1. just_dropping_by - it is nice to hear at least some warm words. Many teachers in here unfortunately do take my comments personally. Usually that happens only when they know that what I say is not nonsense, but yet truth is not always sweet. Although outnumbered by “opposition”, I am confident in everything that I say and thus it does not matter how many actually don’t like what I say.
I really can’t go on like this writing responses to every single one of you. I expected that by now you would be more open minded. However, you still either attack my personal flesh forgetting to bring any decisive blows to my topic or you choose to not understand what I say and continue to beat around the bush repeating the same ideas over and over again. Not all is lost since you are but a very small portion of teachers and are mainly located in England. Perhaps, this topic would be debated more properly if the representative samples of teachers also came from countries like Russia and Germany. These two countries alone are responsible for perhaps more than 90 percent of all great virtuosos and composers ever created (to avoid any contradictions, I will add that artists like Mozart and Handel were both purely German even though they did not live in Germany).
2. Saturn - your thoughts are breaking apart. Many are irrelevant.
In the very beginning I already said that I am talking about talented students. A student who reads ANY book on how to play a piano is not going to become a virtuoso (I am not talking about musical theory, but physical mechanics). So why do you bring such a student into a debate?
- You also said:
I think you have become cynical. The majority of teachers are not good teachers because they don't exactly understand what their function is.
If a teacher does not understand what is his function, then let us admit that there is another disadvantage to study with such a person. Your comment only supports what I say and it does not require any further embellishments. I’ll just add that I did not say that good teachers have no function at all and if anything, I am very confident that not all the good teachers are concentrated in England. If you said Germany, at least your comment would be artistically literate.
3. B Minor - your responses are the most personal. As if you are trying to fight me instead of my ideas. You write: “If I misunderstand your argument as simplistic, it's because you are presenting it in a simplistic manner.” Is that supposed to be a response? Here is another simplistic argument: atoms contain protons and electrons. Now, if you think simplistically, there is not much to this argument, but if your analytical skills are powerful enough and your knowledge sufficient, this simple statement can imply how entire galaxies can form from unorganized dust and also why you and I exist. The opposite is true also: someone way write one complex paragraph after another and create a whole book; and yet the idea may be so simplistic that it won’t even be worthy of a single sentence. Try to grasp what I said.
- I don’t have any self-contradictions, but you have problems of addressing ideas that were not expressed by me. I did not say that Czerny taught Liszt any new techniques. Liszt came up with those techniques by himself.
- Everything I write has a historical accuracy. If you want to debate my precision, bring on your sources. If you succeed, I will bring you my references down to the page number and the paragraph. You say that I have trouble absorbing books when you yourself find it arduous to grasp my simplistic arguments.
- Your last comment is uncalled for. I did not ask you to stop debating me, but rather to first understand what I am saying and only then debate. Since you did not care to do so, your arguments do not bring any heat on me, but only create entropy. All the impoliteness on my part is only a response to yours. It think it is an ultimate waste of time and only makes people feel bad. That’s why I won’t answer to any of your personal comments to avoid any unnecessary insults.
4. Shagdac - thank you for your feedback.
5. Ahemdito - I realize that many teachers are just ordinary people who still have to work to pay their bills. My views were not directed against those people, but against the general ideas of the teachers. To assure you of that, I will add that my mother has been a piano teacher for over 20 years. I never studied with her, but since my comments also apply to her, I obviously do not mean to be offensive. I also know and have argued successfully with three piano professors in my college. When I see a good counter-argument, I don’t beat around the bush and openly admit my mistake. Such occurrences don’t lower a persons prestige, but heighten it for that person is much better than he was earlier. It is better to be a fool for a moment than a fool for life.
Bernhard - I still admire your knowledge, but your flaw is that you don’t know where it ends and where your assumptions take over. It is ironic that you are trying to teach me things of which you are not well informed yourself. That is another problem with teachers in general.
- The way you talk makes me feel that you know Liszt better than his biographers. That can only mean that you knew him personally (however, he lived 1811-1886). Liszt DID teach technique once in a while. I do not have any under- or overstatements. It was also not very rare for him to make allusions to technique in his correspondence with his students. In one of the letters he stated that glissando should be played with the fingernail of the index finger and that the flesh should not touch the keys at all.
- Another mistake on your part: contrary to popular uneducated beliefs, Liszt was not a Don Juan, but more like a priest (he eventually became one as you should know). He was mainly attached to only two countesses in his entire 75 years of life - Marie D’Agoult and Princess von Wittengstein. Like every other man, he was dumped and haunted by women. Both were really possessive of him and he was on a very short leash even when he was over 60. Now your honor is telling about his flirtings in a coffee shop. If you told that either to D or W, he would be in a very deep trouble. His only controversial relationship with a woman was during his transitional period from D’Agoult to Wittengstein. That does not make him anything close to a Don, but more like a solemn priest. Upgrade you sources.
- You are also completely wrong about him not liking his masterclasses and hence his students. He was always surrounded by his students and really enjoyed his classes which were more like a fun gathering of numerous artists and disciples.
By the way, Liszt was not really a good teacher.
Bernhard, enlighten me! Who do you think you are? If Liszt was not a good teacher, then you are not a teacher at all, but a charlatan. Excuse my rudeness, but your statement stinks with foul vanity. Hans von Bulow and Carl Tausig were just few of his great students. Of course, they became virtuosos because they were innately good themselves - thus in here you unconsciously support my argument that there are no good teachers (it shows that you are pointlessly trying to resist all my views - ask Sigmund Freud about that [Psychoanalysis of Everyday Life]). However, if anything, Liszt was the best piano teacher since he was one of the fewest to really know what he was teaching! How thankless can you be to state that there are teachers that can teach better than Liszt, the inventor of modern piano playing? Your credibility is going more and more down the drain because your assumptions are too opulently surpassing your knowledge. I really don’t have to say anything more to you, but I will go all the way, once and for all.
