pandylover18:
I hope this makes your day. It definitely will not meet with agreement from those on this website who have seen it before.
Enclosed is the link to my original post on Piano Street. It states that my research has shown me that most of the pianists who composed, performed, and taught in the 19th century, rolled most of their chords. This was done almost always in the left hand, and very often in the right hand.
Claude Debussy rolled practically every single chord and most always played broken octaves. There are his own piano roll recordings that prove this.
Also, a rarely heard composer, by the name of Rachmaninoff, whose reach was a 12th, hardly ever played block chord octaves, and he rolled all of his tenths.
Josef Hoffmans' hands were so small that he had the Steinway piano factory make a special piano for him with thinner width keys. Anton Rubinstein, and Leopold Godowsky also had small hands.
Further, a little tip I learned from the late pianist Earl Wild: If you cant' reach a particualr note in a chord the way it is written, then redistribute the notes between the two hands. Everybody in the 19th century did this.
A perfect piece to try this out on is the famous Rachmaninoff C# Minor Prelude. With two exceptions, the chords in the right and left hand are identical once they are re-distributed.
In Rachmaninoff's Ampico recordings of this piece, he is rolling every single chord and most of the octaves.
A section of the Taubman Tapes is called the "Walking Hand." It teaches you not to stretch out your hand to reach a key but to move your arm laterally to position yourself over that key. In most cases, it is the smallest of distances when it invloves the entire arm.
Finally, here is the link to my video. And remember, never let anyone tell you that it is inappropriate to roll a particular chord because it does not appear that way in the printed score.