This is my first day on this website, so I am full of it, as they say.
Chopsticks.
When we talk about difficulty, we are all talking about a kind of greed that
is not the most admirable aspect of being a musician. One can say that
this piece is harder than that one and be completely convincing, but the question
itself sweeps away far more important questions as soon as it asked.
If it is hard, then why is it hard? What is hard? Is the last movement of
the Moonlight Sonata harder than the other two? Obviously it it is, but unobviously
it is not. Its shadow questions however have now been swept away.
The question itself is boring both on its on terms and in light of what it removes
from any subsequent discussion. So, here, briefly, is that discussion.
The most difficult thing about playing music is staying awake to it. That problem,
one shared equally in the challenges of meditation, is a great leveler. There
are good and bad performances of Chopsticks, including letter perfect mechanical
ones that serve as the first warning of how exactly the same mindset is going
to fare with a Schubert character piece.
I had the great good fortune to know David Tudor, who stunned the world by memorizing
in 6 weeks the 2nd Sonata of Boulez, then playing it as the U.S. premiere. Here,
at this level, we start to talk about "difficult" music even as we continue the same
set of errors in so doing.
David Tudor however put things in especial perspective for me when in 1967 while
in a class at U.C. Davis that he taught on live electronic music in production (no piano
this week, folks) I asked him how best to practice Stockhausen. His answer,
accompanied by his famous Cheshire cat smile was, "Stay awake."
May we all know that when we talk about difficult music, we are dealing with an art
that threatens to be a sport by pushing it off the fence to that rather tacky side.
John Dinwiddie
Santa Rosa Ca
USA