Having musicality and being technically sound are the same thing. Let me rephrase that. Being "musically good" is not necessarily the same as being "technically good", however being "technically good" almost certainly makes you "musically good". Let me explain why I believe this.
I think playing lighting quick octaves, and ultra fast runs are part of a solid technique. But I believe the ability to control each tone within those octaves/runs, and in doing so make clear and fluent musical lines, is another huge part of having solid technique. Expressing fully your FFFF's and PPPP's, your cantabile's and strepitoso's etc. But herein lies the contraversy: couldn't you then program a computer to play something like Mozart k330 if you spent a lot of time telling it the "volume" of each note, duration, etc. and artificially create phrasing in this way? I mean every note and every degree of pedal all relative to an entire phrase? It would have to be a really good program but they are out there. Would the process of programming everything in be the "musicality" part? Can a player piano have musicality? I'd like to think it is impossible to create artificial musicality but IS IT?
"Can a player piano have musicality?"
Player piano's use rolls right? So say Vladamir "The Best Pianist Ever" Horowitz (what have I done!?) came over to your house and you asked him to play K330 on your player piano. You listen and you say "Oh thank you Mr. Horowitz, that's a different interpretation but great all the same", and then he goes home. Later if you were to listen to what the roll recorded, would there be musicality in it? There was when Horowitz was playing it, so shouldn't there be now? Would watching the key's move with no one playing it kill the musicality?
So now that I have dug myself into a hole and really don't know what the heck I was trying to prove/explain in this post, please, what are your thoughts? If you have a clue of where I was trying to go with this (I don't anymore), feel free to expand.
I suppose you could consider what I said about
Technicality is Musicality...or is it?
Could a computer be programmed to playback with musicality?
Player Pianos/Piano Rolls of pianists: Do they cease to be musical with no pianist playing the keys?
Rob really has to stop trying to sound smart
Finally, after all this typing, I think there is a definite human component to Musicality, whereas Techinality in the barest sense of the word is just that and does not need the human medium for it to be conveyed. Any thoughts?
your friend
Rob