I've just recently started "re-practicing" Rachmoninoffs Etude Tabluex No. 6 and found it to be rather difficult for me. My teacher says that she wants the song to be perfercted by the middle of March/April and after seeing/hearing how the song is played (I have played it once for perfomance but was rather messy.) I wonder if anyone has ever played this song, or any song of this caliber or higher, perfectly with clean notes?
Basically, the idea of perfection is unattainable. The more accomplished the pianist, the higher their standard of perfection is. For me, perfection might be playing all the correct notes on a piece without any noticeable hiccups, while also keeping the dynamics and phrasing just the way I want them. I can never do this, because I haven't reached that level yet. If I could do it, my standard of perfection would be higher (and still unattainable). To the audience listening to me, perfection might be hearing the majority of the notes played correctly, because they simply don't know the piece the way I do, and a mistake I make may not be noticeable at all to them. As for great pianists such Horowitz, Kissin, Gould, Rubinstein, or anyone else of this caliber, perfection would be playing the piece with everything exactly the way they intended. No matter how great they are, the human mind is far too perfectionistic when compared to the human body to allow for complete satisfaction. Our minds and hearts can expect one thing so incredibly specific and beautiful and precise, that our bodies could never accomodate. Nevertheless, the difference between what our mind wants and what our body actually delivers becomes smaller and smaller the more we practice a piece, and eventually it becomes so insignificant that a piece sounds perfect to everyone except the performer. Best way I can explain it, anyway.