harder than playing technically
Not necessarily. For example Rubinstein in his young days had no problem grasping the musical meaning of the pieces he played, but could never render a technically polished performance. So I would say it depends on the piece and the person playing it. In fact most pianists manage to play badly in both respects.
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prongated
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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Reply #13 on:
April 07, 2007, 04:15:32 AM »
Quote from: opus10no2 on April 07, 2007, 03:29:38 AM
To reproduce everything on a page, as written - is all TECHNICAL difficulty.
What I DIDN'T say, and which is obvious - is that ANY piece benifits from creative musical input from the performer, be it a great piece or not.
"Musical" difficulty is simply a misnomer, if a piece is more musically difficult than another you must either simply not like it as much, or find it more difficult to find the musical essense of(or make up your mind from the myriad of possibilities).
Oh. Then I quite agree
. I prefer your latter definition of "musical difficulty", even though the former is also possible.
I can also sort of start to see your definition of 'excellent' music...
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danny elfboy
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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Reply #14 on:
April 07, 2007, 07:01:26 AM »
Quote from: debussy symbolism on April 07, 2007, 01:16:40 AM
Greetings.
Today I received a very thoughful, to me at least, and a very pensive comment from none other than my own mother about my playing of a couple of Chopin Waltzes. She commented on how my playing lacked musicality, if I should use that word. She also however commented on how well I play the technical material such as Moszkowski etudes, so naturally the question for me arises: playing musically is much harder than playing technically, even if the "musical" piece is easier. I would much rather perform the difficult Moszkowski etudes to a public than a technically easier, but musically difficult Chopin Waltz. I always knew that playing musically is very important, but I never actually realised just how difficult it is. I do have to admit that I am working on the Moszkowski etudes (I know 5 so far) for much longer than the Waltzes (I just started them), but the technical demands are very different. I guess I just need to focus also on not just the notes, but the meaning behind the notes, or for a more technically precise term, articulation, tone and dynamics.
Imo technique is the piece of cake aspect of piano playing.
Everything can aquire it given some knowledge on effective practice and consistence.
In fact all the technique one will ever need to play everything can be aquired in a rather short amount of time.
Putting technique at the service of good performance which captivate the audience and flows emotionally is the hard part.
I've made the example.
Perform poems so that the essence of the poem is trasmitted to the audience and all the emotional nuances are emphasized but doesn't ruin the flow of the words is ONE of the hardest thing ever. Yet it has nothing to do with speech-technique.
From years of speaking we have all the "technique" required to manipulate the volume of our voice, whisper, control the tone, rest, make lung pauses and so on.
So even when you have the technical means required to express yourself artistically, expressing yourself artistically is still the hardest task ... the one not only that require a great control on using your means but that require choices on how to use them that no one will choose for you (think of how each conductor make choices about the rendition of a score)
Having the technical means is just less than half of what being an artist means.
Having the technique to perform all the figure in dancing doesn't mean trasmitting passion and communicating interesting things with your dancing.
Having the technique to perform all the dynamics of singing doesn't mean transmitting passion and communicating interesting things withyour singing.
Having the technique to type fast on a keyboard and never make a mistake in outlining your page doesn't mean trasmitting passion and communicating interesting things with what you write.
And what about chess champions. The technique required to play chess is rather easy and can be all learned in a month. The hand part is making choices, using your logic, your intelligence, your analitical skills. Again: possessing technical means and using those technical means efficiently and with skill are TWO COMPLETELY DIFFERENT ASPECTS
I think it should be very obvious.
If you compare a world famous artist and a graduated pianist the difference is not in their technique since they have the same complete technique.
The same can be said between anyone with a driving licence and a world champion in F1 or again the difference between the other pilots and the world champion in F1.
After all those years of running they all have the same technique ... it's how they use their means which makes the difference and using your technical means goes way beyond possessing those means.
This is also way I'm more impressed by someone who can perform a simple grade 3 piece beautifully or who can compose simple but beautiful pieces rather than someone who can play and compose virtuoso rhythmically and technically complex pieces.
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danny elfboy
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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Reply #15 on:
April 07, 2007, 07:06:52 AM »
Quote from: opus10no2 on April 07, 2007, 01:49:44 AM
Because excellent music sounds great in a midi.
Yeah right ...
Guezz da wat? NO!
