Yes it's very good. Why do you feel that you need question it? edit: Lack of response means you just trying to falsely show off with lies? What's the stupid point of that.
Its a comment of perplexity, given it was a post and run without response assumptions were made.What person would think totally memorising a Chopin etude in 5 hours is bad? Or mastering it in a week? That is a question which the OP has avoided.When things don't add up I am rather cynical until a reason is offered. If that reason is flimsy like "curiosity" I'd rather again try to get to the root of the matter rather than try to give them answers to their own personal issues. You can call it snarky, I call it provoking.
My initial reaction was that his post was to say "look at me!"Then again he seems to be focused on rate of learning, here's another post by him:https://www.pianostreet.com/smf/index.php?topic=70533.msg728992#msg728992
Yeah but this still doesn't quite answer the cognitive dissonance being shown here:"I memorized the whole etude (Chopin Etude Op 25 No 10) in about 5 hours, it took about a week to play it at tempo with no mistakes and good technique. Is this a good learning ratio for someone to started to play not as a child but in his late teenage years?. "Still curious why one would ever think something like this.
Maybe his fellow students are learning faster? In case he studies with one of the top teachers out there, they would have their fair share of prodigies.
I just asked because of curiosity, I always heard that people that start at a later age cannot progress very far, so that is why I wanted to ask if my learning ratio was good.
To be honest, I feel this way sometimes as well. It can be a kind of insecurity that comes about if your experience as an adult was teachers/peers constantly telling you that you started too late. I still feel it even when teachers sometimes make it clear that they think I learn fast.It makes sense that it may not be "good enough" if you're competing with Daniil Trifonov, or other concert artists who can learn a concerto in a week or two and perform it on stage.
I know excellent professional pianists who play at high levels who take their time. Does this make them lesser pianists? Why should it be a race? Does that make you a better musician, does that sell more concert tickets, make you a better teacher or what is the measurement, what other measurement does one want to take? Why does there even need to be a comparison? Does one identify themselves as a musician based on how much "better" they are than someone else? Is that how one finds their niche in the arts industry? The world is too much about eating up each other, succeeding by overcoming others, being a giant fish which scares off all the others. Making yourself feel verified by looking down upon others is a terrible way to validate yourself.
I did find a lot of ego, looking down on others, comparison and sniping at each other, not from everyone, but enough people for it to be noticeable when I was in the music business.
Agree, of course, but to be fair to the OP I don't think that's necessarily what they were doing. At first glance it did look like a bit of a boast-post but I think there are other plausible explanations. It is possible to want to seek validation (often a sign of insecurity - something I personally know all too much about ) without a desire to make others feel small. I could be wrong but I think it's worth giving people the benefit of the doubt.
Competition and comparisons can have a place, particularly for setting certain goals or understanding benchmarks, they’re best viewed as tools rather than ultimate measures of success.