hmmm ... well, I will take these posts as fuel for my thought, I just can't seem to let this topic drop and it is related to things I have been "working out" for years it seems.
Further up I wrote that I think that "tradition" is about performance practices itself, and probably heard within the playing (as well as in the writing). Well, I still think that's true, but I decided it's not JUST that. More precisely, I think it's in the tools that each individual is taught to use, and how they learn to use them. This is where I suspect there is becoming a difference between what was practiced in older school Moscow Conservatory, for example, vs. "modern thought" in the world.
I don't know truly that much about any of it, and I have in the past several years felt constantly like I am just piecing things together as items come my way or as I find scraps here and there. I feel that what I am learning now with my mentor is by no means scraps, but sometimes I wonder if it's "okay" for me to truly want to learn what I want to learn even though most of me is no longer only 5 months old (as the world sees me).
Anyway. Marik has posted about achieving particular articulations, for example a very light kind of staccato where within the line, everything is actually connected in concept, and that this becomes the highest incarnation of legatissimo. Also, Russian School, as far as I know, has nurtured "intonatsia" ... something that I rarely hear anybody talking about anymore at all (not that I have had lengthy discussions with most people in general about it), but something that it seems people around here (I am talking years ago) believe doesn't really exist, or that it is less than it is cracked up to be. But, I can't help but think people just never learned about it and I can't help but wonder why that is ?
Lostinidlewonder, you say that you think today's teaching would blow away that of yesteryear ... and I don't necessarily agree nor disagree ... but, what I want to know is
how ? Like
what (?), specifically, do we do or know now that yesteryear didn't ? For example, amongst other things and probably deeper concepts (that I don't know too much about), Taubman teaches about forearm rotations (that is not just Bernhard talking about that). Is that an example ? I don't know ALL of the ins and outs of what seems like a "modern" thought or school on technique, but if there is something of value in that way of thinking, is it truly new ? Or, perhaps it's rather just a certain kind of focusing on things that have always existed ?
Or, what does yesteryear know that today doesn't ?
Also, who would/could we say is truly a product of modern thought, of that which would blow away the teachings, the technique of yesteryear ? Lang Lang ? Or
what is the product of this modern teaching which blows yesteryear away ? What is being achieved musically ? Is it truly on par with that of the olden days ? If we have never heard/seen the greats of yesteryear live (
some people
have), how do we know ? Are there truly little Mozarts running around everywhere, and we just don't notice the same way because there are so many ? My questions are endless ...