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nasalstein
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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Reply #16 on:
April 07, 2007, 07:40:39 AM »
just a food for thought........
arthur rubinstein "technique is just like money. you can buy lots of things with it but there are things it can't buy"
me would humbly add " there are things
only
money can buy"
and i guess it makes anyone feel good seeing 0's on your bankbook anyway?
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lostinidlewonder
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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Reply #17 on:
April 07, 2007, 09:20:22 AM »
If you are technically strong you can be musically strong. Unfortunately you cannot say it the other way around, many people are musically strong but they haven't the technique to express what they hear from within. This is from lack of practice more often than not.
If you are technically strong you can simply shift attention as to how you play your notes. No longer simply think you have to play everything safe and evenly, explore different way to actually play a phrase of music that highlights the musical idea in a way you enjoy.
Technically strong players should see themselves as a conductor and their fingers the orchestra, the fingers know what to do but need to be told where to fous their attention to produce the conductors musical vision. This musical vision needs to be developed and can simply have been ingored as tehcnically strong players focused all their attention on getting all the notes comfortable under their hands and neglecting creativity on the part of sound production. Record yourself, experiment with different ways of expressing a phrase, record yourself, listen to yourself and record yourself again etc.
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invictious
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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April 07, 2007, 11:05:47 AM »
I disagree with how if you are technically strong then you are musically strong.
I would say, with a hint of arrogance, that I am rather musically strong, but my technique is..let's not talk about it.
Once you get to a level, you will realize playing it with musicality and with technicality is very difficult.
That's when you start playing insanely difficult pieces, and people start complaining about the lack of musicality, happens all the time.
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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April 07, 2007, 11:12:38 AM »
Quote from: lostinidlewonder on April 07, 2007, 09:20:22 AM
If you are technically strong you can be musically strong.
you CAN be .. not .. you ARE
Without the mean you can't express yourself and you musicality.
But having the means doesn't mean having a strong musicality.
In a way you can that if you have a good kitchen you can express your culinary talent.
Unfortunately often people with a good culinary talent don't have a good kitchen that allow them the means to express their talent.
Nonetheless, buying the best kitchen ever with all the toold of the trade doesn't mean automatically having a culinary talent, superb control over the harmonies of tast and top quality creativity.
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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April 07, 2007, 11:22:32 AM »
Quote from: invictious on April 07, 2007, 11:05:47 AM
I disagree with how if you are technically strong then you are musically strong.
I would say, with a hint of arrogance, that I am rather musically strong, but my technique is..let's not talk about it.
I have seen this many times.
In conservatories here they accept people whose level is grade 1 or 2 too.
And they say
"you lack technique because you've just a beginner technique but you have a well developed musicality and control over the sound you want to express not to mention interesting ways to express it; you have something more than other students don't have, imagine what could you do if you have the technique!"
So the belief that technique alone provide musicality even if there's no good musicality and expressiveness to begin with doesn't hold water. Often students lack technique but have already a great musicality and expresiveness meaning that it is possible even without technique.
It's very logical: the mean influence a pre-existing foundation.
If the foundation is there the mean will help it to emerge.
If the foundation is not there there's nothing the mean can do to create it.
Someone made an example with money.
The logic with money is that if you have a pre-existing foundation which needs a mean (i.e. you're a very eclectic and stimulated and need money to follow courses, lean things, see places, meet new people, join association ... then money will definitely help to make your life better)
But if you're apathetic, unpleasant, asocial, understimulated, judgemental and have no friend or happiness ... money will never be able to buy you happiness or friends.
A mean (technique) is like a trigger it allows something to be expressed.
THAT SOMETHING must be there to begin with otherwise the mean (technique) has no purpose
Great technique and lack of anything to express, dry, emotionaless and boring playing is absolutely possible so musicality doesn't depend on technique, technique just allow it to be expressed but musicality must be there.
Once you get to a level, you will realize playing it with musicality and with technicality is very difficult.
That's when you start playing insanely difficult pieces, and people start complaining about the lack of musicality, happens all the time.
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opus10no2
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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Reply #21 on:
April 07, 2007, 12:00:30 PM »
Quote from: danny elfboy on April 07, 2007, 07:06:52 AM
Yeah right ...
Guezz da wat? NO!
If you disagree, then the quality of composition is less important to your enjoyment than the creative input a performer can bring to the table.
Quote from: danny elfboy on April 07, 2007, 07:01:26 AM
Imo technique is the piece of cake aspect of piano playing.
