Super fun happy man
It would REALLY do justice to the amount of good information here if everyone would just shut the *** up (flame-wise) and focus on contributing ideas that will help J.S.Bach better understand the flaws in his post, instead of turning this into personal bullshit.
I was going to say something like this, but if I did, most of you would probably take it in a very “inflamed” manner and bend the subject even further away from the topic. Since finally someone from your own circle had the guts to attempt to bring you back to your wits, I will once again swallow hard all your “comments” and will only address those very few persons in this entire forum who had said something intelligent and worthy of a debate. I must add that my patience is beginning to end. Several of you even insult me for “whining” about not wanting to get personal. Ok then. I won’t say anything about that any more. You can be as rude as you wish to be. But I will add that if you keep that going just a little bit longer, it would mean that all you really want is to fight. As such, I promise, I will give you one that is really worthy of you. After that the debate will be over once and for all, and some of you will really wish that my comments were more personal than general. I always keep my promises. You have the choice of finding out about that yourselves. Those of you who do not agree with what some of these teachers write in this room, please make yourselves heard even if you do not agree about my topic in the least. My words might not seem very significant as of now, but if the manners of the “musicians” in this room do not change, it will become very significant, and very soon.
After routinely wasting another paragraph, I will finally get to the debate:
Since your “honorable” protector is not with you anymore, I will take his role in your favor. Some of the few intelligent postings made me realize that maybe you are so angry because there are actually many students reading what I have written and if you should not be able to fend off my encroachment, you will be left functionless and jobless. Here is one of the comments by one author that was very useful:
Swan said: “If we teachers agreed with you - "THERE ARE NO GOOD TEACHERS", we'd all be a burden to the tax payers while we look for a different job!”
I completely understand that. Since there are hundreds of people who are reading the contents of this room, I think that it would be wiser for me to issue a disclaimer first. I can’t say that I was wrong to not do so in the beginning because this is my first time in this forum and I thought that since my posting will be in the teachers “lounge,” I would be able to discuss it privately with teachers. Since I have seen several amateur students like B minor and mark1 hurl themselves in a hurried manner into our conversation as if it has anything to do with them, I think that this is the best time to add the “disclaimer.” I also sincerely hope that it will help to mend some of the misunderstanding among the teachers since I am not doing so for the sake of the students (it is their job to find out what concerns them and what not on their own), but the teachers.
DISCLAIMER: Those students who had a rapture after reading this room’s topic because they finally found an evidence that they can’t play the piano because “there are no good teachers” and hence could blame their inferior piano skills on their teachers are utterly wrong. The truth is that my opinion has nothing to do with as much as 99.99999 percent of you. So before hurrying back to your teachers and saying that they “suck,” consider just the very few of my questions just to see where you are standing yourself:
1. Do you love piano so much that you practice 3 to 12 hours a day (as your schedule allows, excluding parties, drinks, MTV, etc and including time spend studying or working) without your teacher saying a single word to you? (This is where 100% of you will answer no).
2. How many books have you read on the musical theory, the biographies of composers et al?
3. Do you listen to any classical music without someone telling you to do so? (It does not count if you spend just 3 hours a day listening to classical as background noise, i.e., passively and without any feelings).
4.Can a classical music touch you so deeply that a piece might be able to make you cry and laugh?
5.Would you spend all your money to buy a good piano instead of a car or a stereo system (or drugs)?
6.Do you always follow the fingerings in the written text or do you first analyze intelligently whether it would suite you well (this is where the non-technical books come in)?
7.Would you ever complain that you can’t achieve something because you have a crappy teacher? (Although many teachers are crappy, it would not be an obstacle for a studious student. Again most of you will sure say yes to this one).
8.Would you ever think to study a piece that your teacher did not assign you or would you wait for a spoon feeding?
I can go on forever. There are no rules for a talented student. In fact, talent is not only synonymous with interest, but can be actually replaced by “extreme eagerness.” These are just sample questions to show you that my article has nothing to do with students like you. I will also add: have you ever thought that just as “There are no good teachers, only good students” is true, it is even more true the other way around? Namely, “THERE ARE NO BAD TEACHERS, ONLY BAD STUDENTS.” Why? Because every student has the power to educate himself even better than his teacher can. Thus, when the student is not studying, it is not the teacher’s fault but the student’s eager choice. Also, teachers are EXTREMELY important when dealing with regular students, as already described, because a student who only “loves” to play and does not care much about reading will for sure develop so many bad habits that his case will become a hopeless one. This is so since if one does not study with a teacher, one also needs intelligence to make right choices. For example, if you study alone and are not talented (the same definition already described above), you will tend to choose the easiest fingering so that you can cut down your work. A talented student not only will choose the hardest fingering, but also will take the hardest passage from the hardest piece and will play it in every single key with various variations (forget Hanon, for as you can see you can make your own exercises).
Thus, a teacher cannot make from a student a virtuoso. A good teacher still can make you as good as any other performing and recording artist. For example, Murray Perahia and Evgeny Kissin are excellent pianists. Even virtuosos. However, as Marcus Cicero says “In virtute sunt multi ascensus,” the virtuosity of Kissin and Perahia are nothing compared to the Giants like Richter, Serkin, Busoni, or Rubinstein. To reach their level, one needs A LOT more than a conservatory education.
Disclaimer to the disclaimer: If you suddenly decide to follow my above recommendations in order to become a virtuoso, please realize that they are but the very view and simple aspects of a “virtuoso.” It also won’t work simply because someone had to tell you what to do and it was not in you innately (i.e., you are talented to try to follow the instructions and reach great heights, but not talented enough to become supreme). It would be the same thing for Czerny to tell Liszt “Here is the list Liszt, if you follow the list and practice a lot you will develop a transcendental technique and achieve great fame!.” It is as simple as I can get.
