It would help if those who conceive me as a troll don't post in this thread - isn't that just forum etiquette?
I think it's also forum etiquette that those who troll, don't post at all.
[E]verything apart from the expression in playing should be handed over to the unconscious. To achieve the state of 'allowing' your body to carry out your intentions is a (the?) lifetime's study.
Oh God. Not again.And here I thought this might have stayed a sensible thread.
Sure. It's sad when you can't quote great minds without small minds crapping on them!
And equally sad when you turn every thread you post in into a vehicle for your views on relaxation.
..assuming that we allow j_menz sufficient time to study and form conclusions on piano technique... precisely what makes his mind any less brilliant than bardis/bonpensiere?
that would be fair if he'd actually made a comment suggesting that your quoted passage was wrong, and provided no real reasoning for that opinion - his post was more along the lines of being amused at the likely K/N arguement that will ensue
Generalizations are fun to talk about and discuss, but in all reality they do not teach us anything unless we have the past experience to draw from and relate to. The problem with this generalisation is that it is ignoring (or at least not mentioning) that to get to a point where you can play with a subconscious art you need to have gone through countless hours of conscious and physical practice to get to that point. NO ONE can merely do this immediately without a load of work.
How much, what kind and of what may all be matters for discussion (apparently endless discussion I've learnt since joinong PW, but that's another thread).
I agree that you require the hours of conscious and physical practice.
There I would disagree. I think you're just re-enforcing conscious control - battling against the body instead of letting it get on with the job (very Inner Game). At least I think that's Bonpensiere's view - I'll have a look.
I'd see conscious control as this: one has to be aware of one's habits and consciously inhibit them in order to allow the body to do what it does best, as it is the unconscious habits (which are a false sense of control) that get in the way of good use.
I think Alexander would be happy to say we have to go into ourselves (unconscious habits) to come out the other side - still unconsciously operated but without interference from bad habits.