hey guysso a friend of mine told me when she found a great teacher who taught her for 2 months, her skill level doubled and this was when she had finished 8th grade.So is it luck, that you have a good teacher or that you have teachers that pass you on the great ones?is it possible that someone with talent could have lost oppotunities as they haven't had the right teaching???
is it possible that someone with talent could have lost oppotunities as they haven't had the right teaching???
Unfortunately most people treat their teacher as the sole source for inspiration
So for the young mind the best teacher should be sought, for adults we can put up with bad teachers (take the knowledge that works for us and discard the others) and learn to move on, but children need to be carefully nurtured. For adults usually if you socially connect with your teacher then this teacher will set up a good learning environment. A teacher who does not know how to socialize with their adult student should not teach adults. An adult want to make friends with their teacher generally where a child needs to respect their teacher but also know they can have fun with them.
A teacher for me is someone who transmits skills which I cannot get myself. Inspiration is not really in the picture.
A teacher who makes the student feel that they are answering the problems themselves is a good teacher.
The inspiration I meant was in choice of music to learn, what interests you in music. Some students have no idea what music they want to learn and merely learn what the teacher sets them. If you are learning an instrument surely you need to know what music interests you or how can you have personal long term goals?
There's an old Taoist saying: Of a great leader the people say "I did it myself!"
I think what he's saying is that a great leader will convince the people that they are doing it themselves.
I'm getting the feeling that there is a mix-up in the terms "teacher" and "guru" here. I, too, had my "guru" who gave life to my love of music and the piano. She's the one who started me on this trip. But, after that, I searched out the ones who could give me what I sensed I lacked. And I got something out of every one of them. Even the worst of teachers has at least one thing to offer.
But all this esoteric talk about finding the "right" one, being in the right place at the right time, etc. is a little unsettling to me. Can it be that we're looking for an excuse for not progressing or obtaining what we're striving for?
A good teacher doesn't convince their student that he/she is doing something they are not. A good teacher guides them to make their own realizations.
I recently saw this quote from Horowitz: "I think that a large part of the problem in this country is that people are taught how to be taught by someone else, but they are not taught how to be their own teachers."
As a parent, one of the things I've learned is that you have to find a way to get the child to reason and judge for themselves. Otherwise, they will not internalize any given concept. It's kind of like giving them a fish vs. teaching them how to fish. So, it's not so much fooling them into thinking they did it themselves, it's about actually having them do it themselves. I believe this principle can be applied by any kind of teacher or leader.
Do you happen to have a source? Even if what he says were true (and I'm assuming he's talking mainly about Russia), did him saying that actually help individuals reading it get any better at what they were doing? Did it actually somehow make them become what they formerly weren't? Aside from that, there are many outstanding pianists who have come from the country, and as great a pianist and musician as Horowitz was, there were greater overall musicians, too (like Rachmaninov, for example, in my opinion). Also, Horowitz himself was not exactly known as a legendary teacher, despite his own musicianship and philosophies.Definitely too simplistic. There is a pretty huge chasm sometimes between incapability and capability, and the road and journey between those can't possibly be summed up or encapsulated in a paragraph representing a philosophy. Ideas and philosophies are only so good as they are applicable to the situation at hand. Any philosophy must have its manifestation in the actual and help an individual gain dominion over the challenge. If dominion's not being gained, then something's missing.
I shouldn't have been so lazy. It's from Lao Tzu's Tao Teh Ching. Here's one translation:A leader is best when people barely know he exists, when his work is done, his aim fulfilled, they will say: we did it ourselves.
Hold on a minute. Tao Teh Ching not profound?!?!?!?!!?!??!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?
I'm watching TV... Well, you know what they say: The Tao that's profound is not the real Tao (anyway).
