Mozart is easier to learn, play, and perform than most other composers. I'm sick of people's arguments saying he's 'musically' difficult. That's so untrue. I've got news for you: Rachmaninoff is incredibly musically difficult AND technically difficult. Mozart features simple scalar lines and simple chords. And I'm not talking out my ass either.. I have played a great deal of Mozart including several of his sonatas and two of his piano concerti (C major k 467 and B flat major k 595). I rest my case for dicussion..
Mozart is easier to learn, play, and perform than most other composers. I'm sick of people's arguments saying he's 'musically' difficult. That's so untrue. I've got news for you: Rachmaninoff is incredibly musically difficult AND technically difficult. Mozart features simple scalar lines and simple chords. And I'm not talking out my ass either.. I have played a great deal of Mozart including several of his sonatas and two of his piano concerti (C major k 467 and B flat major k 595). I open for dicussion..
Don't get me wrong guys. I do fully appreciate the musical genius that is mozart, and I love his compositions. My point here is simply that his music is generally technically easier than most other major composers, and musically not necessarily more difficult. You miss my point nicco and debussy symbolism.. I understand that playing the correct notes is only 20% of the job, but that's not unlike other composers. The problem is, people either overrate the technique required to play mozart, or they revert to your arguments, saying he is much more 'musically demanding' making him equal in difficulty overall to others, or simply 'difficult in a different way.' I disagree.
But I agree with you on this point. Mozart SUCKS (especially the piano sonatas). Glenn Gould thinks so, why shouldn't you?Love you lots.
Whilest I understand and appreciate other peoples opinions and tastes of music, I am however appaled by your comment about Mozart.
Satie is much easier, except for "Vexations"
Mozart:ImmatureDifficult exaggerated by peopleChildren's musicPredictableinteresting at first, boring laterWell his musical style NEVER matured since he was 4.Unlike Mozzie, Beethoven's musical style matured, e.g. Appassionata.However, wrong notes are very obvious in Mozzie's work
Mozart's piano sonatas do not exist except through Glenn Gould (peace be upon Him). He brought them to life. His playing is so nuanced, subtle, full of wondrous dynamic control and miraculous phrasing. So sweet, so Mozartian, so angelic. Ah, build me a stairway to Paradise.
Put it this way, Mozart is technically easier, literally, therefore I will definitely choose one in the exam situation (to ensure one fluent piece, at least), but it's more difficult to play one good enough to impress, no matter how much you practice; unless you can play the "soul" out of the music (in fact sometimes even get worse with relentless brainless practice because you will get bored and the performance just become more souless and flat, and sounds like "children music") . For the romantic pieces, once you practice and practice and get over the technical bit, the performance will sound "impressed" automatically and sounds like "grown-up music" at least.
Only when it comes to Mozart. The slightest peep out of anyone that might be interpreted as bashing their precious Mozart attracts a frenzied mob.
one would think that you had understood the richness that lies in mozarts compositions.
This is simple to explain. If you make a mistake with Mozart, it ruins the whole piece. as with Rachmaninov, its unlikely to be noticed.So the presure to get every note, Every dynamic etc.. right puts enormous pressure on the performer thus making it difficult in a very different way
I disagree with you, Mozart is hard because the right "notes" must be heard when you play it. Not just playing it out. Everything has to be precise and every mistake can be heard.
I think the best way to explain Mozart would be this. Imagine that two states exist. The first will be a nearly perfect interpretation. Something like Glenn Gould's Goldbergs or Cziffra's Hungarian Rhapsodies. The second will be a player piano. All the notes are there but no interpretation. Now, imagine a scale with 100% as Gould/Cziffra and 0% as player piano. Chopin and Rachmaninov would begin to sound good very early on, say at 20-30%. Mozart on the other hand would be lifeless until say 70%(these are completely arbitrary numbers btw.) Playing Chopin at 100% would be no easier than playing Mozart at 100%, but Chopin at 50% sounds much better than Mozart at 50%.