- Bernhard are you comparing piano playing with boxing and soccer? Art with sports? Your examples are very childish, as if you are trying to hold on to the very last twig to stay afloat. Here is my response: a soccer player and a boxer have a very devised strategy to respond to the opponents attack. The pianist has no opponent. If a pianist considers a grand piano to be an opponent, then allow me to say that he has problems (or the teacher for that matter). There is also no one particular strategy involved in piano playing. When Horowitz returned after 12 years of retirement, he did not hire a teacher to coach him so that he could pump up and go onto the stage to knock the hell out of the piano. In fact, he arrived only a few minutes before the concert was to begin, and still left the audience astonished. I’ll leave the rest up to you.
One more thing. A coach for boxing or soccer can watch the games on TV and devise strategies on where each player should be located during a given attack. Can a piano teacher do the same? Are you going to watch Gilels produce those superhuman sounds on the piano and then teach that to your lucky students? Excuse my Francais, but hell no. To teach Gilels, you have to play like one. Enough of this nonsense.
- And here you go again:
Listen carefully: To teach Islamey, being able to play Islamey is not only unnecessary as may prove counterproductive . (Go and figure). Therefore, your question: “what is your repertory” is completely irrelevant. The only useful (for you) question that you should ask a teacher is: “Can you show me the most efficient to learn this piece?”. Maybe he can, maybe he cannot.
You are saying that you are “bored” to teach your students about pieces that you have mastered yourself. Is this how a good teacher is supposed to be? Or is your technique so flawless? Do you realize that you have insulted all the virtuosos who can play almost everything but at the same time they pass on their knowledge (Arrau to Heifetz)? That is indeed news for me that a teacher should teach only pieces that he can’t play himself otherwise it is all counterproductive. I realize many of you oppose to my views, BUT ARE YOU ALL TEACHERS DEAF to what this guy is saying? Do all of you agree with this nonsense? I am truly surprised. A teacher can show the most efficient way of playing a piece without ever having played a note of it herself. The waters are getting dirtier than I ever thought. The reality seems is even worse.
- Another irrelevant paragraph. Bernhard, my posting has nothing to do with "talented" students who play Christmas tree or Going Home. Please don’t do that again. I am going to skip several of your comments because of irrelevance, too many repeats, and also because they have already been addressed properly before.
- No offence, but Brendel is very low on my list of piano virtuosos. Maybe you like him because of his nationality, but when the stars like Gilels, Richter, Gould et al shine, Brendel becomes nothing but a mere shadow.
- Bernhard, why are you being so pedantic? Why are you telling me what I already know? This is not a show off forum, but a debate. It is very painful for me to hear insults from someone like you against Bach. “Nobody cared for his cantantas.” Tell me something, don’t you love Bach? If not, you are in the wrong profession. You might say that you are simply telling the history; that’s not the problem. The problem is that you talk about Bach as if you are disgusted by him. I will return you the favor:
I don’t deny that Telemann was known better then Bach, however, Bach himself was not a “mediocre” musician. Yes, when he was young, he was not well respected or known, but as years passed, the respect for him increased a lot. His income was higher than most of the musicians’ and it was not a surprise that he quickly worked his way to the top to Kapellmeister. The reason that Bach came across so many hardships in his life was due to people like you who cared about nothing more than to adhere to the rules. His hardships were spiritual, not monetary ( you really talk a lot about fame). Also note that this “mediocre” musician was the best keyboard player of his time. The organ was advanced because the organ builders asked for his feedback. There is also a story about a “virtuoso” keyboardist visiting Germany to compete with Bach. He quietly fled in the very early morning. It is said that he had heard Bach practice. Thus, before you trash someone as magnificent as Bach, learn a thing or two about him. I wish there were some Germans in here, they would tell you a thing or two about pride.
Also, everyone now knows that Bach is a singular genius. So what does it matter that in the 17th century people were not as bright to realize that? Your derogatory comments were uncalled for.
Your illiterate remark about Spitta especially infuriated me. Bernhard, did you know that I have read Malcolm Boyd’s “Bach” (there is no J.S.)? If you knew I am sure you would be more careful in showing off your knowledge. And here is something new for you: Spitta’s work IS still the most complete work ever carried out on Bach. May be there have been new findings (I found Boyd’s book the most boring biography ever written), but ALL your new authors rely on Spitta. You show me a real biographer of Bach who doesn’t use Spitta and I’ll show you a buffalo with wings. Once again, you are in way over your head.
- Yet another wrong remark. I know that during Mozart’s time women could not easily become musicians. But your comment is again irrelevant. Mozart surpassed her sister right after he began studying keyboard. As they were still children, your feminine comment is ultimately irrelevant.
- One more mistake by you. Can’t you grasp that Paganini example was supposed to show you that teachers value is not that great in creating a virtuoso? Don’t you know that Paganini never taught Liszt anything? It seems I have to explain to you that I meant that Paganini was like a trigger for Liszt to begin his rigorous self-education which proved to be more productive than what he had gained from all his teachers combined.
- Do you consider Baremboin a virtuoso too? Have you ever heard him play Chopin as if he has no power in his left hand and just barely enough in his right?
Anyway, your comments were very immature. I can’t write any more lengthy responses because I don’t like to talk about the piano as much as I love to actually play it. I am not boxing you, but expressing important ideas. If you choose to block, there is nothing I can do but waste time.
Thank you. Please do not be offended by anything I say. If I seem rude, it is only in response. Being rude towards an idea is ok, towards a person is uncivilized.
J.S.Bach