tanks, "dcstudio", I enjoyed your input.
... it seems like in your experience, if someone is talented, they WILL practice without motivation.
but what about those kids who are 'different'.
ok, let's all agree (NOBODY WILL DISAGREE WITH ME HEAR... NOBODY - I'M SURE OF THIS) that every child is different.
ok, now that we got that aside and we all agree....
some kids just pick up music like Calculus coming so easily to them and they just know it.... no extra help, no tutoring.. just in-class teaching by the teacher and voila, they get it.
then there are kids who don't get it, and ONLY CERTAIN TEACHERS can figure out these kids after months, or even years of PERSEVERANCE AND PATIENCE, and then, WOW! these kids just pull it off somehow.
----- but now, you ask, which is the gifted child? some kids are motivated, while some aren't.
is it just an immaturity stage? yes.
the very interesting point you're making "dcstudio", because some students have a TOUCH on the keys and piano
TOUCH - this ability is IMPOSSIBLE to learn; hear Rubenstein's touch - it's musical; hear Horowitz' touch, it's mind-bogglingly virtuoso-istic... Rubenstein once said if I recall correctly that Horowitz was a BETTER PIANIST, but that he [Rub] was a BETTER MUSICIAN. --- you get the picture.
Horowitz being the modern Liszt, without the COMPOSITIONAL gift.. but more of the fingering technical gift.
Rubenstein being the actual performer, movie-actor (if you will), and yes, the Musician.
so, if a kid's got great TOUCH on the piano but hates to practice except only those limited pieces that just sounds good, and just want to work in simple Cmajor pieces of Gmajor pieces, YES, THIS CAN BE QUITE FRUSTRATING TO any teacher.
MOTIVATION - so i guess THIS is why we have MOTIVATIONAL SPEAKERS like Tony Robbins to cause us all to ACT and DO
-- "Mr. Robbins! help!"
