If your interested in russian technique try reading up on Simon Barere. He was said to be one of the best technisions of th 20th century. His student Boris Maxomovich created the Kiev conservatory.
I was taught the Russian method, since i was in Romania during the comunist years and Russian influence.The bad aspect of it is that it puts too much accent on the competitive spirit.The good aspect is that it's very severe and it's challanging. In her 3rd year of playing the piano, my sister had to play Fur Elise and many other pieces that would seem hard for her age... but it was very common for all of us to play hard pieces by the end of 2nd year. Especially american school (if we can talk of one) but mostly western schools are too easy on the student.By the way... in the Russian School, teachers don't limit their punishment to verbal punishment ;]... but thank God for my teacher :]]My opinion is that is the best and most serious out of all schools of music.The Bitus
Thanks for the very interesting post.What about lesson frequency for the very young? Do they have one lesson per week? lessons everyday?Also, do they make any concession to games and fun? or is it music centred?Why do you disagree with the way they use the arm?Finally, how uniform is the teaching (that is, does every single teacher follows exactly the same approach, or they all have their personal ideas?)Best wishes,Bernhard.
The Russian School is not ONLY about technique and relaxation etc. It requires a complete change in attitude in order to study it. For instance, there is a thing called intonatsiia, a way of distinguishing intervallic relationships; accelerating during a crescendo; playing as if you are massaging the keys, then only you will get the tone that the great Russian masters produced! I will be posting soon, an article by John Bell Young (i'm sure you all know about him) in which he has criticised the "American ignorance" towards the MUSICAL aspects of the Russian School. One example is, for instance, always making a delay while approaching a long note and distinguishing between small intervals and large intervals, obviously by delaying again. This is just a theoretical explanation to something which is very inbuilt in the Russian School, teachers dont teach this; students get it automatically.
Hey, I missed out some things there! To observe the above methods, Emil Gilels' recordings are the best bet! I wouldn't advise Richter because Richter had such a great technique that his playing always used to have an interpretation that used to highlight his technique a lot! With Gilels (especially in his Beethoven) , you can notice everything above: the MASSAGING of the keys to the delays......Also, to get a genuine feel of things, as my teacher says, you have to feel Russia. Read Russian literature, poetry, the culture and then only you will get the FEEL of their piano school!
But then I came across Charles Rosen’s “Piano notes” (Penguin) (highly recommended reading):“(..) there is no optimum position for sitting at the piano, in spite of what many pedagogues think. (…) The height at which one sits does affect the style of performance. It isdifficult, for example, to play bursts of virtuoso octaves fortissimo when sitting very low. That is one aspect of piano technique that Glenn Gould, for example, could not deal with (…) nevertheless, the low seated position enabled Gould to achieve a beautiful technical control of rapid passage-work with different kinds of touch.”
But I must disagree with the eminent Mr Rosen, there are recordings of Gould and virtuoso octaves, for example Prokofiev Sonata 7, or Ravel's La Valse. Also this from Otto Friedrich:"...somewhere in New York, when Gould was in town for one reason or another, and he sat down at a ipano and whirled through a thunderously Horowitzian chain of double octaves. 'And he said, "I can do that,"' [Joseph] Roddy recalls. '"Anybody can do that!"'"Walter Ramsey
I think the point Rosen is making (and I agree with it) is not so much that Gould could not do double octaves, but rather that his sitting position (very low – in his favourite chair which he brought to concerts the way the pianists of old brought their pianos), made it impossible to do them with ease. So the question here is: In New York, when he demonstrated that he could indeed do double octaves – as you say – how high (or low) was he sitting? Did he have his favourite short-legged chair with it, or was he using the (high) bench of his host? Do you have any information on this?
He also had a favourite Steinway piano, which he had engineered extensively, so that the characteristic “Gould sound” had far less to do with any special touch than with the piano itself.
Then disaster struck. In one occasion, when moving the piano, they let it drop and it cracked.
Well, one of my favorite Gould's recordings is "Glenn Gould meets the students of Moscow Conservatory". Lev Vlasenko (who was translating the meeting) told me that Gould used Conservatorie's piano. You cannot miss that "Gould sound" on the recording. Hell, you cannot miss it even when he plays organ...Franz Moor (who worked on Gould's piano) in his book gives quite a different version, and I tend to believe him.
It is actually quite interesting to read this thread. So many legends, so many misconceptions. There were so many posts here that I even dont know where to start.First of all, there are much more great Russian pianists than were mentioned here. Definitely muuuuch more that could be count on one hand. And I mean GREAT ones. Nobody knows their names on the West. Many of them were worshiped in Russia. Many of them ended working in small Conservatories, and even in music schools. There were many reasons for that, and political and antisimetic are probably the most important.Yes, there is Russian Piano School. It is not about how relaxed you are, how you use your arms, body, and how strong your fingers and how much you played Hanon. It is a cultural phenomenon. It comes from Russian painting, literature, theater, etc. It comes from general education, musical education, from emphasis of all cultural life, etc., etc.
I spent in Russia my first 27 years, and was privileged to study in Moscow Conservatory with Lev Naumov. Something tells me that I know little bit about Russian Piano School.
So what is the Franz Mohr story? Was the piano dropped by movers at the Eaton auditorium in 1974 or not? Did the frame crack or not?
Well, then we are not really talking about a "piano school", but a "piano (music) culture", right?
So. please, enlighten us.