I simply don't understand the attitude some people have towards piano playing. I have meet many people , especially teenagers ( I am a teenager myself, only 20 years old ), who seems to think playing piano well is about playing the most difficult and technical pieces they can. And a lot of aspiring pianists seem that they don't understand the concept of progression.
To all aspiring pianists who read this thread, please understand just because you can 'play' Chopin Fantasie Impromptu or C# Nocturne or Flight of the Bumblebee or Pathetique Sonata or ( insert popular pieces here ) WILL NOT mean that you are a 'good' pianist.
A good pianist in my book means a pianists that is well balanced and mature in intepreting and playing pieces from different eras and epochs. More than that , a good pianist must have good knowledge of music theory and a good historical and background knowledge of piano repertoire.
Those so called 'good' pianist i met, they can play the notes 'correctly' ( the sounds come out, but they have severe technical errors, mostly because they try to attempt those technical pieces without guidance of their teachers, resulting in bolched tones, tempo, and phrasing mistakes ). And one thing i notice , their repertoires mostly consist of Chopin's and Liszt's , and they do rather poor job in inteprating the music of these 2 masters.
If you fall into the category i described above, i besiege you, please do learn piano the proper way. I know that those pianists claim they just enjoy the music, but wouldn't it better if you can do the pieces actual justice instead of playing a very crippled intepreatation of the pieces , which will only sound nice to your ears and those musically unaware people. Music is an art, and I believe the journey to be a good music artist is one that requires hardwork and proper guidance. If you don't have a proper teacher now, get one , you will do yourself a great favour and the music of those great composers too. And for goodness sake, don't learn pieces that are way too difficult , and I mean musically difficult, not just technically. And play music from different eras too, there are so many wonderful composers and music to be discovered, even you may not really appreciate them at first.
I used to fall onto the category of pianists i described above, but ever since I get my new teacher , who is a very famous performer in my city, suddenly my musical thinking changed completely, i begin to see the errors of my ways and changed for the good. I am now much more proficient in all different eras of piano repertoires, and most importantly, I strive to make music now, not play notes , as I used to be.
Any opinion on this ? Did what I say is correct ?