The title of this thread is "Details -- Only for certain students ?"
When I read that, my first thought was "Piano IS the details!"
To clarify what I mean, I am realizing more and more that piano is not about "Expression", "Emotion", "Personal Interpretation", or any other of a number of terms that people who don't really understand what they're talking about toss around to make it look like they do

I am realizing that, at the very highest level, piano is craftsmanship. The precise volume, tone, and duration of every single note; the precise depression and lift of the pedals, the precise shape of every single phrase, chosen with the utmost care so as to perfectly fit in with every other. Of course we do not hear individual notes - We hear rhythm, articulation, phrasing, crescendos and decrescendos, etc. And from that some people draw emotional and expressive meaning, and other people draw other things. But these are all subsets of the phenomenon I already described.
Note that this is true for composers as well as performers, just that the elements are different (And there is alot of overlap as well).
Now, in my opinion, a great deal of this craftsmanship has been lost. Pianists do not know how to do these things, or that they SHOULD be doing these things. Worse, audiences do not know that these things are what they should be listening for. The worst part of all is that teachers DO NOT KNOW they should be teaching these things, WHAT they are, and HOW to teach them.
To give an example, projecting a note out over an accompaniment. For a great pianist, this is childs play. They all know how to do this; it's one of the easiest tricks in the book, and it's also one of the most beautiful.
And yet there are so many students who don't know how to do it.
Now, to get more relevant to the topic at hand - The teachers, being good pianists themselves, can hear the the student doesn't know how to do it. So they play it the right way to the student, they tell the student "Make the accompaniment softer, make the melody louder". Some students get it, others never do. But the principle is simple, I can explain it in a paragraph with a video and you would get it. And ALL the craftsmanship principles are like this - they are small details that can be explained in a paragraph or less, but since the teachers don't know all of them, and don't know how to explain them, we are left with pianists and audiences that continue to decrease in quality.
So, to summarize what has been said so far -
* The difference between a great pianist and a poor one is the details.
* The details aren't tough to explain, but you need to figure out the right explanation
* Less and less teachers know how to teach them, hence declining quality of pianists
So, here is my suggestion. Figure out the simple explanation for the details your trying to explain. Explain it to the student, demonstrate, perhaps give him a video or two. See if he picks it up. Come back here and tell me how it went.
P.S.: I'm sorry about go, she really doesn't know what she is saying, just bear with her, please
