FERRUCCIO BENVENUTO BUSONI
THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE DETAIL
“Some years ago I met a very
famous artist whose celebrity rested upon the wonderful
colored glass windows that he had produced. He
was considered by most of his contemporaries the greatest
of all makers of high-art windows. His fame had
extended throughout the artistic circles of all Europe.
A little remark he made to me illustrates the importance
of detail better than anything of which I can think
at present.
“He said, ’If a truly
great work of art in the form of a stained glass window
should be accidentally shattered to little bits, one
should be able to estimate the greatness of the whole
window by examining one of the fragments even though
all the other pieces were missing.’
“In fine piano playing all of
the details are important. I do not mean to say
that if one were in another room that one could invariably
tell the ability of an artist by hearing him strike
one note, but if the note is heard in relation to
the other notes in a composition, its proportionate
value should be so delicately and artistically estimated
by the highly trained performer, that it forms part
of the artistic whole.
“For instance, it is quite easy
to conceive of compositions demanding a very smooth
running performance in which one jarring or harsh note
indicating faulty artistic calculation upon the part
of the player would ruin the entire interpretation.
As examples of this one might cite the Bach Choral
Vorspiel, Nun Freut euch, of which I have
made an arrangement, and such a composition as the
Chopin Prelude Opus 28, No 3, with its running accompaniment
in the left hand.
“It is often perfection in little
things which distinguishes the performance of the
great pianist from that of the novice. The novice
usually manages to get the so-called main points, but
he does not work for the little niceties of interpretation
which are almost invariably the defining characteristic
of the interpretations of the real artist that
is, the performer who has formed the habit of stopping
at nothing short of his highest ideal of perfection.
LEARNING TO LISTEN
“There is a detail which few
students observe which is of such vast importance
that one is tempted to say that the main part of successful
musical progress depends upon it. This is the
detail of learning to listen. Every sound that
is produced during the practice period should be heard.
That is, it should be heard with ears open to give
that sound the intelligent analysis which it deserves.
“Anyone who has observed closely
and taught extensively must have noticed that hours
and hours are wasted by students strumming away on
keyboards and giving no more attention to the sounds
they produce than would the inmates of a deaf and
dumb asylum. These students all expect to become
fine performers even though they may not aim to become
virtuosos. To them the piano keyboard is a kind
of gymnasium attached to a musical instrument.
They may of course acquire strong fingers, but they
will have to learn to listen before they can hope to
become even passable performers.
“At my own recitals no one in
the audience listens more attentively than I do.
I strive to hear every note and while I am playing
my attention is so concentrated upon the one purpose
of delivering the work in the most artistic manner
dictated by the composer’s demands and my conception
of the piece, that I am little conscious of anything
else. I have also learned that I must continually
have my mind alert to opportunities for improvement.
I am always in quest of new beauties and even while
playing in public it is possible to conceive of new
details that come like revelations.
“The artist who has reached
the period when he fails to be on the outlook for
details of this kind and is convinced that in no possible
way could his performances be improved, has reached
a very dangerous stage of artistic stagnation which
will result in the ruin of his career. There
is always room for improvement, that is the development
of new details, and it is this which gives zest and
intellectual interest to the work of the artist.
Without it his public efforts would become very tame
and unattractive.
SELF DEVELOPMENT
“In my own development as an
artist it has been made evident to me, time and time
again, that success comes from the careful observance
of details. All students should strive to estimate
their own artistic ability very accurately. A
wrong estimate always leads to a dangerous condition.
If I had failed to attend to certain details many years
ago, I would have stopped very far short of anything
like success.
“I remember that when I concluded
my term as professor of piano at the New England Conservatory
of Music I was very conscious of certain deficiencies
in my style. Notwithstanding the fact that I had
been accepted as a virtuoso in Europe and in America
and had toured with great orchestras such as the Boston
Symphony Orchestra, I knew better than anyone else
that there were certain details in my playing that
I could not afford to neglect.
