My husband asked me yesterday how much longer I'd need to take lessons and when there would be a point when I could just sit down and play the piano and not practice anything.
(...) Can someone give me a good response when someone expects you to take lessons for two years and "go off on your own" and just sit and play?
"When I have learned how."
My answer is that I want to be the best pianist I can possibly be, and if that means lessons for the rest of my life, then that's fine with me. I don't think I can achieve that teaching myself.
We are always undergoing some kind of lesson, or learning experience, no matter who/what the teacher is. Where, exactly, having learned the lesson will
put us is fairly impossible to know (even afterward). I don't think we actually ever "arrive" anywhere in particular, other than having "landed" another foothold or handhold (or fingernail hold) somewhere different or deeper or higher or more to the side. I don't think anybody whom we call "The Greats" had ever "arrived" at their full potential, and if they did, it would have only been after they realized that they themselves needed to take the reigns.
Since each of us are entirely unique (in one way), at some point only our own individuality and relationship with life will be able to teach us who we are at the instrument and what, exactly, our own musicianship
is. I mean, who can step inside of you and teach
you how to be
you ?
Honestly, that's scary business, and I think that holds a lot of people back from really developing as an artist and a person because it's seemingly a lonely path (at least when a person just looks at it from a darkened perspective). Even the people that
can seemingly sit down at the piano and play whatever they want without practice are not actually achieving this without practice. They have put their time in, it's just the time they put in accumulated and developed into something seemingly different than how it began.
I find myself to be often in some kind of fight with myself -- on the one hand, I have a drive to get everything in its place and establish how I will do
this and how I will do
that and call that package ME. On the other hand, the second I do that, I seem to run into trouble and a further need to grow. There is something concrete about life and musicianship, but what that is elludes me.
At the same time, I don't necessarily believe others have the "BIG picture" truly much more figured out than I do (at least not people here on earth) -- if they did, I wouldn't be able to see them and they wouldn't be able to see me (don't feel like explaining that comment at the moment). Don't get me wrong, I learn a lot of helpful specifics from other people who know more about certain things than I do, and I appreciate this very much ! But, it still doesn't mean that they are going to know exactly what
my individual path will be, and that I should look to them as though they do.
How long will I take lessons for ? Well, as long as I still have something to learn. What I am working to do, though, is expand my idea of "teacher" and my idea of
learning -- and my receptivity to what that is. It's not just one person or one thing, but potentially everybody and everything. I suspect that the "Greats" in
any field had figured this out and lived it, to at least some conscious extent.
The point is, whatever your desires are with your music, let
that drive you to wherever that leads you, because that is the only way you will get there

. This post is all a bit abstract, and I apologize if it's not helpful for you, but that's where I am at today and it's the best I can do.
