Time for banjo practice.
If it really is THAT difficult for you, then the only possible conclusion is yes, mine must work better.
I'm sorry your students all suffer this problem. Even those you have started from scratch?
Remember, as I told you I had no baggade when I started, got an excellent teacher only after 3 months on the piano (who pointed out the problems with my hand shape immediately), have read a lot about piano technique. I have also spend a huge amount of time watching some great pianists play, comparing my hands to theirs and experimented. When I started getting better tone, it became much easier, because I am extremely "aural". I intuitively learn things when I hear the right sound results. Maybe that's why it isn't so difficult, I don't think too much about the mechanics of what I do. I mostly listen and look at my hands and learn what works and what doesn't.
Honestly when I hear a piece I like and get the sheet, only to notice it is too complicated for me, do I feel bad? Not really, I put it aside and think I will return to it later if it still feels worthy.
Blast, I think I have got a collapsing wrist.Thal
It's page three. By this stage I find what's collapsed are my spirits. Page 4 and it's my will to live!
Indeed, because it's exceptionally difficult to actually master this.
I didn't appreciate the extent of my problems (or use anything but desire to strive for a quality of sound) until I'd already performed Rachmaninoff's 2nd concerto and Liszt's sonata.
You've never heard a piece and thought I MUST play that- but instead restricted yourself to nothing but this list of 1000 pieces?
You should go with passion sometimes, if you can walk away so easily. If I really like a piece that much, I have to learn it. It's not even a matter of choice. When you go with your heart rather than your head on these sometimes, you'll discover where technical attention is due.
I wonder why you keep bringing out those two composers whose output contains very little that would make ANY list of mine...
Hmmm...no, not really...
Sorry, I forgot quite how self-centric you are
The point was how much further it's possible to get than your intermediate stage- before finally realising how much you may still have to learn about technique and control over sound.
Choose any piece you do like but aren't ready for and replace them with that, if it needs to revolve purely around you. It's a lot easier to get there at some point when you entertain the possibility that you haven't mastered all you think. Get someone to push on your knuckles and check your wrist and you may learn something.
You learn technique through learning pieces,
This is ridiculous. You say get music too hard for you play it and realize your technique cannot cope then get someone to push on your knuckles>
Certainly didn't magically work for me. I played reams of different repertoire during my years of blissful ignorance.
When you present your own very personal experience as if objective factual truth about a universal process, there's no grounds for attempting meaningful discussion.
PS. I'm still learning pieces now, if you assumed otherwise? I'm just not assuming the rest comes by magic, from that in itself.
LOL LOL LOL OLO LO OLLOLLO sorry LOO)O)O)O)O)O0o00o0o0000o0o00LLL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Lol, I guess we all have to believe you don't we?? You admit you have learned a lot of pieces, to say it didn't help you develop your technique is ignorant on your behalf.
If it helped by magical certainty, I'd have developed my technique in the years where I was playing the widest repertoire. It developed most in years where I worked much more narrowly. There's little point in your trying to make a rational support for an argument that is inherently irrational- based on the premise that quantity equates to quality. Quality is of primary importance.
PS. If you want a serious discussion, it may help to avoid cackling like a Bond villain.
well im sorry but you are wrong. There is no magical thinking just work, work on lots of pieces. You are rewarded AUTOMATICALLY by learning your pieces correctly. You assume people are morons without any intelligence, in fact ALL every single one of my students no matter what ability level becomes better at the piano the more pieces they learn correctly. If you studied piano without a teacher and played wrong then you still will improve the more pieces you learn, it is UNAVOIDABLE, it is a natural action in all normal human beings. YOU think that science thinking will help, it horrifies you that learning pieces correctly will AUTOMATICALLY improve your technique. You think that going back and thinking in general terms, drawing diagrams and copying movements like a parrot will improve peoples technique, what a joke.
Believe away in your quantity yields quality. I'm not going to debate someone who makes assertions with religious certainty but no supporting evidence.
There's more than enough evidence of rank failure in the world to count as evidence, without even bothering to detail my own contrary experience.
PS. Parrots copy speech. It's monkeys that copy movements. Thanks for the chuckle. Although I'll leave the strings of hysterical laughter to you.
... a burning urge ... at any cost?
And you suggested that I'm the one who isn't interested by the musical side of things? I sincerely cannot imagine how it's possible to be so indifferent to every piece you have ever heard as to never have an experience of needing to learn a piece that you've heard, out of sheer love for it. I suppose if you have such a dispassionate view towards musical compositions then you don't need to worry much about getting the technique to be in a position to follow musical desires. You can pick one off your list at random, rather than follow anything that comes from the heart.
LOL hey everyone look at this quote, notice how he tries to correct every single thing? lol where are your meds.
Sorry, but it's really rather amusing that a person would conflate two expressions in order to refer to a "parrot" copying human movements- without their brain actually processing the meaning of the words or noticing what a ridiculous image they suggest. In my comedy writing as a spoof amazon reviewer, I particularly like constructing mixed metaphors and absurd conflations deliberately. But it never fails to amaze how much sillier the ones people come out with in real life are than the ones you can construct. I'll definitely borrow that expression for future use.