As for the teachers, I have already tried to give an example to Bernhard. He was unable to grasp it. Thus I will give the same example again, but this time step by step:
1.Bach, along with his numerous family members and other German students goes to church to study.
2.All of them have the same teachers and study the exact same material.
3.All of them have the same opportunities to study (in fact, some have more opportunities that Johann)
4.After graduating, some students never make it to become anything close to an artist, other become regular musicians, while Bach becomes an excellent keyboard virtuoso, and a good composer.
5.Bach eventually becomes Kapellmeister and secure a good salary.
6.Many people love his work, but many don’t realize that he is going to become the greatest composer every lived and rather regard him as too stubborn since he refuses to follow the regular church rules.
7.Every single great composer after Bach studies most of his available works (including Mozart and Beethoven). His peers are given to oblivion, but many people still break their heads over the mathematical complexities of Bach’s “Die Kunst der Fuge.”
8. Question: If Bach and his peers had the exact teachers and got the exact education, why was it only Bach who became so great?
Answer: He learned something extra that others did not.
Q: But how? Didn’t he get the same education as others?
A: Yes he did. But what sets him apart from others is that he gained a lot of extra knowledge not taught in the regular church.
Q: What was that “extra knowledge”?
A: I can’t possibly know all of it, but here are some: he searched for and studied composers as far located as Vivaldi and Albinoni (he has transcribed many of their works). He also studied old masters like Giovanni Palestrina and would travel for days on foot just to see Dietrich Buxtehude perform on the organ.
In addition, he was a well rounded person not only musically, but as well as philosophically and religiously - he rigorously studied all the works of Martin Luther, illustrating his rebellious spirit. Not only that, he disregarded the general belief that the thumb should not be used during playing which enabled him to compose his beautifully complex fugues. In addition, perhaps he was the first person to cross his fingers during playing (e.g 4 over 5 and 3 over 4). Now this is something that many modern “teachers” think is wrong and would punish their students if they used it.
I think that now I have made myself perfectly clear. I can’t get any simpler than this. If this example does not prove to you that I am correct, I would be very interested in hearing your counter-evidences. An answer like “You are wrong” without presenting any intelligent arguments won’t work. I hope that this will clear all the misunderstandings and will silence the ignorant. Since I have seen almost everything in this room, I would not be surprised to see some irascible genius begin another fight just because he thinks that my remarks contain “something” offensive.
Just in case, I will also give some individual responses:
Swan
I think you'd get a more 'open minded' response from the STUDENT'S forum.
Not anymore.
I'm not going to tell a potential student when they ring to have lessons, "Well, you know if you're talented, then coming to me really is a waste of time, because you'd be better off learning by yourself." And it's not because I'm after their money - it's because I really do believe I can help them progress much quicker than on their own.
Here’s the deal: As I have shown you above, you will have many talented students, but not as talented as I meant for my topic. Actually many teachers will see as talented students as I am talking about. Thus money wise, you don’t have to worry. As for knowledge, if someone takes up lessons with you and already knows everything that you can teach him (e.g. a young Horowitz), would you still keep him or would you pass him on to a more knowledgeable teacher (if there is one)?
I do understand (I think!) where you're coming from. Because I also believe that every teacher is also self taught. Each day, we teach ourselves, "well that didn't work, let's try something different," and each day we are faced with new challenges (including repertoire) that we need to find the solution to ourselves. Some of us do that by enrolling in courses, others do it by reading a lot of books. So teachers are self taught in many ways. And I believe a 'good' teacher is one who conitnues to 'self-teach' him/herself for the rest of their lives.
Exactly. And what did I tell earlier? A really talented student will read as many books as he can. As a simplified example, let’s assume that the student is so talented that he has read almost all the books that you have read yourself. What can you teach that student? I agree that you can still GUIDE him to give him moral support since you are more mature, but that has nothing to do with actual knowledge and is something that can be also done by a friend or a parent. In fact, by any one (many teachers are not very mature themselves as this room shows). Again, such prodigies are rare, but those are exactly the people I am talking about. And the difference is that while you study the trial and error for your own hand, the student who gets the primary information himself and makes his trail and error for his own hand is much, much better off. After all, most of the information is coming from a single source. However, as the information passes from generation to generation, that information is getting modified and not always for the better. Even though I believe that everyone has to discover his own technique, the direct study of a source as an example would be much better than to learn its interpretation by some author who couldn’t play the piano well enough himself (Hanon come’s to mind).
Willcowskitz
J.S.Bach said that this doesn't make him American, and we don't know the reasons why he chose so, but he was at heart Jewish, just like Rachmaninoff was Russian although he lived in America.
Thanks. At least one more person saving me some words.
Shagdac, I am not getting upset for asking questions, only ignorant insults. As such, you can ask any questions you would like and that would not make you ignorant. Let me add that Vivaldi was Italian, Handel was German, and Liszt Hungarian. Although it is more complex to explain Bernstein’s “reasons,” I am skipping him because he had nothing to do with keyboard virtuosity. I merely added him and Copland because for some strange reason Bernhard mentioned “modern music,” although it didn’t have to do with anything I told him.
Super fun happy man
I just gave this thread's link to my piano teacher last night. I called her this morning and she said "I haven't laughed this hard since the time I heard about Monica Lewinsky and cigars.
Your teacher is far from being the only one laughing. I myself have fun reading some of the especially dazzling postings. Nevertheless, due to the lack of information in those postings, they are becoming more and more banal.
This one is going to be a make or break.
J.S.Bach