It depends on what the purpose of learning them is. I am curious as to why you have chosen these particular 5 ?
I am assuming for the same reason he chose Liszt...for a different style of "sheer technical difficulty". Some of his [Scarlatti] sonatas are fiendishly difficult and exercise specific techniques (e.g. repeated notes).
Sure, but why not include Debussy, Rachmaninov and Scriabin (for example) ? I would say that these guys also present a different style of writing that the others aren't going to necessarily prepare a person for (which is part of the reason they all wrote their own etudes). Which is what brings me back to my initial statement; it depends on what the purpose of learning them is.
Also, repeated notes are not a technique, they are a group of notes that require technique(s) to be able to play them. I think that the difference is important because not all repeated note groups are going to be asking of the performer to have the same intention/sound. For example, there would be a difference in how a person plays repeated notes leggiero style vs fortissimo.
Again, I agree. We just have to be sure to extend this to all other facets of piano playing; octaves, scales, playing staccato, etc. are not techniques either.
Also, why must we assume that the author of the thread intended the list to be comprehensive?
Well, that is what I am wondering, actually -- whether or not they thought it was comprehensive -- hence the reason I asked why s/he chose these composers specifically. I am not assuming anything.
I guess we'll both have to keep wondering...for now at least.
Or perhaps we'll just move onto something else altogether
Sure, but why not include Debussy, Rachmaninov and Scriabin (for example) ? I would say that these guys also present a different style of writing that the others aren't going to necessarily prepare a person for (which is part of the reason they all wrote their own etudes). Which is what brings me back to my initial statement; it depends on what the purpose of learning them is.Also, repeated notes are not a technique, they are a group of notes that require technique(s) to be able to play them. I think that the difference is important because not all repeated note groups are going to be asking of the performer to have the same intention/sound. For example, there would be a difference in how a person plays repeated notes leggiero style vs fortissimo.
this is a classical period poll only.
this is a classical period poll only. maybe i should have another poll on the 20th century musicians.
Maybe I'm not understanding... if it's classical period only, then why are Chopin, Liszt, Scarlatti, and J.S. Bach all listed as poll options?
I said Bach because I mean anybody can go learn a chopin etude and they'll be done with it. but in bach, everything must be clear and accurate and much more disciplined than chopin. Anyway, the only works by chopin that really have an "technical benefit" are the etudes.
Anyway, the only works by chopin that really have an "technical benefit" are the etudes.
I said Bach because I mean anybody can go learn a chopin etude and they'll be done with it. but in bach, everything must be clear and accurate and much more disciplined than chopin.
I said Bach because I mean anybody can go learn a chopin etude and they'll be done with it. but in bach, everything must be clear and accurate and much more disciplined than chopin. Anyway, the only works by chopin that really have an "technical benefit" are the etudes. that`s not true at all. Not just anyone can go learn a chopin etude and be done with it. In chopin etudes the notes have to be played clearly and accurately too and it takes a lot of work.His etudes are not the one that really have a technical benefit, how about his preludes,polonaises, waltzes etc....
A journalist asked Rubinstein why he didn't play more Chopin Etudes, and he said, "I'd rather read a good book."Walter Ramsey
And, then again, according to critic Tim Page, Rubinstein is quoted as admitting frankly that he was "scared to death" of them. "To do them justice is a most difficult task, which I haven't yet had the courage to attempt," he wrote to an admirer in 1962.
And anyway, if technique is the only issue, why not stick to Czerny? By the time you get to Opus 800, you should be able to do just about anything...
Wow, that's naïve. Czerny's music is awful and consists of nothing more than a bunch of unimaginative permutations of scale figurations.If you want to waste your time on these kinds of exercises, at least play those of someone with a little imagination...Brahms maybe.
Thanks for calling me naive! I love being insulted by somebody I've never even met! Made my day.But I'm afraid you're full of sh*t. Czerny wrote a huge variety of studies that address nearly every technical problem there is in piano playing (except possibly leaning over and plucking the strings with your fingers.)Are you sure you're not thinking of Hanon? Assuming you're capable of thought at all, of course.