Everything can aquire it given some knowledge on effective practice and consistence.
In fact all the technique one will ever need to play everything can be aquired in a rather short amount of time.
How long would it take, from scratch, to get Hamelin level technical ablity?
Musicality is innate, you've either got sensetivity, musical ability, creative spark, or u just haven't.
Technique is aquired, it's all just work.
There is no limit to a pianist's technique, but there is a limit to their mechanique.
Technique is the lifelong pursuit of aquiring the physical ability to play anything your own musical and physical perceptions can comprehend and (re)create.
Musicality, talent, as I've said - is individual, and innate ...it can be developed and watered like a flower, and it's taste can be widened by variety of musical 'nutrients', but nothing can change it's genetic potential.
There are some 'difficult choices' to be made in more advanced interpretation, but if you are true to your own musicality - your instinct will dictate where your musical heart should follow, and this can change from moment to moment, and this is what a spontanious musicality is.
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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Reply #22 on:
April 07, 2007, 01:26:01 PM »
Quote from: opus10no2 on April 07, 2007, 12:00:30 PM
If you disagree, then the quality of composition is less important to your enjoyment than the creative input a performer can bring to the table.
...hence 'excellent music' refers to the quality of the composition - the maxima of which requires no extra musical input from the performer. Yes? But is this a hypothetical work, or do you have any specific ones in mind?
Quote from: opus10no2 on April 07, 2007, 12:00:30 PM
Musicality, talent, as I've said - is individual, and innate ...it can be developed and watered like a flower, and it's taste can be widened by variety of musical 'nutrients', but nothing can change it's genetic potential.
There are some 'difficult choices' to be made in more advanced interpretation, but if you are true to your own musicality - your instinct will dictate where your musical heart should follow, and this can change from moment to moment, and this is what a spontanious musicality is.
...I must say, having read some of your posts, I don't expect those words to come from you
Quote from: lostinidlewonder on April 07, 2007, 09:20:22 AM
If you are technically strong you can be musically strong.
I think it depends on how you define technique and the pieces concerned. Someone playing Schumann's Waldszenen don't need really good finger technique as one would in Rachmaninoff's Corelli Variations. Both do require good sound technique however. And certainly cantabile playing won't come off well without the appropriate sound technique put in place.
...I think we often associate musical playing with performances that are cantabile in style. Here, expressivity is perhaps more naturally obvious. Of course, we mustn't forget that agitato playing can also be expressive. And without good finger technique, you'll only get mud puddles.
At the same time, I think we often associate technique with fast and furious playing. There are people (and I know them personally) who have developed good technique for fast and furious playing, yet have a lot to learn about good sound technique.
Are they unmusical? Or are they lacking the required 'tool'? Either way, their playing are not musical in the cantabile sense. No doubt they get the fire going in works like Dante though.
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invictious
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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Reply #23 on:
April 07, 2007, 01:54:39 PM »
OK, take some examples
Lang Lang - OMGOMGOMG, TECHNIQUE is DA BEZT! BUT MUSIC IS CRAP!!
Kissin - WOARRRR GOOD SKILLZ, NO MUSIKALLITY!
Horowitz - whoarrrrr wrong notes!!!! but so musical and moving!
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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Reply #24 on:
April 07, 2007, 02:06:58 PM »
Quote from: prongated on April 07, 2007, 01:26:01 PM
...hence 'excellent music' refers to the quality of the composition - the maxima of which requires no extra musical input from the performer. Yes? But is this a hypothetical work, or do you have any specific ones in mind?
I mean all music, but some music in particular demands a more 'human' rubato to go along with the style. This is the only major exception, and it's instinctive, rubato shouldn't really be 'practiced' or forced, it should flow naturally from your own innate sense of rhythm.
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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Reply #25 on:
April 07, 2007, 02:20:17 PM »
Quote from: opus10no2 on April 07, 2007, 12:00:30 PM
Quote
Musicality is innate, you've either got sensetivity, musical ability, creative spark, or u just haven't.
Technique is aquired, it's all just work.
There is no limit to a pianist's technique, but there is a limit to their mechanique.
Technique is the lifelong pursuit of aquiring the physical ability to play anything your own musical and physical perceptions can comprehend and (re)create.
Musicality, talent, as I've said - is individual, and innate ...it can be developed and watered like a flower, and it's taste can be widened by variety of musical 'nutrients', but nothing can change it's genetic potential.
