Several people recommended various teachers, and in some cases they had worked with the teachers in question. That looks like direct answers to the question. Why is this sad? Or what are you referring to?
The bottom line is as follows:
1) My coach is Dr. Thomas Mark who is the author of "What Every Pianist Needs To Know About The Body," which thousands of university level and private teachers have in their personal libraries. It is not sexy, it is not in color, and no established music publisher has ever wanted to have anything to do with it.
2) Yet, most University Music Faculty Chairs in the U.S. use it as a technique "Handbook," which its author, Dr. Thomas Mark, describes it as.
3) Thomas Carson Mark teaches privately as a technique coach, which in your wildest dreams you have never experienced. As a philosopher with three degrees from Columbia, he utilizes analysis, its particular causality, and then its associated dynamic to address any technical challenge any student may have.
As stated before in another post: the first time I sat for a five hour coaching session, I was thunderstruck. He would play any passage I put before him (on the fly) and then the analysis and solution would follow. The second time, I just paid attention with all my might because (as I was in my late 50's) this was no my first rodeo in regards a detailed piano coaching session.
Specific, to the OP, this was the second and last time I spent five hours, "each way," on a flight from San Antonio to Portland, OR. For my second lesson, I brought my own video equipment.
For everyone else, if that is not possible after the first lesson, Dr. Mark offers remote distance learning by film, directly through a download. In my earlier years, we even did it through the mail (VHS).
So, once again, if any of you can get your arses to Portland for the lesson of your lifetime, I highly recommend it. (
www.pianomap.com)
You tell me when the last or the first time you have ever had a real life philosopher give you a piano lesson?