My main question is how do you discuss important issues without offending your teacher?
First of all, you convince by how you play. Mostly, they start changing things when you are not delivering the message you had in mind. They may ask "Why do you play this like that?" and your story had better be good. Prepare for that discussion at home.Second, on no account should you refer to authorities, who told you to do otherwise; NEVER! (Is that the "masterclass" story you are referring to, or did I misread that?) This will make them VERY defensive up to the point of sending you out of class.Third, you may just act pragmatically and do as he asks you to do right there to avoid conflicts, and in another setting do your own thing anyway.Hope this helps.Paul
I argued the point, by saying
He was wrong by calling it "bad".You were wrong by giving the wrong arguments. Musicological arguments like "Chopin did this, Chopin did that" won't work because they are too open for discussion. We just don't know. The publishers sometimes changed stuff, you know. In your arguments, you should generally refer to mood or atmospere, to the image YOU had in mind, the heartbeat or whatever. Something imaginative. Let him argue against THAT. Let him relate to HIS image; you might even like it if you listen with your heart. And I repeat: in the process you should not question the man's authority. That's what you actually did. I paraphrase what you tried to do: "Who are you to say so, when Chopin..." You see, that hurts just about anyone, especially before an audience...Paul
In the interest of not filling out a page with the exact back and fourth, rest assured my argument was centered heavily around my own imagery. I merely mentioned the tempo direction as that was a factor in forming my imagery.
Surely however, questioning his opinion is a valid exercise? If he cannot defend his own opinion he shouldn't have made a comment? That;s only my thoughts however I do not believe I was questioning his authority, just his views.
Well, I'm sure that it was not what you INTENTED; it was what actually happened. That's how people's minds and emotions work. Keep that in mind for the future.Hmm. In your teacher-student relationship, who is having lessons with whom? And why are you having lessons with him, and not with somebody else, who may be more considerate? Paul
if I may ask your thoughts on the other issues at hand too? Things such as repertoire and technical development? Surely the average teacher-student relationship should not be this divisive?
Unfortunately, there are not so many really good teachers (in the sense of good psychologists). Some think that you need to humiliate the student to make him "grow". It seems to me that your teacher is one of those and I am sincerely sorry for you. If you have no other options, then the only I thing I can think of is split up your development in two: 1) bear his regimen in a humble way, avoiding a lesson or two from time to time whenever you are not ready for the onslaught;2) think, read and develop your own views in some other way parallel to those "lessons".Paul
Do you have any ideas for how to perhaps bring these issues to his attention without causing more tension than there already is?