Lots of threads are turning into arguments about how learn technique, framed this way:
Technique through the repertoire
Technique through exercises
Instead of continuing that discussion in the threads in which it has popped up, if anyone wants to contribute to it, let's talk about it here, so we don't hijack the other threads, which are about more specific technical inquiries.
To start it out: I say, I have had enough of this nonsense about technique being learned entirely through the repertoire. Any teacher who doesn't teach scales, arpeggios, trills, octaves, doubled notes, and every possible variety of those things, is not doing his/her job.
You've heard me say it before: Chopin, Liszt, the Lehvinnes, etc etc etc.... they all taught technique apart from the repertory. What do you know that they don't? Please explain yourself, and include personal experience if possible--since I can't stand purely theoretical discussions of something so practical.
You offered more information in the other thread where you wrote,
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"I still maintain that the "technique of technique" is to find the component motions of an aggregate motion, master until they become "natural," then combine them back into the aggregate motion. In short, divide and conquer. And practicing exercises is the most useful way for me to focus on a specific technique, so that I can make it a natural, automatic part of my playing."
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For many, and for me, improving technique is simply not about learning a series of universal motions. In fact, I often post here as an antidote to those who only post about physical approaches to piano playing, because that approach has been personally so harmful to me at the keyboard, and I suspect harmful to others as well.
The problem I sense here is that technical exercises present material in sort of undiluted forms; an arpeggio is always an arpeggio that goes up, and then back down. Octaves are predictable be they in scales, repeated notes (in Hanon you can find an exercise where you repeat each octave in the scale eight times before moving to the next note), arpeggios. Scales can be an octave apart, in thirds, tenths, or in contrary motion. Et cetera! But in the repertoire, how often if ever do these undiluted examples exist?
Practicing, for instance, hours of C-# minor arpeggios with proper fingering, will not teach you how to play Beethoven op.27 no.2 third movement. Will it help? Probably. But the relation between the two, an undiluted c-# minor arpeggio, and the layered arpeggiations of that Beethoven, only go as far as the name of the notes. Nothing else, not even the so-called "movement," which as far as I am concerned is never universal anyways.
One might say, "Yes, that's true, so why not practice a c-# minor arpeggio as it appears in Beethoven, starting first from the c-#, playing three more notes, then starting from the e, et cetera, up and down." To which I reply, "Why not just practice the Beethoven, which already does that?"
Every composer uses scales and arpeggios in a different way. To illustrate this, compare the first movement of the Mendelssohn c minor piano trio (piano part) with any music in c minor by Beethoven. The approach is just vastly different. There is no one set of motions that will apply to all cases, that wll solve all problems in all contexts.
There is only a flexibility of motion, and a few basic things which one has to be able to do (using the component parts of the body as they are meant to be used, for instance allowing the elbows to move in slight clockwise or counter-clockwise directions; employing different kinds of touch which subconciously will effect the way you use the arm weight; etc)
We can achieve this kind of flexibility by concientious practicing of
anything, technical drills or repertoire. I believe it is in this way that technical drills achieve something, but I don't find it inherently different than what we can achieve through prcaticing actual music. And to that end, what is the point of practicing non-music, if that flexibility can be achieved through a real creative encounter?
Just a few scattered thoughts on the subject.
Walter Ramsey