I agree that the arm should not play the note. However, what I discovered is that if the thumb finishes completely extended (with the arm being free to respond- rather than bearing down at any time) there's not need for any follow-up of relaxation. It just starts and finishes in full comfort anyway. This has made more difference to rapid scales than I could possibly describe. Rather than repressing thumb movement, I'm completely finishing the extension of the thumb. Got it. I do that naturally. I was reading about how the base joint of the thumb in near the wrist and needs to be relaxed in order to allow a free extension. It is definetly something I will keep and eye out for in my students.
At times. However, the student who goes all out into their first fortissimos may only have the possibility of loud thumps. I believe good technique should come first. The more enthusiastic the students musical intentions with loud sounds, the less likely they are to learn good technique. found a interesting quote from article we can both agree on
interestingly, the more musical the player the more difficult listening can be, because the
inner musical world has correspondingly more depth and clarity. Even good teaching,
stressing the importance of listening to the inner voice and of pitching notes mentally in
advance of playing them, is misleading if the student is not finally helped towards real control
of the sound.
It is not necessary to be a top, world-class artist before you can hear sound coming out of your
instrument, and shape it musically and expressively; but I am certain the puzzling truth is that
few of us actually play like this. A musician must be like a sculptor of sound, deliberately and
physically shaping a describable quality of sound in a particular fashion, nuance by nuance. Simon Fischer
Sure. And then? Well, the real difficulty begins. It's not hard to be aware of inner voices.
It is hard if you have never been taught how to listen to it. Never met a student who listened to a piano piece and says " Wow its cool how that pianist voiced that chord" without the teacher bringing it up. You are right , it is not hard to do but it won't be done until it is noticed first. Then yes you teach the technique but it must be identified first. I say it is not hard to voice them effortlessly but it is not done because the person does not listen for it.
That's why simply pointing out that a melody is in the middle is worthless. If the student already knows where the melody is, looking directly at the end goal itself is totally futile.
That is a big, big if. You are talking as a mature pianist. I am talking about a kid in middle school , identifying a counter melody. I promise you, it will not happen. I am not saying these students are uncapable but honestly they have not matured to even listen for things like that yet. If you are an older pianist, why is futile to know where the melody is. How would you bring it out if you don't know where the melody goes. Good teaching is part teaching the student to teach themselves. If you combine teaching students to identify countermelodies and the techniques to bring it out, you will have a student who is able to do it.
But teaching them to do it is incomplete if they do not know the when to do it. All the good technique goes to wayside. When you are teaching you have to do it sequencially so students can follow the steps as home. Teaching technique without the listening is coming up with the solution before identifying the problem. You would not want to spoon fed the students the answer but allow them to come up with solutions to problems they have in their own practice.
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If a deaf person plays the piano, I argue, they are playing sounds, and executing piano technique, but they do not understand what music is because sadly they cannot experience it."
Obviously. Again, you're pointing out what happens if you throw out a variable entirely. A deaf person has no hearing and hence develops no feedback about the correlation between movement and sound. A person with hearing certainly can.I used this example to show people need a concept of what music is in order to create it. I use examples like that because in order to show the importance of a variable you need to look at the results when it is not there.
No. The TEACHER, thinks of the musical results of course. My point is that the STUDENT need not understand every step musically to begin with or necessarily understand how a physical procedure leads to the end goal. Obviously it would be different if the teacher had no idea. When I get students to practise the first movement of the moonlight sonata, I only need spend less than a minute illustrating the concept of the triplets being far softer than the melody. Sadly, this never leads to any notable difference. If I concentrate on getting them to play the triplets staccato and the melody legato (and on very specific physical issues while doing so) this takes far longer than that initial minute and might seem totally contrary to the musical goal. However, it never fails to make a huge difference to the musical result when they go back to playing normally. They learn the FEEL of two different voices. But I train that by an entirely separate process to that in which I explain the dynamics. It's not hard to understand two different levels of sound. However, it's very hard to execute- without specific exercises to train the means by feel. The training exercise might appear totally unmusical. However, if you bear with it the results certainly are not.
Your right this is a great technique for teaching students technique. I do things like that all the time. Doing the opposite technique can make the technique you are aiming for suddenly possible.
My whole point was there need to be a sound concept be someone in order to play it.
Of course if the student walked in and you asked the student to sight read something, chances are especially if they are inexperienced they will not have a clear notion of how the piece goes. But there will be some vauge notion of sound in their mind. They expect what comes out to be the sound of the piano. They may know the intervals , melody harmony, or rhythm, but if it started sounding like a violin they would be startled.
My point of the importance of listening is by strenghting their tonal concept before they play they can get an idea of the tempo, rhythm, notes, directions, phrasing, articulation before you say word explaining. Of course you can point out somethings to them but they will sight-read it much better having been given the preview. Then you may suggest the great practice techniques you mentions after they had some success with it.
In regard to the Moonlight Sonata, everyone has heard the piece including the student so your right the whole aural concept would not be important in this situation, because they have it already! What if they didn't?
Of course, you wouldn't phrase it that way. But that doesn't mean they cannot start learning usefully about such things, rather than copying. Slurs in particular, are almost impossible to convey without a physical demonstration that is referenced to strong-weak.
