I recall a 2004 dialogue between RobertHenry and Bernhard which really defined how Bernhard felt about Hanon and Czerny to a slightly lesser extent. I can't find it now, otherwise I'd post the link, but the jest of it was RH saying he wasn't inherently against Hanon, and Bernhard actually agreeing that he really wasn't either.
Bernhard's main beef against Hanon was the claims of the introduction/prologue delaring itself to as being the ultimate book of piano technique with practice instructions that appear to be physically impossible and would result in injury if attempted - that and the book's popularity for students and teachers over the past century. Because of that, Bernhard advocated very strongly to not use the excercises to build technique as it does more harm than good.
I would agree that the exercises (NH and Bernhard make it clear that they refer to the first 30 exercises or so), because of it's seemingly false claims, is hugely overrated as being a great technique builder from reading the agruments against it and my own ituition.
However, I haven't trashed my copy just yet because I found a way it can be useful to me, other than giving my fingers a workout.
I am not proficient enough to transpose pieces of music on the spot, and I do like to work on my scales as much as possible. The Hanon exercises are repetitive and simple enough to where I can use them to work on testing my profiency of scales by transposing them. This gives me several different patterns and permutations to practice my scales, other than the standard exercsies we are used to.
I do this not so much as to practice transposition (because what I'm doing isn't really going to help much with that), but to get myself more familiarized with different keys, as standard scale practice, I think, eventually leads to playing them with pure hand memory rather than really being truely comfortable in a certain key. I can't think of many other exercise sets that would allow me to do this with this kind of ease.
But, as thalbergmad said, the only way to really know is to trial different things and do whatever works best for you, which is what Bernhard also frequently advocated - try it different ways and see for yourself.
But personally, I don't think the answer really lies in either extreme of the issue, it's somewhere in the middle, and I just found a way that seems to work great for me.
The only thing I'm fairly sure about is what ajspiano said, that no set of technical exercises can prepare you for all the technical difficulties in music, so repertoire itself would be our best bet for that.
Hi
I mean is there any backbone to piano learning eg : 3rd , 6th , octave , double notes , scale etc over which whole piano pieces are built ?
If yes what is that or at least part of that ?
If yes I will be happy doing those boring exercises every day to be a good pianist.
Thanks
Those would be the exercises beyond No. 30, again which is not stressed about when we argue about the method book, so this may be drazh's main question at this point which I don't really have nor should (at my skill level

) have an opinion about. Does anybody have any words on those?
Is Bernhard C C Chang, the gentleman who wrote the book on piano practice?

Haha - I often wondered that myself, but I don't think so. They just have very similar opinions about practice method. If he is, then he may also be lallasvensson, kulahola, and J.S. Bach!
