Very interesting question... (and very good point, Hmoll). I'd have to agree that Chopin etudes will prepare you for anything else you may come across in Chopin, and definetly some other things. BUt as far as technical exercises, I think Phillipe is absolutely INDISPENSIBLE for developing technique and independance of the fingers.
The chopin 3rds etude has a major problem...it doesn't do double major chromatic 3rds!! and when it comes to Liszt 2nd concerto it annoys me becasue I have done this "almighty" 3rds etude, and when I learnt Liszt 2 I was crippled at the sight of 3rds!!! That annoyed me. And it doesn't touch LH 3rds! So I was left very annoyed after doing Chopin op25no6. I find it hard to imagine the Liszt etudes as etudes. I find them amazing pieces of music, and the same goes for the Chopin, but for some reason I get more musical satisfaction from Liszt. Chopin etudes get a bit boring after a while, I mean they are great, but op10no1, all the same. Op10no2, all the same. Op10no3, great piece, shame about awful middle section imo. op10no4 is the best etude ever. I learnt the most I've ever learnt about technique from that. etc.. The Liszt etudes vary greatly, and I just enjoy them more. Technically I would say the Liszt are easier as a set. They are more pianistic, but easier. I think these are the pinnacle of technique. I think czerny and hannon etc.. is essential to study before any of the big etudes by Liszt, chopin, Ligeti, Debussy etc.. The Chopin have so many difficulties that most people just ignore. Has anyone ever looked at how many times Chopin writes "sempre legato" in op10no2? yet how many non legato or pedalled versions do we hear? Far to many.
If I ever had a student from scratch that had talent
Correct me if I'm wrong but repeated notes are not covered in Chopin etudes, unless you count Op. 10 no. 7 with only pairs of repeat notes. I'm talking about extended repeat notes as in the finale of Dukas sonata, or the cadenza of the Alkan concerto (?).Come to think about it, I think trills are also missing, as in the kind that prepares you for the cadenza of Beethoven concerto no. 3 or the finale of Saint-Saens concerto no. 2.
Correct me if I'm wrong but repeated notes are not covered in Chopin etudes, unless you count Op. 10 no. 7 with only pairs of repeat notes. I'm talking about extended repeat notes as in the finale of Dukas sonata, or the cadenza of the Alkan concerto (?).
ALT hand figurations of any kind, including alt octs, chords, and alt runs and hybrids.
CHORDS - extended perpetual passages of thick chords at extreme tempoThis difficulty IS dealt with in Sorabji [...]
Tasteful?Thats an awesome piece, actually, are you criticizing the figuration of alt octs themselves?
since it is impossible to cover every single action possible at the keyboard and I still don't think every single action has been worked out even to this day.
I disagree that we study a particular piece to attain the ability to produce a technical feat. We are always focusing on the sound production not the physical action, with the right sound comes the right action much more often that not. The right action might not necessarily produce the desired sound however, first we must understand and produce the correct sound, then we focus on making the action as comfortable and effortless as possible, not the other way around.
Although etudes are written to train a particular motions rarely will you find that you have to use it with such frequency in other pieces. So indeed making strong one technical aspect of your piano playing could be useless in the overall picture of your piano playing (and also can waste a lot of time, you can spend years on mastering all the intricacies of multiple chord actions in one hand but the reality is not many pieces are written to ask it from us!). You are simply focusing on mastering one little area instead of developing a broad sense of how you play EVERYTHING.
Rachmaninoff E-Ts can cover harsh leaps and thick, quickly changing chords.Reger as well.Dan
They can, but the Chopin etudes deal with their difficulties for a longer period of time.I'm quite convinced that every unique difficulty found in the works of Xenakis, Sorabji, and Finnissy, could be made into or found in something of a more appealing tonality, like that of Chopin/Liszt.That is, every difficulty but the sheer randomness.
Once you've got your head around that it won't be that bad.who composed that just out of interest? I noticed you mentioned Xenakis, possibly the worst "composer" of all time! His "music" is the biggest pile of crap ever! He wasn't even a musican!!! He was a mathsmatician. He composes crap, and gives it a name. And people try to be intelligent and pretend to like it.
Yes, how is Chopin op10no1 hard if you no how to use the arm properly? Op10no2 easy if you can find the positions, etc... any piece is like that. Rach3 is even easy if you find the correct movement and positions. This of course only works if the person has a good technique. If somethings hard, and you no why it's hard, it suddenly becomes a lot easier becasue you can solve the problem. What is a mechanical difficulty? I've never viewed the piano as mechanical. If you loosen up and totally relax everything, everything suddenly becomes free, and difficulties just dissapear.
I noticed you mentioned Xenakis, possibly the worst "composer" of all time! His "music" is the biggest pile of crap ever! He wasn't even a musican!!! He was a mathsmatician. He composes crap, and gives it a name. And people try to be intelligent and pretend to like it.
i know this is off topic, but wow, you are such a close-minded idiot for saying that. if only you spent some time analyzing and listening to some of the pieces religiously, youd know how much of a genius he was, even though his music isnt conventional or consonant.