Consider this:
Arrau and Richter had about 1500 pieces that they could play perfectly from memory. Life is short so why waste time on dull(mostly) excersises? why not practice the piece?
I think the culprit in all this is that people practice inefficently because they were not taught to practice in a effecient way. It seems to me that people think that by doing all these excersises they will somehow be able to skim through the real repetory pieces.
Learning rapidly(extremly) if the student is motivated to learn something( they are dying to play that piece..etc.), that will not happen by doing dull excersises.
First, I never said that excersises are for all. I had a few students who did not need it.
I can assure you, Arrau and Richter would play those 1500 pieces from memory anyway, regardless whether they played excersises or not, trust me on that.
Just tell me how many of those 1500 pieces in Richter's repertoire he learned before age 10-13?
I can tell you one thing though, with all my love and admiration to Richter, apparently it is obvious he did not play Czerny as a kid, and I don't mean it in a good way. With all his phenomenal both musical and technical capabilities, his technique was not smooth, but rather forced and often his playing was brutal (esp. when young).
For some reason you conviniently ommit the well known fact that in order to get to the level he was, he needed to practice 12 to 14 hours each day.
I am absolutely convinced should he received a formal piano education as a kid, he wouldn't have to spend THAT MUCH time struggling with technical difficulties every day of his life, but instead learn at very least 5000 more pieces.
And excuse me, 15 minutes a day untill age 10-13 WILL NOT take much from time to learn "real repertoire", but will ensure instead of learning "technique relative to the piece", the student will have a strong foundation and will be technically ready for ANY piece.
Besides, the excersises become dull when played mechanically. When the students have 10 different tasks to pay attention to, while playing it, they in fact become very engaged.
Bring me 4 first Hanon "excersises" (which BTW, I never use in my teaching) and I promise you a full hour of intensive piano lesson on music, technique, relationship between music and technique, why all the technical problems are in fact not technical but musical, what is music image and how to listen to the sound, how to shape the phrase, how to put phrase into pianistic motion, etc., etc, etc...
If a student feels that excersise are dull, or practices inefficiently, that's definitely teachers fault.
hah! the time is rediculous, one should be at the advanced level (grade 8- not meaning teachnically but in all other areas) after 1-2 year or less. taking 4-7 years to start playing pieces more advanced pieces than the pieces you said just proves that something is very wrong with the way the teacher teaches the student how to practice(or If the teacher do at all).
I have no idea about what is grade 8, and I have no any idea what any other grades are.
I teach every student not according to the stupid grades, but individually, according to particular student needs--strengths and weaknesses. When we are talking about beginner students, I teach them not for today to learn some 8 grade pieces and then for hours, full of frustration, struggle with technical difficulties and not getting any further. I teach them giving such a foundation (both musical and technical) that tomorrow they would need me as a teacher not to explain them "technique relative to the piece", but work on right reading of musical text, its expressive and interpretation content, saving tons of hours of struggling with technical work for actual learning a new repertoire.
Before I moved to another state I had a studio of 13 students (besides my University load).
Here are just a few competition programs of some of my students:
age 8: Debussy La cathédrale engloutie and Golliwogg's Cake - Walk, Mozart Phantasy in D minor
age 10: Haydn Sonata in F Major, Liszt Gnomenreigen
age 13 (one of very few students who never needed to play Czerny, or any other excersises):
Bach French suite no5, Chopin Etude op.10/1, , Liszt Hungarian Rhapsody no.12.
the same student next semester:
Beethoven Sonata Op2. no3 1st mvmnt, Ravel Scarbo. Concerto division: Prokofiev, Concerto no.3
Next year his program included Balakirev Islamey, Feux Follets, Chopin Scherzo no1, etc.
Another student at age 13:
Bach English suite no.2, Chopin Ballade No.3, Concerto division: Rachmaninov Concerto No.1
Next year her Concerto was Chopin 2nd complete.
Another student at age 12:
Beethoven Sonata No.5 complete, Liszt Etude Un Sospiro, Concerto division: Saint Saens Concerto No.2 1st mvmnt.
All of them were "normal" kids, i.e. neither was a prodigy. All of them played absolutely professionally--both, technically and artistically (all my students, even worst, play professionally). And yes, after a certain age they don't play Czerny anymore, but replace it with Chopin, Liszt, Stravinsky, Prokofiev, Rachmaninov, etc. etudes.
If your students play all this stuff after 1-2 year or less on a high professional level, seriously, I will leave ALL my duties here, come to you as an apprentice and will be sitting on all your lessons, writing down every single word you say, studing, thinking, and reconsidering everything I professionally ever done.
Please let me know if they do.
And please explin to me what the BASIC technical resources are?
Sorry, English is not my first language (actually, not even second), so sometimes I still don't know how to say some things.
In short, what I mean is when the student takes let's say Chopin etude op.25/6, or Brahms/Paganini s/he has to be ready for that, i.e. not to start learning how to play double notes or octaves, but already know all the coordination needed.
That's what I meant by "having basic technical resourses". If you have a better name please let me know.
And how ignorant can one be to call the inventions that are masterpieces as not worth retainable repetory?
I must admit, in some cases I am ignorant, but please don't put words in my mouth. I never said the Inventions are not masterpieces, and I never said they are not worth retainable repertory.
There is no need to interpret my words.
Best regards, M