If you have great hands, you will definately have an advantage because you are naturally more fit to succeed at the piano.
That's baloney.
ok....why?
Because your statement implies that "big chord" and "piano repertoire" are the same thing or particulary linked
But actually there are far more pieces where you just need an octave or a ninth than pieces where you need a twelfth
So, yes, the wider your hand is, the easier is to reach big chords
So what?
How this has anything to do with being naturally more fit to succed at the piano?
Piano repertoire is not synonimous of big chords, and if we forget about Rachmaninov for a moment, a lot of piano composer has average hands (a ninth)
So, saying that "big hands" are better for big chords, is not the same as saying that "big hands" are better for playing piano
Daniel
Maybe I read the original question wrong, but I thought we were taling more about having the physical equipment (proper hands) so you are PHYSICALLY able to play the piano. My sister cant play an octave because her hands are too small. As a result, she never played any of the works demanding octaves (ha- Id llike to see her try hungarian Rhapsody No.6). She had good technique and the intervals she could reach, she played well.
But lets look at Busoni. In his transcription of Bachs Chaconne in Dm, you need a reach of at least 10 to play the stretches, and if you arpeggiate them because you cant reach the notes, you are playing out of style and not following the composer's intentions, and therefore, NOT really playing the piece well. I didnt interpret this original thread of being a question of intelligence or musical interpretation, but more empircally- having the adequate tools. It would be good if vaio9876 would post again to clear this up for me.
donjuan
I think you've misunderstood my reply
I was not talking about interpretation or creativity
I was just talking from a physical point of view
You said that big hands are better for big chords
The point is that being able to play big chords is not synonymous with being able to play the piano
Just because some piece require a tenth, it doesn't meant that all pieces require that span
There are far less pieces that require a tenth than pieces that doesn't require it
So I agree with you that big hands are better for playing big chords
But I don't agree with you that you need to reach big chords to succeed at the piano, as majority of the pieces require a normal span and majority of composers had a normal span
A minority of pieces with big chords doesn't make the whole piano repertoire
So again, from a purely physical point of view: if you have big hands you can better play big chords, but being able to play big chords doesn't make a difference about succeeding at the piano
If you have great hands you have an advantage with big chords and a disadvantage with short intervals (think of those pianist that have a middle finger that cover two keys at the same time)
If you have smaller hands you have a disadvantage with big chords but an advantage with tone and smaller intervals
Neither of these is better for succeding at the piano, as the piano repertoire is neither all big chords nor all small intervals, yet piano playing in its whole exists also without any big chords or pieces with large intervals
If you have great hands, you will definitely have an advantage because you are naturally more fit to succeed at playing pieces with big chords
That's all
Not piano in general, just those minority of pieces with big chords
Daniel