By reading the posts on this forum, I get the feeling that most of you use pointless methods such as Alfred, Bastien, instead of teaching music and proper pieces composed by decent composers.It s quite appalling if it s really the case.Do you really think that Kissin learnt with Bastien ?I personally stick to the methods I was taought with as a child and which are still in use in Eastern Europe countries.They are great methods since all the pieces, even in the most beginner level, are truly beautiful and thus are a true initiation to music.The difference between me and you might be that I dont teach piano only, I teach music. There is a big difference of approach. If the only piano pieces existing were the Alfred and Bastien pieces,I believe I would never have been interested in playing the piano.Teach miniatures by Gretschaninov, Dvarionas, Glinka instead ! Studies by Nikolaiev, Schitte !
I teach jazz piano at a German music university, kulahola.And I must say that the Russian piano students are very often the best students.BUT: They are also exceptionally often mentally ill. Very many of them are disciplined at the piano, but lack important other human abilities. They simply often are unhappy, internally disrupted people.And that - besides other causes - is caused by a very unbalanced, one-sided, blinders-wearing lifestyle. Caused by unbalanced, one-sided, blinders-wearing parents and teachers.I prefer students that are a tad less proficient at the piano but know how to live a satisfying life.Best Wishes,Monk
Are there books by these people you are talking about? I couldnt find them on the internet...i'm really actually interested in finding some with more quality then Alfred's. That is currently what i'mk using, aside from some of my own teachings. GIve me a name of some books i could order, or tell me why i'm not finding them on the internet. Please
It's obvious that they become great piano players BECAUSE of that training.And they love music (in most cases).What I wanted to point out that a life is worth little in which one part is developed into monstrous dimensions and other parts suffer.If you manage to practice 8 hours a day and be a positive and socially competent human being, it's fine. But just that isn't the case with many of the Russians. They even have their own corner in the cafeteria where they sit together, smoking and looking tired and depressive. While students e.g. from US, Scandinavia or Asia almost always happily mingle with the German students.Best Wishes,Monk
I think there is a point in that playnig the piano so many hours a day causes psychological problems.
Yes, Kulahola, and exactly because of this I find it O.K. when the piano students are a bit lazy and just want to enjoy life in their spare time. And I find it O.K. when they want to play some crap piece they like (and I not).Because I love HUMANS more than MUSIC!Because the sanity and happiness of people is WORTH MORE than the 158778699465623th perfect rendition of Liszt's B minor sonata. Period.Best Wishes,Monk
Wow!If only more teachers (or people in general) thought like this.I really respect you, man (and wish I could take lessons from a teacher like you).- Saturn
For once, I got to side with Kulahola here. I think it's a bit questionable to respect someone, because he allows his students to be lazy and focuses more on a holistic teaching approach, and not respect someone, because she is strict with her students.
In ANY activity - not just piano playing, but chess, biochemistry, marathon, climbing, etc., if one wants to excel, one practically has to devote one's entire life to it. No slacking, no "playing crap". One needs to have complete focus, or in other words, one must wear blinders and be unbalanced, and one will develop psycological problems. It's inevitable. In such a case, a teacher who lets you slack is utterly worthless and would not deserve any respect.
xvimbi, I agree with some of what you said, but not all.First, I doubt monk allows his students to be lazy.
Second, notice that in my post, I didn't say I respect him because he allows his students to be lazy. This would be very stupid of me, because there are thousands of teachers who allow their students to be lazy, which largely results in the acceptance of mediocrity. The reason I respect monk is because he genuinely cares for his students. This is, in my mind, something very worthy of respect.
Are you saying that one who wants to excel should dedicate himself blindly to that activity at the expense of all else, even his well-being?
Wow! If a student were so silly as to do this, the BEST thing the teacher could do is to make the student realize there is more to life than being the best piano player in the world. Of course, one must be dedicated and focused to excel; this is a given.
But why do musicians excel to the point of greatness? Is it because they want to sell cd's, or because they want to be discussed and revered by students who post on online piano forums? No, it's because they love music (I hope).
Excellence does not necessarily imply the development of psychological problems. And if it did, what would be the point of it (excellence)?
What if the student decides to dedicate himself completely to excelling in the piano, and then he incurs a Repetitive Stress Injury, or has one arm severely (and permanently) injured in a car accident? Since there's no chance he can excel in what he focused himself on, is there no longer purpose for his life? Is he ruined?At that sort of crisis, the student will realize what a fool he was for limiting himself.
Also, one minor thing. I'm not being nitpicky here, but your use of "a priori" is not correct. "Per se" would be better. I don't care about this kind of thing, because the meaning was clear, but I thought you'd like to know it anyway.
I use Nikolaeva sometimes with begining students, if they are not too young. But I dont dismiss the methods you mention as useless. Everything has its uses, and I assure you that Nikolaeva and other eastern European methods have huge deficiencies. Especially in this day and age in which a pianist is also required to improvise and do a lot of things in contemporary music that require a more open mind. A teacher must carefully select his methods depending on the particular deficiencies of his students. I go back to Bastian with some students who I fear are getting a bit too stressed.
If they dont hear beautiful music in the childhood, it will be too late after that. How can you love Beethoven and Chopin if you only heard Bastien all your childhood