In my own teaching I'll have students sometimes who need most to be able to burn through some pieces and keep moving, and I lure them into details over time. I realize this might be a personal teaching decision at this point, and not everybody's approach. My point though, is that I can see letting young students burn through repertoire that isn't "supposed" to stay with them for the rest of their lives and be performed when they're also 40, or 50, or 60, or more. But, it's happening with the pieces that are supposed to be with a person for the rest of their lives.
My guess:- The kid wants it because kids do have an adventorous spirit- The parents love to think of their kids as prodigies- The parents/teachers think that the sooner you can bring yourself out from the mass, the better
Then it is perhaps down to whether the individual maintains the intent to grow and improve AND allows that intent to effect all their actions rather than let past pieces remain however they were first learnt.
I guess I'm just trying to see what is truly positive about it, and wonder if it might be actually building something negative. But maybe as we grow we can't help but build negative associations right along with positive ones, and those negative ones just later have to be corrected.
Well, a child gets on stage also because a teacher wants him/her there, not just because the parent does. It seems like it could ruin a lot for actually a lot of people, the child included, if there is no real thought to the long term. I wonder if there is a smart pedagogical alternative?
I suggest that in your ponderings you think not only of the prodigies you have seen, but also of Mozart. It may give an additional perspective.
Sometimes teachers don't always consider what's in the best intersts of their students.
I'm thinking about your whole post, but this here I do agree with, and also might add that perhaps some teachers don't really even know what is in the student's best interest - I mean, perhaps it's not always just a conscious choice to do something which isn't in the student's best interest.
Most definitely true.Furthermore, I definitely have noticed a slight philosophical shift in the minds of the public. It seems as though children are being hailed more and more for outstanding musical achievement. Almost as if Piano performance is becoming something of a novelty. In other words it is becoming less impressive to the general public for an adult to play masterpieces as it is for children to play them, at the expense of an inferior performance. I think that is a possible sign that the public at large is losing appreciation for the instrument. I hope that this is not the case, but it seems to be a growing trend nowadays.
I think you nailed it here. 99% of this is due to bad judgement on the teacher's part. The parents are going to go with the teacher of course, because the teacher is catering to their egos. Something like this "you're kid is awesome, I want him to play this impossible piece because I believe he is special"... the parents are totally going to go for it.
What if it's something as normal as that?
; has almost certainly never heard of the Prok 2
What are you talking about? Is it about age or skill level?
Because you don't have to be a certain skill level or age to have HEARD of pieces. I knew about Gaspard de la Nuit and the early Scriabin sonatas when I was like 7 or 8 before I started playing piano.EDIT: actually I've only heard of Ondine when I was like 8.
There's no forcefield that prevents 8 year olds from hearing difficult music.
Even with Ondine, you were well ahead of the curve.
No, but there is a lack of mental development that usually prevents them understanding or being attracted to it.
My aunt bought me a CD with a bunch of piano works when I was a little kid and I would listen to it every night when I went to bed.
So you're telling me a kid would be more attracted to Hot Cross Buns versus a Chopin etude? The lack of mental development would prevent a kid from understanding or being attracted to the more atonal 20th or 21st century composers, not just difficult works. Just because it's hard, doesn't mean that it's hard for a kid to understand. Flight of the Bumblebee is technically challenging but musically almost nothing so I can't imagine how that would be difficult for an 8 year old kid to understand. Unless of course he's an idiot.
But seriously, kids really tend not to like long, complex or untuneful stuff.
Either you are wrong here or people are very different. I NEVER liked simple songs as a kid, as far as I can remember. I always liked different kind of music than my peers. Also from very young age I was drawn to some instruments and disliked others.I really don't see much change in my preferences in music if I dig deeper. Different genres yes, but some of the fundamentals seem to stay the same. My simple explanation is that certain harmonies, wave lengths and rhytms are naturally stimulating the pleasure center of my brain and others are not I think I need to grow up a bit more to appreciate music on a purely intellectual level, like Bach
Like a Chopin Ballade?? Referring to the untuneful part...
Either you are misremembering your tastes as a kid, up to a point, or you are saying your musical taste and palette hasn't grown since you were 8. I hope for your sake it's the former.
There's an untuneful part??
I though YOU were saying that the kids cannot like this type of music but must be "pushed" to play them?
But seriously, kids really tend not to like long, complex or untuneful stuff. Hey, they usually wait for their teens to get into (c)rap.
Noboby should attempt a Chopin Ballade until they've had two unhappy love affairs and a pet die on them.
So you're saying it doesn't have to be difficult?
a normal three minute conversation with their teacher.
Haven't had any of the former
My guess would be 3 weeks.
Hence the "untuneful parts".
This is what I do... I find something I like, and if I don't have the score for it, I get a copy from the Internet. I screw around with it up until next piano lessons. Then I play what I have to my teacher. Then he critiques me about my playing NO QUESTIONS ASKED. I do the same thing until I'm satisfied with what I've done.THE END
So how did you wind up with that P&F on your study list?