“For instance, I knew that my
method of playing the trill could be greatly improved
and I also knew that I lacked force and endurance in
certain passages. Fortunately, although a comparatively
young man, I was not deceived by the flattery of well-meaning,
but incapable critics, who were quite willing to convince
me that my playing was as perfect as it was possible
to make it. Every seeker of artistic truth is
more widely awake to his own deficiencies than any
of his critics could possibly be.
“In order to rectify the details
I have mentioned as well as some I have not mentioned,
I have come to the conclusion that I must devise an
entirely new technical system. Technical systems
are best when they are individual. Speaking theoretically,
every individual needs a different technical system.
Every hand, every arm, every set of ten fingers, every
body and, what is of greatest importance, every intellect
is different from every other. I consequently
endeavored to get down to the basic laws underlying
the subject of technic and make a system of my own.
“After much study, I discovered
what I believed to be the technical cause of my defects
and then I returned to Europe and for two years I
devoted myself almost exclusively to technical study
along the individual lines I had devised. To
my great delight details that had always defied me,
the rebellious trills, the faltering bravura passages,
the uneven runs, all came into beautiful submission
and with them came a new delight in playing.
FINDING INDIVIDUAL FAULTS
“I trust that my experience
will set some ambitious piano students to thinking
and that they may be benefited by it. There is
always a way of correcting deficiencies if the way
can only be found. The first thing, however,
is to recognize the detail itself and then to realize
that instead of being a detail it is a matter of vast
importance until it has been conquered and brought
into submission. In playing, always note where
your difficulties seem to lie. Then, when advisable,
isolate those difficulties and practice them separately.
This is the manner in which all good technical exercises
are devised.
“Your own difficulty is the
difficulty which you should practice most. Why
waste time in practicing passages which you can play
perfectly well? One player may have difficulty
in playing trills, while to another player of equal
general musical ability trills may be perfectly easy.
In playing arpeggios, however, the difficulties which
prove obstacles to the players may be entirely reversed.
The one who could play the trill perfectly might not
be able, under any circumstance, to play an arpeggio
with the requisite smoothness and true legato demanded,
while the student who found the trill impossible possesses
the ability to run arpeggios and cadenzas with the
fluency of a forest rivulet.
“All technical exercises must
be given to the pupil with great discretion and judgment
just as poisonous medicines must be administered to
the patient with great care. The indiscriminate
giving of technical exercises may impede progress
rather than advance the pupil. Simply because
an exercise happens to come in a certain position in
a book of technical exercises is no reason why the
particular pupil being taught needs that exercise
at that particular time. Some exercises which
are not feasible and others which are inexpedient
at a certain time, may prove invaluable later in the
pupil’s progress.
“Take the famous Tausig exercises,
for instance. Tausig was a master of technic
who had few, if any, equals in his time. His exercises
are for the most part very ingenious and useful to
advanced players, but when some of them are transposed
into other keys as their composer demands they become
practically impossible to play with the proper touch,
etc. Furthermore, one would be very unlikely
to find a passage demanding such a technical feat
in the compositions of any of the great masters of
the piano. Consequently, such exercises are of
no practical value and would only be demanded by a
teacher with more respect for tradition than common
sense.
DETAILS OF PHRASING AND ACCENTUATION
“Some students look upon phrasing
as a detail that can be postponed until other supposedly
more important things are accomplished. The very
musical meaning of any composition depends upon the
correct understanding and delivery of the phrases
which make that composition. To neglect the phrases
would be about as sensible as it would be for the
great actor to neglect the proper thought division
in the interpretation of his lines. The greatest
masterpiece of dramatic literature whether it be Romeo
and Juliet, Antigone, La Malade Imaginaire
or The Doll’s House becomes nonsense
if the thought divisions indicated by the verbal phrases
are not carefully determined and expressed.
