Hi I am jazz pianist, I am coming from the jazz end of things but i figured classical pianists probably go through the same thing that I do. I guess I'll start out by saying that I am 28, I just graduated from college with a degree in jazz. I am competent enough to be playing gigs, and considering that i started late (at the age of 15) I think I should be happy about my progress.
But I am not happy about where I am at all. I've heard the best jazz young s of my generation, Aaron Parks, Tigran Hamasyan, Eldar Djangriov, Taylor Eigsti, Rachel Z, you name it there are so many of them.. and well it seems like the better I get the more I realize how far I am from reaching the level they are playing at all... at one point it became so daunting that I am just too overwhelmed to play anymore
I know its probably not fair to compare myself to these people, they are certainly the best jazz pianists to come out of this generation, and I started at least 10 years later than these people.. and I didn't have the best musical background or education.. But still, what I do seem so insignificant, and so trite knowing what is out there. I guess I have this insane expectation, or need, and I don't expect myself to be the best ever, but I guess in my mind, if I am giving my life to music and if i am no where near their level, it seems like a waste of my time and life.
I guess most of my friends, colleagues seems to do okay without having such concerns, they are happy where they are, and it annoys me to a certain excent, because a lot of these people stopping growing and improving altogether. I guess I can't accept mediocrity. At one point I was willing to give myself everything to it, if it meant practicing 15 hrs a day I would have done it, but I had a really severe tendinitis and i had to stop playing for a while. At this point, I have to be really careful not to overdo it...I usually do 4-5 hrs a day now depending on how my hand feels, but I can't help but to think about how these people practiced 10hrs + and how terribly behind I feel.
I guess what I am struggling with, and it's probalby something all serious musicians have to deal with one way or the other.. is the fact that you see yourself as being competent, and professional but you realize you are no where near the level of the people you look up to. For me I almost feel like I'd rather not do music at all if i can make that kind of achievement. I know music is ultimately about self express and the desire to express, but what if you feel like what you are trying to express seems unworthy, because you don't have the ability to create music with the depth that you want it to have?
I guess I(We) can all take comfort in the fact that we tried very hard, we worked our butts off.. but i wonder.. maybe we didnt want it enough.. When I hear that Gilbret Arenas practiced 100,000 jump shots during off season, it makes me wonder how much of what we can achieve is based on will power, but its hard to tell how gifted he was in the first place. Sometimes I feel like all this is not up to me at all.. Some people practice twice as much as I do , and looking at their posture, i wonder why they don't have major problems.I know there are people who have the same kind of desire and talent, but some goes through major injuries, life changing events, they are so many things that can happen in life.. it seems like the great musician we look up to were blessed with the right circumstances along with natural abilities
It may be that you are a successful concert pianists, but you might feel like your accomplishment seems marginal compared to what Horowitz or Gleen Gould have achieved on the instruments..You may be a very accomplished composer, but where does your music stand in the face of great composers like Brahms or Beethoven? you look at those giants and you just wonder why you are doing it in the first place, and you wonder whether you have it in you to do what they did, create something special like that.