Dear xvimbi,
I am sure you can debate the present question without attacking or feeling attacked. Relax.
I actually agree with lost that an over-rational approach may be detrimental here.
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On the other hand, Lost, consideration of the whys and hows of playing the piano can give your id the seeds to incorporate new tools in the arsenal of atavic responses we play the piano with. This concept of relaxed hands I find to be a myth, or at least a semantic misunderstanding: if your hands were truly relaxed, you would be playing mushy clusters all over the piano, and such is not the case. You need eutonic, strong fingers which do not collapse (so there is no loss of energy) and nimble grasping motions that convey to the keyboard your musical thought. Le strictement necessaire.
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For some mysterious reason, the latter approach will result in a louder, richer tone, closer to the golden tone so coveted by the likes of Gilels, Pogorelich and Rachmaninov. Why is one of the questions posed here. How to practice it and develop it we should talk about.
First, I am quite relaxed. I simply get annoyed when one is talking about one thing, and somebody else insists on talking about something else and only distracts from the subject at hand. I just vented my frustration accumulated from other threads.
There are a lot of different issues here. First, and foremost, playing the piano is not a mystical activity. When two pianists sit down at the same piano and generate different sounds, they must be doing something differently. These differences can be analyzed, and often rationalized, in an objective way. So, generally, there are a lot of things about playing the piano that can be understood in concrete terms. Understanding is the basis for teaching, but I am getting ahead of myself.
Remember, I am not talking about what makes Horowitz Horowitz on a metaphysical level, or how to develop a personal touch, develop musical ideas, etc. I am trying to understand what these guys physically do differently in the first place. There must be a physical reason why they sound different, and to explore this is the idea. Not to put off lostinidlewonder too much, what he (and you) are talking about are very valid questions, but they are separate from clear questions such as "what is the role of mass in tone production?".
The point becomes a bit clearer when one considers pita's question: "How do I learn/practice this?" Simply saying, "just let it flow out of your fingers" is not helpful. We are no Zen monks pondering koans, we need clear instructions for the basic aspects. In order to give helpful advice, we need a good understanding. If we don't have this, we need to resort to shrugs and say "just do it". Of course, the first step is always to imagine the sound that one wants to achieve. The question addressed by this thread, as far as I understand it, is then, what do I need to do to get the sound and how can I describe this in clear terms that everybody can understand.
It's physical, not metaphysical.
Meditate on it. I am not going to explain how to play piano with an EFFORTLESS touch because 1st it would be impossible and 2nd i would probably write 1000 pages. So difficult things are explained with generalisations and directional pushes. GET OVER IT. Effortless is definatly a part of GREAT PIANO TECHNIQUE, it is not a requirement for piano playing. But if you understand what is the effortless touch you will realise that once that is aquired then your interpretation and musical ideas flow much more readily and uninterupted physically. If there are any Effortless procedure you want to discuss fine, get the score the bars lets discuss.
This is very lame, but it's exactly what you were saying all along. You are saying the key is EFFORTLESNESS, and then you say you won't explain it, because it would be IMPOSSIBLE. This is the whole conundrum that we would like to resolve. What should a student do with such a statement? You will probably say, "well, I have to demonstrate". I doubt this will work.
No, it is not impossible. Many things can very well be explained for the benefit of students or anybody who wants to advance their skills, so stop throwing monkey wrenches into other people's attempts to rationalize things. It almost looks like you are afraid that one could understand the principles of mastery piano playing.
Everything in piano can be done without effort. If you need effort you are not playing it with mastery.
I completely agree, but repeating this over and over again does not help anybody. The idea of this discussion is to understand and explain how one acquires the ability to play effortlessly. I'm looking forward to your 1000 pages
