Members:
I heard this one old lady say, if your kid did not start piano by age 5 (or was it 4?), then she wouldn't take them as her student.
?
. curious.
YES, it is true that a baby does develop neuron pathways much easily than those who are a lot older.. once you're too old, it's more difficult ---- NOW, I don't know if this is simply unsubstantiated Neurological studies debated over and over in the latest JAMA magazines.. but it does sound quite convincing.
-that, the younger you are, the quicker you learn a language (the LANGUAGE OF PIANO)... or simply put: "Ya' Kant Teach 'an Ol' Dog New Tricks" [please, don't post your funny old dog doing tricks here..

So, my question to you who are CONCERT PIANISTS or who ASPIRED to-be a CONCERT PIANIST and never quite reached your goal..... when did you start the piano? 4? 5? 7? 11? or even 12?
Have there ever been a Lang Lang, Herbie Hancock, Billy Joel, Yuja Wang, Kissin who start their piano training late? .. really late? like 9? or even 12?!?!
---reason is I have NEVER heard of any Star Concert Pianist start so late... sure, there ARE those who may scrape close to a so-called "Late Start", but the only one I can think of is JOHN TESH, who in my mind was an ET entertainment reporter-turned-pianist -- I believe he started at age 6? ... if so, then that old lady up above would not take him as a pupil.
"she' got too high 'uh standards!"
PRINCIPLE: the principle I was thinking is the speed in which a newborn baby learns a language vs. a 19 year old adult. It would take the baby about 4-5 years to only begin learning a language.... and adult of 19, 20, or even 68 years old would learn a language probably within 1 or 2 years of living in a country.. assuming she asserted herself to learn it -- NOW HAVING SAID THIS ....
...... CAN AN OLD FOLK, EVEN A 19-YR. OLD BECOME A CONCERT PIANIST IF SHE PUT IN THE 10,000 HOURS ?[average this 19-year old would be around +8 yrs.. and he'd be 27 years old.. or a 50 yr old putting in 10,000 hours.. reasonably speaking would take around 8-14 years since he's gotta work, too = 50+14=64 yrs.. then the 64 yr old can call himself Vladimir H... or the 27 year old can compete with Lang Lang ------ WELL, YOU GET THE CONTEXT IN WHICH i'M TRYING TO POSE THIS QUESTION.
-- so with this background, now reasonbly speaking, can a KID WHO STARTS, SAY, AT AGE 12, STILL BECOME "A GREAT", OR MORE-THAN-A-TOP PIANIST....?.... NOT JUST A CONCERT PIANIST, BUT REACH STARDOM? or do they have to get luck on America's Got Talent or X-FACTOR or some Korean Talent Show or some Thai or Singaporean type of X-Factor?
to me this is an interesting issue, because to answer this question would help parents from all over the world WHEN to start their kid with music/piano/golf/tennis/baseball... or any other career for that matter.
.. i know many of you will and may rebut EXCEPTIONS to this.. which I fully understand... but I'm not talkinga about the exceptions.. because again ------> I DON'T AND HAVE NEVER HEARD, SEEN, OR READ ABOUT A STAR CONCERT PIANIST IN THE LIMELIGHT WHO DID 'NOT' START THEIR PIANO CARERR AFTER 5 (OR 6?) YRS OF AGE..
THEY ALL STARTED VERY VERY YOUNG.. SOME EVEN TOUT TO HAVE STARTED AT 3 OR 4.. WHICH I ACTUALLY DON'T THINK MAKES A DIFFERENCE..
.. 5 IS JUST FINE.