Assuming that the pianist has many strengths and has a large potential to display more than one kind of playing, I'd like to hear pieces which represent different qualities. Overall, I'd be keyed into tonal pallets and emotional depth and would hope that each selection lends itself appropriately to some adequate form of that, but to get a good sense of a pianist's musicianship I'd like to hear a piece for each of following characteristics:1. Slow and song-like2. Physical power and stamina3. Contrapuntal Thinking(4. Agility) -- not necessarily less important, but since it's just supposed to be 3, I'd choose it last.I can't say that I have a sense of ideal pieces for these quite yet, except for I'd like to hear something by Bach for number 3. For the first one, I think this ends up saying almost the most about a person, about pianism, and musicianship. To be able to suspend tones with interest, to be able to continue slower phrases without losing the line, these require a particular musical maturity, a particular musical interest on the part of the pianist's, and a certain knowledge or instinct about resonance.For the second, aside from the fact that I'd like to hear the pianist's "inner roar," I'd also like to hear if/how a pianist can do this without it being a slap. Like it just comes from deep within.For the third, I think that this shows a very certain kind of intelligence in being able to maintain the individual musical characteristics of each line, while using the piano's tonal abilities to have these come to life, and then how to have all of this tie together to form the overall tapestry.The fourth ... well, it can be fun, it can be kind of like lightening, but I'm especially fond of it within a musical context, particularly when its presence expresses something musically where the concept is unequaled at a slower tempo.
I would only add "architectural" ability to this list. The way one would pace something on the scale of Schönberg's op. 19 is vastly different from the way one would approach Schubert's B-flat major sonata. Mike
Sure, that's a great choice, my only reservatio being that I'm a bit of a technical completist and the Appassionata has little in the way of left hand runs, double notes, or octaves, but that's something I personally prioritise, others wont.
Do you mean this kind of 'pace' in terms of, for example, when to use power and how much?
Hi m1469,Yes, that is one part of pacing -- deciding where to put the climax, and how much support it needs . . . Deciding what role each phrase plays overall rhetoric of the piece, and what is a suitable rubato, shaping, connection, and so forth, to create a sense of unity and direction in the whole. I think the way Berman put it, one savors details and moments in a different way in a shorter piece such as an art song, than in a larger form such as a lengthy sonata.Let me think a bit more about how to explain this, and get back.Without sacrificing the family nature of this forum, I suppose one way (albeit crude and simplistic) to put it is "how not to climax early," and how to create the perfect release from that climax over the remaining portion of the music. Another way is the running analogy: a 500-meter dash is not a 5k is not a half marathon is not a marathon -- but it is not in an athletic sense . . . it is in the use of time, texture, dynamics, direction, momentum, rubato . . . Can anyone else explain pacing in a better way, please?'THanks,Mike