I have studied with many teachers at various points of my musical development. What I write here are some of the key points I absorbed from these teachers at those particular stages, this does not mean that what I say here is in any way a descriptive of the full spectrum of their teaching. Each provided me with things I needed at that time. Quite possibly if I had studied with them in a different order the descriptions of their teaching would be different. But this is what I believe is the lasting contribution of each to my playing.
Studied with Stephen Drury at New England conservatory ( vibrant, open-minded, adventurous, always questioning, opened my ears for the first time, great in developing good practice habits)
PAtricia Zander in Boston for only one year (good for discussing interpretation ideas, and sound, no discussion about technique, that I can recall, I think I was too immature a musician when I studied with her to really get the most out of her lessons. would like to go take another one some day)
Studied with John O' Conor in Dublin (helped me a lot in overcoming performance anxiety, detailed work on colour/tone production, touch, a good source in helping me create my own library of interpretation styles for each musical period and also provided practice techniques that strengthened my hand and finger independence)
Studied with Ferenc Rados in Spain (biggest influence in my interpretation of music in the last 8 years, does not discuss technique AT ALL. For him all music emerges from its rhythmic base. Once you understand this base the music is simply an audible expression and variation of the heartbeat of the piece.)
I highly recommend them all. Drury and O'Conor are great teachers who are also willing to work with students trying to find their own voice if it is not yet fully developed. Zander and especially Rados are great polishers but you need to be fairly secure in your abilities, your technique and your musical maturity before you go to them in order to be able to get the most out of their teaching
Elena
www.duoscarbo.com