“Great actors spend hours and
hours seeking for the best method of expressing the
author’s meaning. No pianist of ability
would think of giving less careful attention to phrasing.
How stupid it would be for the actor to add a word
that concluded one sentence to the beginning of the
next sentence. How erroneous then is it for the
pupil to add the last note of one phrase to the beginning
of the next phrase. Phrasing is anything but
a detail.
“Fine phrasing depends first
upon a knowledge of music which enables one to define
the limitations of the phrase and then upon a knowledge
of pianoforte playing which enables one to execute
it properly. Phrasing is closely allied to the
subject of accentuation and both subjects are intimately
connected with that of fingering. Without the
proper fingers it is often impossible to execute certain
phrases correctly. Generally, the accents are
considered of importance because they are supposed
to fall in certain set parts of given measures, thus
indicating the meter.
“In instructing very young pupils
it may be necessary to lead them to believe that the
time must be marked in a definite manner by such accents,
but as the pupil advances he must understand that the
measure divisions are inserted principally for the
purpose of enabling him to read easily. He should
learn to look upon each piece of music as a beautiful
tapestry in which the main consideration is the principal
design of the work as a whole and not the invisible
marking threads which the manufacturer is obliged
to put in the loom in order to have a structure upon
which the tapestry may be woven.
BACH, BACH, BACH
“In the study of the subject
of accentuation and phrasing it would not be possible
for anyone to recommend anything more instructive than
the works of Johann Sebastian Bach. The immortal
Thueringian composer was the master-weaver of all.
His tapestries have never been equalled in refinement,
color, breadth and general beauty. Why is Bach
so valuable for the student? This is an easy
question to answer. It is because his works are
so constructed that they compel one to study these
details. Even if the student has only mastered
the intricacies of the Two Voice Inventions,
it is safe to say that he has become a better player.
More than this, Bach forces the student to think.
“If the student has never thought
before during his practice periods, he will soon find
that it is quite impossible for him to encompass the
difficulties of Bach without the closest mental application.
In fact, he may also discover that it is possible
for him to work out some of his musical problems while
away from the keyboard. Many of the most perplexing
musical questions and difficulties that have ever confronted
me have been solved mentally while I have been walking
upon the street or lying in bed at night.
“Sometimes the solution of difficult
details comes in the twinkling of an eye. I remember
that when I was a very young man I was engaged to
play a concerto with a large symphony orchestra.
One part of the concerto had always troubled me, and
I was somewhat apprehensive about it. During
one of the pauses, while the orchestra was playing,
the correct interpretation came to me like a flash.
I waited until the orchestra was playing very loud
and made an opportunity to run over the difficult
passage. Of course, my playing could not be heard
under the tutti of the orchestra, and when
the time came for the proper delivery of the passage
it was vastly better than it would have been otherwise.
“I never neglect an opportunity
to improve, no matter how perfect a previous interpretation
may have seemed to me. In fact, I often go directly
home from the concert and practice for hours upon the
very pieces that I have been playing, because during
the concert certain new ideas have come to me.
These ideas are very precious, and to neglect them
or to consider them details to be postponed for future
development would be ridiculous in the extreme.”
QUESTIONS ON STYLE, INTERPRETATION, EXPRESSION
AND TECHNIC OF PIANO PLAYING
SERIES V
FERRUCCIO BENVENUTO BUSONI
1. What is it which distinguishes
the performance of the great pianist from that of
the novice?
2. Upon what detail of interpretation
does musical performance most depend?
3. Should the student continually
estimate his own ability?
4. Which difficulty should you practice most?
5. What was the principle which
made the Tausig exercises valuable?
6. Upon what does fine phrasing depend?
7. Why is it that the compositions
of Johann Sebastian Bach are so useful in piano study?
8. How may complex musical problems be solved
mentally?
9. Is it advisable to isolate
difficulties and practice them separately?
10. How should one seize opportunities to improve?