I wish it was that easy. Assuming they are well behaved children ,then yes ,you could learn thing through verbal descriptions first. Unfortunatly, it is rarely the case and kids want to do something and they want to do it now.It is much easier said than done to teach roudy boys about the importance of slurs.
What is strong weak reference to slurs?

Slurs is an articulation that indicates a connection between two sounds and has nothing to with meter or dynamics.
Tell Beethoven about the strong -weak rule because he sure does not follow that.
I think it is bad idea to teach things that could be controdicted in the not too distant future. This may work in some elementary literature but it does not carry through as you keep going.
Slurs are also sometimes used as phrase marking( I dont think they should but editors do it) . Not every phrase is going to start strong. I am not trying to be so picky about itm but when you get the smart alec kid that says" I though you said slurs start strong", they will look at you like you do not know what your talking about.
But that goes without saying. Why would a teacher do ANYTHING that was not conceived to contribute to a long term musical goal? The point is that a student can learn better MUSICAL thinking from PHYSICAL instructions. The teacher need not explain every aspect of it. You continue to speak as if this is just a ludicrous idea but various examples have proven otherwise- especially the bowing ones. In a balanced whole, it's among many productive ways to teach musicality- and one certainly that does not exclude anything else. The standard idea I dispute is that the musical goal ALWAYS comes first and the movement ALWAYS follows. I think that's very small-minded thinking. The opposite often applies too. A lot of the time, the teacher can look after the complexity of the path- and begin with the nuts and bolts. Students can gain musical results from physical instructions. What you excellently described in your Moonlight sonata explanation is a practice technique toward a musical result. If you want students to think musically, you have to allow them to experience music. Listening to Chopin will help you understand his style and approach better than anyone could ever explain to you.
Let me give you an example of when it is a bad idea to do a practice tool first
I was teaching Moonlight Sonata, and she had heard it before and never played it so I proceded to teaching her. When it came to showing her the right hand. I taught the opening chords, blocked first, then had her double strike it to help her remeber the shape her hand was in to play the chords. This is what I do all the time. I break pieces down into various strategies I know will help me learn faster.
When it came time for her to play, she struggled because she had never played a piece with so many sharps before and was struggling to remeber so all the piano physical piano practice technique. It would have benefited her more to have an opportunity to simply read the notes before teaching her and probably confusing her with practice technique.
I reminded me of a story, where one of my piano teachers was an assistant for a Dorathy De Lay, who was a renoun teacher of violin technique and hundreds of students. She would have short lessons where the student would play for her and she would say ok well, it is a g# in measure 4 and play a little higher in the B section and that would be the lesson. The point is as much as we want to get extreamly technical and wrapped up in the technique of things, everything comes down to the fundamentals of notes and rhythms in the long run. I had made the mistake of getting wrapped up in the technique and not starting from the bottom up and building the simple fundamentals of just learning the notes.
I didn't say such a thing. I said that if your means do not permit you to even begin to transmit musical intentions, frustration will ensue. And the more you develop musically (without being able to realise it) the more frustrated you will become unless you are taught means to progress at a piano (rather than in your head). The above is entirely beside the point.Got it. So basicly if your technique is faulty and prevents you from expression your musical intentions, you will get frustrated right? Completely agree and understand that. Luckily I am part of the camp that believes technique can be fixed. Although I have never experienced carpal tunnel syndrome, so I have no idea what these kind of limitations are like.
Neither is being told about musical issues you are supposed to strive for, then going to practise only to discover you have no means to realise those issues.You are right. it seems like you are implying her teachers did not teacher her technique. If that is so then quiting does seem a lot more logical. If she is not getting that balance then she should get a better teacher.
Sure, how many teachers explain the basic physical nuts and bolts? I was given all kinds of classic practise techniques. None of them helped me a bit. Recently, a number of lessons that were almost exclusively on physical issues have completely transformed my ability to produce the sounds I had already intended to. Now those practice techniques work. Many teachers just don't teach the basic fundamental movements.Good teachers do. I definetly got them and then some. I had one when I read this book The Perfect Wrong Note by William Westney. It is a wonderful book that really altered how I viewed practice. It describes practice techniques many teachers simply do not talk about and I feel it would greatly help their students too.
"Well which part of musical control do you mean?"
The control that permits realisation of intention. Developing that is the only way to both to be self-satisfied and to have a reasonable chance of also impressing others. Without it you simply cannot show your real level of musicality. The intention is basically lost in white noise.So basicily , technique. There are many aspects people try to control: tempo, dynamics, interpretation, etc. Now I get what you mean. Yes, not having technique is going to prevent you from the sound you want.
As I said, I'm talking about the technique to control sound. Well unless you are a superhero, you cannot control sounds only the instrument that produces sound. So you are saying there was not enough piano technique in her music lessons.
Exactly- to step back from the immediate musical goals and develop better physical movements- in order to be able to realise the musical goals. At the time, all I really did was play and listen. The whole thing was about that. I didn't have the slightest clue what my body was doing. I'd just try anything to get closer to the sound I intendedAnd this is why I have a job.

I think you would like this quote from a violin teacher
If you want to change the way you play, you have to change the way you think about your playing. One of the chief jobs of the teacher is not only to present and implement helpful ideas, but also to weed out the unhelpful ideas that are getting in the way. The problem is that many of these may be buried so deeply that, although they continue to exert an influence, they are forever hidden and forgotten whatever the good intentions of the teacher or the student.