Hi PTS1,
I guess, in the end our destination is the same (i.e. efficiency of entire piano apparatus), just we go there from different angles. For me the starting point is diction (articulation) and certain music image, which dictates all the means of execution. It is the same as when I drive I don't necessarily think (although I am very aware of that) about how say, drivetrain and axle work--I am thinking about where I have to get today and how to operated the car in order to get to the point of destination in the most efficient way.
Hi Marik!
Thanks for the comments.
I don't think we're as far apart from the "starting point" as you think, or perhaps its the impression I've given.
For me, its what a piece is "saying"... what's the "idea" or "feeling" or the "concept" visual or otherwise. I have to have this or I'm not interested in learning the music.
And some of this is almost completely inexpressible in words, like Rachmaninoff for instance... so many things happening almost at once... so we chop our way through the jungle of metaphor and semantics, inevitably ensnared in the bramble of trying to "describe what this music is about."
My only real technical concern is:
A. not to do anything that is physically harmful and
B: to find the most easily and efficient way of producing the sound I want which carries out "my vision" of the passages/composition I'm attempting to play.
Other than these two elements -- preventing injury, and being efficient and produce the sound -- I don't want to think of these things, because they are best left in the subconcious.
Pianists should approach the instrument somewhat like doctors do their patients with the first and most important rule being:
Do no harm.
There are famous examples of world class pianists really harming themselves.
I read that Horowitz and Glenn Gould had bouts of tendonitis (I think it was) and Leon Fleisher
completely destroyed himself. (much of this was thanks to, I suspect, the "transference of arm weight school" which reigned for years, I think as the REAL way REAL pianists played)
But these famous pianists who "cut their teeth" on the piano, likely had no earthly idea of how they did what they did (nor, I suspect did they really care to).
Like you say, I don't want to think about the transmission or drivetrain in my car, much less the spark plugs, which cylinder is firing right now, the pressure of the oil, the torque, etc., because I'll surely make a wrong turn and maybe have a wreck.
But I do believe from my on past tendencies to "injure" myself, that injury among pianists is extremely common, and a basic knowledge of what to do and what not to do, is of preeminent importance.
Then the music can begin... and continue.