Regarding Skype...Regarding lessons over Skype, I can't imagine them being worth $175. I study with Marc Steiner in the Bay Area, and if I were to take the tactile element out of our lessons, it would ruin the whole thing. A teacher in the room with you can
see you from every angle, can touch you and help you
feel or notice certain sensations, can
listen to the sound coming directly out of the instrument - rather than being transmitted into a cheap microphone back out through some cheap laptop speakers.
Then again, I've never done a Skype lesson with anyone, so I'm not necessarily the one to ask.
Forearm! Forearm! Forearm!I do want to comment on a lot of the balderdash being tossed around regarding this method. For example, the person who went to GI a few years ago and decided to herself that

"All they care about is the forearm!!! Oh my!" ...Oh brother. If that's what you came away with, either you never got past rotation in your lessons (probably because your teacher couldn't get you to do it right) or the whole thing - the lessons, the lectures, the masterclasses, etc. - all went way over your head. And the fact that it all went way over your head is NOT a valid criticism of the technique in itself (though I admit,
you may have been subjected to a bad teacher in your private lessons).
Don't study with Edna?To the guy lambasting Edna Golandsky. Besides Dorothy herself, Edna is the official spokesperson for the approach. She is a very well respected pedagogue worldwide. And before she started the Golandsky Institute, she was with Dorothy at the Taubman Institute at Amherst College every summer. Edna was the one who taught all the lectures and also took private students. She has been steeped in the Taubman tradition, continues to teach it, and continues - with her colleagues at the institute - to fine tune the approach.
Here are the basic movements... and most of them are not (necessarily) about the forearm...There are a few basic movement patterns they talk about.
Forearm rotation is the first, and (apparently) the most essential. After that, there is
in and out motions. Moving into and out of the black keys is NOT a forearm motion. It is an upper arm motion. Go ahead, take one hand and stabilize you UPPER ARM and try to move in/out of the black keys. Doesn't work. Okay... so that's not about the forearm. What about
Shaping? Shaping, initiates in the forearm. But actually, the essential muscles that have to "give" during the shaping motion are UPPER ARM MUSCLES. Here, try shaping while holding your upper arm... It's impossible. So that's not necessarily about the forearm either... Hmm... What about the
walking hand and arm? Well, the walking hand and arm is by definition upper arm movements to get your hand and fingers in the perfect position for them to work freely and with ease.
By the way, this is just the tip of the iceberg... Think they never talk about motions such as
finger movement? Because... they DO. And they also talk about the torso and
movement of the torso, especially when you have to adjust to one hand playing in front of the body. Oh yeah... and they never talk about POSTURE??? WHERE WERE YOU ON THE FIRST DAY OF CLASS? The first lesson in Taubman is always about alignment. This regards:
seat height,
posture, hand shape, etc.... the list goes on.
Someone criticized them for not talking about getting sound from the feet... First off, that's a bit silly. Your feet don't play piano......... But still, they do talk about the feet. Especially since you need to feel like your body is aligned and grounded if anything is going to work properly. Regarding moving one's torso to the side... they often describe it as "kicking off" from one of your feet (if you're leaning right, then it'd be "kicking off" from your left foot).
Regarding the teachers at GI not being very good pianistsI see why you bring this up. After all, "The proof is in the pudding, right?" Well, let's face it. A lot of the teachers are so hung up on the "method" that they can't just let go and enjoy a damned piece of music anymore. And a lot of them just don't practice enough because they're so much more devoted to teaching than actually mastering piano. Either way, I too wish that some of the teachers could act as better examples so that people had a clearer concept of the value of the approach. Edna herself is actually not a bad pianist. She plays well when she demonstrates, though it's not artistically very inspiring. John Bloomfield also does a great job in his demonstrations.
If you want to see a glut of pianists who are very much indebted to Dorothy Taubman, watch "Choreography of the Hands" on YouTube.
. A number of pianists from Juilliard in the 80's wound up injuring themselves or "feeling limited" and sought out Dorothy in Brooklyn. These pianists include Nina Scolnik (professor of piano at UC Irvine), Veda Kaplinsky (CHAIR OF THE PIANO FACULTY AT JUILLARD SCHOOL), Alan Feinberg (a fine pianist and interpreter of new music), and others.
And if you want to see a number of current pianists who are indebted to the work of Taubman and are students (past or present) of Edna Golandsky, look up
Josu de Solaun (a rising star from Spain, studied at MSM) or
Thomas Bagwell (a collaborative pianist who teaches now at the New School), and of course
Ilya Itin...