There are some 'difficult choices' to be made in more advanced interpretation, but if you are true to your own musicality - your instinct will dictate where your musical heart should follow, and this can change from moment to moment, and this is what a spontanious musicality is.
Okay I agree with you
But I don't agree that there's no limit to a pianist technique.
Technique is a matter of coordination and motions all of which are limited and everything you'll ever need to play whatever you want can be learned in a certain span of time.
From that point one (the point in which there's all the coordination possible to do everything in your neurological bank) it's just a matter of choices, interpretation and musicality.
That's hard work too. It's as hard work as it is for a novelist to write the plot of a noval aside for the grammatical and linguistical aspects of his writing. But you're right that it is innate; well not innate ... because musicality too is a product of what we have been exposed in our life and the experience we made ... but for sure musical sensitivity can't be provided by technique I agree with this.
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opus10no2
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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Reply #26 on:
April 07, 2007, 02:40:08 PM »
There is no reason there should be any limit to 'technique', as the word is defined.
I said there is a limit to mechanique, the raw physical speed and endurance of the pianist's apparatus.
Music is either there or it isn't, I don't see the difficulty - because as I say, it is either innately there, or it isn't - in which case it is not difficult - it is impossible!
Technique on the other hand is a lifelong pursuit, to make dreams a reality, to bring the imagination you are born with to life.
This is why I feel this topic is confusing to some people, and may lead them to spend hours trying to be a creative genius, when their time would be much better spent settling with the imagination they have, and developing their technique to do the best they can with it.
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danny elfboy
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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Reply #27 on:
April 07, 2007, 02:54:50 PM »
Quote from: opus10no2 on April 07, 2007, 02:40:08 PM
There is no reason there should be any limit to 'technique', as the word is defined.
I said there is a limit to mechanique, the raw physical speed and endurance of the pianist's apparatus.
Music is either there or it isn't, I don't see the difficulty - because as I say, it is either innately there, or it isn't - in which case it is not difficult - it is impossible!
Technique on the other hand is a lifelong pursuit, to make dreams a reality, to bring the imagination you are born with to life.
There's a limit to technique.
The word “technique” means the method or means we use for accomplishing a complex task. It is usually applied to complex coordinative tasks in the arts (painting, playing a musical instrument), sports (tennis serve, golf swing), and laboratory science (identifying genes, measuring air pollutants).
Now I don't believe that once reached a certain level each new piece will provide a new tecnique to learn. When all the possible technique has been mastered learning is not any longer a matter of learning new technique but of learning note ... in other words building a repertory.
I do know graduated pianist who have all the technique they ever need to make "dreams a reality". So for them it's just a matter of learning and memorizing the "dreams".
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elevateme_returns
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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Reply #28 on:
April 07, 2007, 04:31:04 PM »
Quote from: invictious on April 07, 2007, 01:54:39 PM
OK, take some examples
Lang Lang - OMGOMGOMG, TECHNIQUE is DA BEZT! BUT MUSIC IS CRAP!!
Kissin - WOARRRR GOOD SKILLZ, NO MUSIKALLITY!
Horowitz - whoarrrrr wrong notes!!!! but so musical and moving!
i dont agree with any of those 3. i think lang lang and kissin are both very musical when they want to be. having said that i hate the facial expressions lang lang makes.
and horowitz is not always wrong notes. and not always musical and moving.
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danny elfboy
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Re: Technical playing is alot easier than "musical" paying.
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Reply #29 on:
April 07, 2007, 05:09:01 PM »
Quote from: elevateme_returns on April 07, 2007, 04:31:04 PM
having said that i hate the facial expressions lang lang makes.
It's not just a matter of
hating
.
The expressiveness of Lang Lang can be considered a technical flaw.
In my Alexander courses I have known many many pianists/students who got pain and injury (to the point of paralysis) because of physically overexpressed emotions while playing.
Some can stand this for a dozen of years but sooner or later pain and injuries will call their name. All that
overexpressions
just creates a lot of extraneous tension which accumulated to that of playing.
The stereotype of the pianist who bang a virtuoso con fuoco on the piano with the hair ala mad scientist is more than a stereotype, it shows a common flaw in pianistic technique: the belief that you have to express physical anger, pain, sorrow in order to express those emotions musically. Forgetting that it's just accumulation of more muscular tension, tendineous and neuromuscular tension.
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