Nice to get a lively reaction, Thierry!
Some pianists read better piano scores than books.
Do you mean play the Fantasie Impromptu at sight better than reading aloud? I don't think there would be many of those.
Why do piano have two staves. DUHHHH!!! MAYBE there are too many notes to stand on one, and it is more clear and easy to see like that!
You didn't read me carefully, I said two
different staves. At one stage the clefs were moveable and the "French violin clef" was a treble clef with G on the 1st line instead of the 2nd, so it was read the same as the bass clef (which existed long before the treble clef). Now if this clef was used today it would immediately cut the learning effort in half for pianists. (There would be two legerlines, C and E, between bass and treble.)
And, in hell, WHY wouldn't some become concert pianists? You said like if NOBODY could. Some can.
Fair enough!
In fact, a lot can,
Who are you kidding? In conservatoriums, music schools, international piano competitions etc there are tens of thousands of brilliantly gifted pianists, but how many get to be recording or concertising artists, 10%?, 1%? 0.001%? Most just become teachers!
OK, I sounded as if I was discouraging all students of classical piano. What I meant was that teachers should not give students a false impression of their prospects of becoming a performer of classical music as a career. Do it for love, as a hobby, as spiritual nourishment, but be realistic! I feel I was misled when I was younger, had a lot of potential etc, but there is so much competition and so few opportunities; unless you can play all the WTC by memory by the age of 12 these days, there is not much chance you will have a classical performing career.
Now commercial playing is a different matter. But how many teachers teach this stuff? I would like to see many more, and I don't mean just giving students jazzy pieces. Teaching to play from chord symbols or improvising is not even mentioned in the main Australian Piano Exam system - I don't know about other countries.
I encourage my students, but I try not to mislead them, and most importantly I think, I try to give them a broad base in piano so that they can choose what
they want to do, be it play and sing pop songs from a CD, make their own improvisations, arrangements, compositions, or play Chopin waltzes. I just feel that there are too many teachers who only know how to teach Chopin waltzes! (And the Susuki system only knows how to teach mechanical, rote-learnt Chopin waltzes, so to speak!)
My own original teacher used to say that if I learnt classical, I would be able to play anything I wanted to, but as much as I loved her, this is just not true! It took me a lot of other studies to become a more rounded musician and that's what I try to pass on. And by the way, I
have had some students who have become professional musicians.
PS I still believe music notation should and can be simplfied. Look up MNMA.org!