What interested me the most when I took lessons and will interest me again was what lies within the instrument and behind music. It was more like being handed paint brushes, colors, types of brush strokes in terms of the instrument: what can this instrument do and what can I do with it. In terms of music, I would like to know different kinds of music, even music that I might think right now that I hate, and really learn about them. Theory, history, genre to get the sense and be able to bring more out. None of these are specific pieces. But I think that by being exposed to so many things and getting the insights from an experienced teacher, that in itself forms tastes. I could not form my long term goals in terms of pieces or type of music at this point. Can you relate to that?
.... my first goal with my own students is to make sure they feel very safe in this process with me. It can actually be an extremely vulnerable-feeling experience for some individuals to reveal their thoughts to another, and to not only reveal their thoughts but even the ways in which they think.
Part of that safety includes me not just putting them out on an island alone, I want them to feel like they have a guide because there can be some pretty funny turns and I don't want those turns to stop an individual from trying.
No matter what, I will remember those individuals who sat there or stood there or whatever while I exposed my thoughts to them and they listened and guided and thought about it. How many people truly listen to others?
I have a strong desire to thank the idividuals who have seriously put time in with me, and it's hurtful actually to rob me of feeling like "you" cared, just because some philosophy says that a good leader is supposed to make me think I did it all by myself. See, I really thought I felt you caring about me and now you are telling me I only imagined that and now I don't trust myself.
Sorry, the above posts are too long for me to read. I don't know whose talking 'universal intelligence', 'universal dumbness' is probably closer the mark!
If they are too long to read then it is true that "YOU DONT KNOW"
.... Music is magical and it can be present in a room even while nothing is being said or played or even while there is talk about something else almost entirely.
To make a musical connection with somebody, that somehow trumps almost everything else. And, to build a lesson from that musical connection I think seems to almost naturally include many of the ways of transferring information at the right times. Yes, there's obviously still thinking going on and work being done and maybe one way of doing something could be better than another. But, what I am talking about is two people who love the instrument and who love music and who love learning and growing, and who have already been nurturing this and developing this and otherwise living this for nearly their entire lives. When it's built on that, something's very different. What I think I have realized the most clearly is that, perhaps what I am feeling and thinking and experiencing goes beyond the scope of the capabilities of this thread. And, not just because there's a difference between reading about something vs. experiencing it in person (though that is true).
Generally I find those who type the most, know the least - there's a saying there somewhere. I don't know where anyone finds the time to digest all that rambling.
Perhaps this is supposed to be profound, but I personally don't find it to be so at this point in my life. Some of the music world's greatest leaders (not even mentioning other areas of existence) have a palpable presence even very long after their physical presence ceases to be known.
I have a student who loves piano and really romanticizes the idea of playing the piano (reads about the lives of composers and always discusses stories with me). However he needs to focus on the actual hard work that needs to go into achieving quality playing and constant improvement. It is nice to think about music and enjoy it but there is the other side of it which is simply hard work and discipline this is what teachers need to work with but of course we must ensure that the student actually loves the instrument or has at least some kind of personal interest in learning it. I like to think hard work before enjoyment, but all lessons should focus on the love for music but we work hard because we love it so much.
I have found the Horowitz quote - sorry that the URL is so long. It is on p. 127 but starts on the previous page. There is a paragraph (middle of p. 126) in which Horowitz discusses teaching and students amidst a longer talk on a number of subjects.Addendum: To really understand what he says you have to go to the beginning. Horowitz starts by talking about how he relates to and interprets music, and why he is against recordings. That outlook would also be there when he teaches so what he writes can't make sense until you have that part too, I think.https://books.google.ca/books?id=_hFIZD5bnVgC&pg=PA127&lpg=PA127&dq="I+think+that+a+large+part+of+the+problem+in+this+country+is+that+people+are+taught+how+to+be+taught+by+so
haha my teacher is almost he opposite of that.I want to get down right into playing.... not that i'mnot interested in lives and stores etc. But... he can talk. once in a 1hr and 40min lesson I only actually played for 8 minutes and the rest was talking. maybe 20mins on my piece and the rest on pianos and other background knowledge
what's agosti's
You mean not a spaghetti house?