Well, for some yes, but people who understand in music at least something, play at the piano sequence of IDEAS. So the technique is not how to play sequence of notes, but how to make an idea out of sounds.
Needless to say, it is much easier to play one idea rather than to push 6 notes this idea consists of. Music and musical ideas dictate the technique. Such an approach is a fundamental of technique and that's what Chopin and Liszt were emphasysing.
This particular post, made by Marik, stands out to me at this point.
How one goes about organizing sound into musical ideas plays a very large role in virtuosity, I think. There are so many elements to balance out with piano playing, but there are immediate ones which come to mind.
Within this thread, we have discussed technical ability, musical ability -- and then there is left hanging something intangible. Yes. I think that intangibility is
silence. I think a great painter, for example, is constantly balancing many of the same things. Balancing color and shape, in many ways, represents an "artistic" sense -- it is like the "musical" aspect of playing the piano. The ability to stroke the paint onto the canvas, and knowing which brushes to use, the ability to create textures, this is technique and intrinsically tied to whatever colors (or sound for the musician) comes off of the brush (or out of the "fingers" for the pianist) -- or more accurately, whatever the balance of colors are that the painter is looking for. But, a good painter is always keeping close at hand, that blank canvas. Similarly, a good pianist keeping close at hand silence. There is always a context, and the context must remain close at hand.
Perhaps mastery is a better endeavor than virtuosity. A master keeps the balance of all three; sound organization (musical ideas), technical ability to produce the musical ideas, context/silence. Well, either that, or I just enjoy the number three

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