This is in response to the topic about bland pianists by omar_roy:
I believe this is the heart of the question. Not an examination of the playing of others, but the search for individuality in our own. So my question is what do we do about it? How do I make conscious choices in my playing that will hold the interest of the audience, while still adhering to the composer's instructions? I attended a masterclass with Frederic Chiu on this subject, well, he wasn't too incredibly keen on following the composer but what he said was useful. According to my notes, he's very interested in the emotional history of a piece. He starts by asking its history: Where did you first hear it? Why are you playing it? How did your last performance go? What's bad about each run through? What's great? What was your first reaction to hearing the piece? When did you truly start to want to work on it and share it? My notes show an intense focus on the emotional connection to the piece, taking our feelings toward a piece and amplifying them so that it is not just the pianist that experiences them but the audience as well. He gave an exercise where the pianist was instructed to stop at a random point in the piece and take stock of his/her current feelings and thoughts. He also gave a little process to developing interpretation: 1) Identify your feelings towards a piece, 2) Validate those feelings and expand upon them, and 3) Exaggerate the gestures in the music (not physical gestures) that spark those feelings. He also stipulated that you must follow this process with the parts you don't like as well, and that you must not reconcile these negative emotions, merely accept them and communicate them (not by playing poorly, mind you).
I think the crux of the problem is described, but inadvertently, in this approach. First an analogy: when Brahms was alive and writing music, the canon that we know today, the symphonic, and stage repertoire had been largely cast into stone. Inevitably, anyone who was to write a symphony would be compared to Beethoven. The easiest way to avoid this daunting example, was to align yourself with the "music of the future," and write totally subjectively.
In other words, it was a
conscious choice that Brahms made to compose in the old, Classical style - or to at least take that style as a fertile starting point. He often complained that he wished he could be Mozart, just dashing off a piece at the cafe. But that approach was no longer possible, because of the cultural situation. The culture didn't allow that - it only allowed masterpieces. In some ways, it was very stultifying towards creativity - and we think that of our current climate! Think of it back then, when Beethoven had been dead only 30 years.
Now the approach of objective analysis has taken such hold, that it is a
conscious choice for a pianist to be individual. There is so much cultural pressure exerted on us, from all institutions, and from most peers, that to be individualistic, in the terms we understand it from pianists of previous generations, takes a forceful act of the will.
For them, for pianists like Cortot, and Friedman, and Paderewski, and de Pachmann, and Friedheim, and Siloti, and whomever, it was just the way they did it. There wasn't any conscious deliberation - do I do what seems objectively correct, or what I feel to be right?
That has two major consequences, in my view - the first is, their interpretations came from a certain cultural perspective. They played with nuance and inflection that could be used to define their milieu. They were nationally, culturally, individualized. The second is, they can't be criticized from that point of view. Since there was no choice, they never made a conscious decision to play like Paderewski with the left hand anticipating the right hand, or whatever mannerisms they used, it's not something that can be truly held against them - the focus is somewhere else. Imagine criticizing Beethoven for not composing like Schoenberg.
By contrast, today's pianists have to make a choice. They are forever being strangled by institutions, who tell them they know nothing in comparison with composers of the past - which may or may not be true, but in my opinion doesn't matter either way - and
should not be creative for that reason. They should only follow directions. That is drilled into people of all musical cultures now in the West.
So they have to make the choice to be individualistic - it's why some young pianists who go that route sound so willful and mannered. Because it is not
natural, it comes first and foremost from opposition and the desire to contrast. And on that note, it is very easy to criticize in a competition setting. You can say they are being eccentric, or pointless, or willful, or whatever adjective to complain that they are making the choice to be individual.
And I believe there is some truth in those criticisms. But what choice do we have? The nature of education in music, is not to be creative, it's to follow directions. Until there is a sea change in the way we approach music, that will be the case. We will continue to have tragedies like Pogorelich, or to some extent Pletnev, and even to some extent Gavrilov. We will be unable to balance rationality and individuality.
Education needs to change, and the institutions connected with education - likec ompetitions - need to change. Competitions, in particular, need to start being more like organ competitions - they need to emphasize improvisation and composition. This will knock out, I would guess, at least 80% of the bland competitors we see today. It would replace them with much more creative and interesting people, and provide much more of a challenge for those contestants - therfore being much more interesting to the audience, and providing more credible results.
We have to start imagining music less as following a set of directions, and more like inventing.
I believe the example of Godowsky will only grow in importance in the coming years of self-introspection of the classical world. For one, he added the left hand in a huge way to the pianistic tool-box, and he also showed composers how to use both hands in the most developed way. For another thing, he was able to reinvent standard repertoire, showing us a new way forward.
I am a big proponent of Godowsky's life work, and I mean not only the fact that he wrote 33 studies on Chopin etudes, but the very impetus that started that project, his creative approach. In my opinion, that is the way forward for music; as his recognition grows, it will become more and more clear.
Walter Ramsey