I said LIKE, it is a simile, look up that definition. It is not to say the action is EXACTLY LIKE. Goodness me you are really deranged.
The reason I'm laughing is that a parrot has no equivalence for copying human movements on any level.
I think you never owned a pet because they all die? You know you have to feed them lol.
Did you read the sentence you quoted? There's no equivalence there either. Did you think parrots starve to death unless they can copy the movements made by a human? It's just as well they can eat without acting like monkeys.
Parrots can copy human movement you ignoramus.
Wow, you're really not willing to back down on anything, are you? Does yours smoke like a monkey?
Parrots can copy human movement
Cats can also copy movements, so maybe I should experiment on teaching them to play the piano? Interestingly, when their knuckles collapse, their claws come out...
Im not because you are a moron who think he knows it all. You say parrots cannot copy human movement in any way, are you not willing to back down? lol. Arguing with you is too easy.
Actually I didn't say that. I The point is that they are not at all associated with copying human movement but with copying human speech- thus the silliness of the conflation you made. The idea of parrots as the representative of mimicing human movement patterns is an wondefully absurd mix of two (rightfully) separate analogies.
By the way, on a more serious note you should read my blog before making up false portrayals.
I don't ask anyone to mimic anything. I show movement to practise and ask student NOT to simply copy as I do based on visuals, but to find their own internal perception of where a balance points lie.
To copy an external impression without having any internal awareness is as far from anything I advise as can be. I'm heavily oppose to trying to mindlessly copy superficial visual impressions like a monkey- or parrot, sorry. It doesn't work effectively at all.
a parrot has no equivalence for copying human movements on any level.
How are they to learn if you don't even think they should learn many many pieces to practice their movements?
no equivalence to a monkey- that is a creature that directly associated with copying movements. So, yes. Monkeys are associated with that. Parrots are not associated with it. So there is no equivalence.
Squirm away, but if you seriously feel the idea of referring to mimicy a movement "like a parrot" is worthy of defence, dont' let me get in your way. You should use the expression as widely as possible and brighten up some people's days. Please also refer to kids reciting poems "like a monkey".
Yet another strawman. Realising that learning reams of music doesn't automatically provide good technique means realising that quality counts. Not telling students to only learn one piece per year.
no equivalence to a monkey- that is a creature that directly associated with copying movements. So, yes. Monkeys are associated with that. Parrots are not associated with it. So there is no equivalence. Do a survey if you like and see what percentage of people name a parrot when asked to name a creature that mimics human movement. And then find me a parrot that can learn to smoke a cigarette.
Its not a strawman, its just because you have zero ability to discredit it.
Many people will use Like a parrot to refer to mimicry.
Isn't it an ape, rather than a monkey?
It's not my argument. It's one you made up and attributed falsely-
Like the nonsense about mimicry that you also made up and falsely attributed as my belief.
I argue for caring about quality and not assuming quantity guarantees anything in itself. Try arguing against that, rather than arguing against which is not implied or held.
You've given me a great chuckle, so rather than counter your attempt to defend you parrot conflation, I encourage you to keep using it and to defend it to the hilt against anyone else who find the patently absurd image funny.
Its only responding to the words that you say: Learning many pieces is not helpful to technique,
You omitted a conditional clause on the quality of the process. I said it depends on complementary issues.
I'm not going to debate you- as you don't argue against my views but against strawmen.
Make an interesting point about a view I actually hold (without completely rewriting it and claiming that I stated it). If you want to argue against views I don't even hold, then feel free- but don't portray them as my view.
As for the rest, as hominem away if you feel you gain anything from that. Have fun with it, but I bid you goodbye.
Primates in general.
Your idea that learning lots of pieces has a chance of doing nothing is IDIOCY in my mind and every other teacher professional I have come across even world famous ones.
Here's a pianist with a very wide repertoire:Maybe she ought to just press on with all the rest of the Beethoven sonatas and see if throwing enough sh*t makes technique stick? I'll leave you to you views.
Stop spinning your rubbish and making fun of other pianists. Shame on you. Unless you are her teacher you have no idea how far her technique has come, if she is your student, shame on you again.
See her reams of videos since then.
Your tangents are useless. Your youtube link is meaningless, taking this one pianist without even being her teacher or knowing her personally is rude and you have no idea about her musical journey, so you should take this advice to shut the hell up.
Something that disproves something that has been falsely portrayed as a universal rule (in this case, your claim that playing loads of music is the way to get technique) is known as a "counter-example"- not a "tangent".
I'm afraid quantity doesn't necessarily breed quality. Attention to quality does.
You have NO IDEA how far this lady has come, you have no idea about her actually musical journey to use her playing as any evidence at all. You think she should be playing like the top concert pianists in the world or that if she wanted to play a Beethoven she should only do so if she can play it professionally? Not everyone's music journey is the same, as a teacher I would think you would know this very well, looks like you dont.