Allchopin, I hope you realize that winning a prize doesn't mean a whole lot.
T'song is one of the most original interpreters of Chopin, but original in a sense that he truly understands how Chopin should be played. He lived in Poland, studied their culture, and there is nobody like him - I have just heard him play and teach the complete Preludes, both books of the etudes (teaching yours truly), and the 2nd concerto (again, yours truly) and I have never seen anyone who is so in touch with what Chopin truly represents, and while at the same time accepting of other, original, and good musical ideas.
According to him, many people have forgotten how Chopin should be played. Nobody knows how to play Mazurkas anymore. I, personally, do not believe that imitation is the way to learn music and musicality, and therefore I also dislike many pianists who, though they maybe exceedingly talented, learns by rote.
Another humorous episode from this recent digestif after the lessons - Yundi apparently went to T'song and said that he wanted to study Chopin with him (this was where T'song met him and decided that he's a nice kid) and T'song then said, wait a minute, he got 1st prize, I only got 3rd. I should be studying with him!
Allchopin, back to the original point - Yundi is talented, don't get me wrong. But many people are talented. The twentieth century (and beyond) is unique, perhaps, in its subdivision of labour (through industrialization in the 1800's), and with such a subdivision, there has been more and more people in music who has talent, but lack a general education in the humanities. All of the greatest musicians have both talent and an understanding of life, history, art, basically many things, but not all talented people have that understanding. And it is most pronounced, I believe, now, that talented people, many of them, have foregone the necessary study of the humanities, while focusing on only their instrument. That, to me, is the difference between T'song and other great musicians of the like, and Yundi and other pianists, who might be extremely talented, perhaps much more so than T'song, yet lacking in true musicianship, or artistry.
This also becomes a big problem that I wrestle with, every day of my life. I did not want to bring this up here, not because this might cause a large discussion (which is always fine by me, and on a subject like this I would much welcome such a discussion) but because these are private thoughts that I previously did not wish to share. What is the difference, for one pianist who truly understands music, life, or rather, truly understands the struggles he has with these things, and a pianist, who learns how to play by imitating another? Both is capable of playing wonderful music, one from himself, while the other could imitate so well that you cannot distinguish his performance from an innate one, or is able to absorb another's teaching, by imitation, into his own, but nonetheless does not contain original ideas, from within. And in a recording session, both will work just as well. Even in a performance, both can be just as great, with the only difference being that in multiple performances it is possible for the original artist to manipulate his ideas, if he wants to, while the other would need a teacher or professor to manipulate it for him. I think everyone would agree that in the second case, that is not a true musician. My problem is, how can you tell? I always strive to be original, to stand on my own two feet, but sometimes that is not enough. Sometimes, I play a recital, and while my interpretation is original, some other pianist might come in, play something he learned by imitation or taught note by note, and play something even more wondrous than what I did. Does that make him a better musician than me? (Here, I'm of course using the first person generically - it applies to everyone) Or does it make him a 'fake'? Nonetheless, it is the results that counts, and if he gave a better performance than I did, the obviously the populace would favor him.
Well, just some ramblings from a frustrated pianist in Italy. My most recent trip to Venezia has put me in a very philosophical mood. Speaking of which, that is one damn beautiful city. Stinks at times though.