Well, my guess is that "composition" and "piano performance" became two highly specialised and exclusive disciplines after the Romantic era.
No, you are not correct about the ‘trained monkey comment. Just because a classical teacher does not teach improvisation or composition does not mean their students are all little cookie cutter, trained little monkeys..... their students should and often do, develop lifetime skills that give them the building blocks to explore and play.... maybe improvise and compose.
I've seen a few people who've learned to play piano, and very often, they don't seem to be interested in composition or improvisation. Like, they've played piano since they were four, but only ever learned repertoire for performance.
I have heard this argument before, and I agree. What I was wondering was if most teachers who taught beginner/intermediate/early advanced students according to a classical method completely neglect composition/improvisation, thus producing "well-trained monkeys" (granted that there is some musical ability involved in interpretation, but kids are taught even to fake that). So, am I right about the current state of teaching in classical piano?
However I personally believe one is missing out a great deal if they don't compose and improvise. There's just an enormous outlet of creativity in those that isn't found in straight piano performance. In fact, I think improvisation itself is the most essential skill out of the three. For me, at least.
My personal experience has been that once I understand a piece of music "well enough", i.e., I understand the feel really well, know the chord progressions used inside out, am able to keep track of which melodies are going where, etc., then improvisation follows naturally (even if it's just a poor imitation of the original). While I can't say so definitively because I've not had enough experience with the piano, it seems like a great way to develop a music "vocabulary", and musicality in general.Again, this doesn't seem to be the norm. I wonder why, because I would expect that once you are able to stand in a composer's shoes, so to speak, you would be able to interpret them better.
I would like to see what other people on the forum think of this as well.
You make a very good point: improvisation leads to a deeper understanding of repertoire, and repertoire adds to the vocabulary of an improvisers palette. Many in the establishment still have not come to this realization, or just plain ignore it.
In other words, I think the key element here is "feel" and "mood" when it comes to improvisation; repertoire surely can expand improvisation, but only if one approaches the pieces with a genuine desire to learn them; that is, if one really likes the music and the composer.
This is very interesting. So don't you need to understand a composer really well in the first place, in order to come up with a convincing interpretation? Can you play convincingly without "feel" or"mood"?
Also, I think most people posting here are improvisers because the post kind of naturally resonates better with those who have a predilection towards composition. Many of the frequent posters in the forum improvise as well (which is rather unusual).
There is a philosophy practised by some learned musicians that nearly all of the authority of music creation originates from the composer, and that the performer's job is not to be creative but rather to recreate the intentions of the composer. Additionally, there are those who take it a step further and profess: that in order to recreate the intentions of the composer you also need to replicate the conditions in which the composer wrote the music.
What I find perplexing is how little improvisation is mentioned in these historical context studies in performance. The musicians of the day were more concerned with just creating music, and improvisation was an integral part of that.
Here's a simple practical answer: how many legit record companies would think they could sell improvisations to the public.