MAX PAUER
ACQUIRING THE REQUISITE TECHNIC
“The preservation of one’s
individuality in playing is perhaps one of the most
difficult, and at the same time one of the most essential
tasks in the study of the pianoforte. The kind
of technical study that passes the student through
a certain process, apparently destined to make him
as much like his predecessors as possible, is hardly
the kind of technic needed to make a great artist.
Technical ability, after all is said and done, depends
upon nothing more than physiologically correct motion
applied to the artistic needs of the masterpiece to
be performed. It implies a clear understanding
of the essentials in bringing out the composer’s
idea. The pupil must not be confused with inaccurate
thinking. For instance, we commonly hear of the
‘wrist touch.’ More pupils have been
hindered through this clumsy terminology than I should
care to estimate. There cannot be a wrist touch
since the wrist is nothing more than a wonderful natural
hinge of bone and muscle. With the pupil’s
mind centered upon his wrist he is more than likely
to stiffen it and form habits which can only be removed
with much difficulty by the teacher. This is
only an instance of one of the loose expressions with
which the terminology of technic is encumbered.
When the pupil comes to recognize the wrist as a condition
rather than a thing he will find that the matter of
the tight, cramped wrist will cease to have its terrors.
In fact, as far as touch itself is concerned, the motion
of the arm as a whole is vastly more important than
that of the wrist. The wrist is merely part of
the apparatus which communicates the weight of the
arm to the keyboard.
INNOVATORS SHOULD BE PIANISTS
“In my opinion the technical
needs of the piano are likely to be far better understood
by the virtuoso pianist than by one who has never been
through the experiences which lead to the concert platform.
Please do not infer that I would say that all teachers
should be virtuoso pianists. I am referring particularly
to the makers of methods. I am continually confronted
in my teaching with all manner of absurd ideas in
piano technic. For instance, one pupil will come
and exhibit an exercise which requires her to press
hard upon the keyboard after the note is struck.
Just why there should be this additional waste of nerve
force when it can have no possible effect upon the
depressed key I have never been able to find out.
There is enough nervous energy expended in pianoforte
study as it is without exacting any more from the pupil.
Pupils are frequently carried away with some technical
trick of this kind like a child with a new toy.
They do these things without ever consulting their
own judgment.”
The whole idea of technic then is
to achieve a position through conscious effort,
where one may dispense with conscious effort.
Not until this can be accomplished can we hope for
real self-expression in playing. Nothing is so
odious as the obtrusion of technic in any work of
art. Technic is the trellis concealed beneath
the foliage and the blossoms of the bower. When
the artist is really great all idea of technic is
forgotten. He must be absorbed by the sheer beauty
of his musical message, his expression of his musical
self. In listening to Rubinstein or to Liszt
one forgot all idea of technic, and it must be so
with all great artists in every branch of art in every
age. What we claim when we attend a recital is
the individual artist, unrestrained by mechanical
bonds.
Very few of the great masters of pianoforte
playing have delved very deeply into the technical
pedagogical side of their art, as for instance have
Tausig, Ehrlich or Joseffy, all of whom have produced
remarkable works on technic. Liszt’s contribution
to the technic of the instrument was made through
his pieces, not through exercises; his contributions
to the Lebert and Stark Stuttgart Conservatory method
consist of two well-known concert studies. Personally,
I am opposed to set methods, that is, those that pretend
to teach the pupil factory-wise. Of what value
is the teacher if he is not to apply his knowledge
with the discretion that comes with experience?
Deppe’s influence to this day
is far more theoretical than practical. This
does not imply that Deppe did not evolve some very
useful ideas in pianoforte work. All of present
technic is a common heritage from many investigators
and innovators. Pianoforte teaching, as a matter
of fact, is one of the most difficult of all tasks.
It is easy to teach it along conventional “cut
and dried” method lines, but the teachers of
real importance are those who have the ability, the
gift, the inclination and the experience to make a
brand new method for every pupil.
In order to develop the means to communicate
one’s message through one’s art with the
greatest effectiveness, there must be a mastery of
the delicate balance between natural tendencies and
discipline. If the student is subjected to too
much discipline, stiff, angular results may be expected.
If the student is permitted to play with the flabby
looseness which some confuse with natural relaxation,
characterless playing must invariably result.
The great desideratum is the fine equilibrium between
nature and discipline. This may seem an unnecessary
observation to some, but many students never seem to
be able to strike the happy medium between marching
over the keys like a regiment of wooden soldiers,
or crawling over them like a lot of spineless caterpillars.
AVOID MACHINE-LIKE PLAYING
There is a certain “something”
which defines the individuality of the player, and
it seems well nigh impossible to say just what this
something is. Let us by all means preserve it.
Imagine the future of music if every piece were to
be played in the selfsame way by every player like
a series of ordinary piano playing machines. The
remarkable apparatus for recording the playing of
virtuosos, and then reproducing it through a mechanical
contrivance, is somewhat of a revelation to the pianist
who tries it for the first time. In the records
of the playing of artists whose interpretations are
perfectly familiar to me, there still remain unquestioned
marks of individuality. Sometimes these marks
are small shortcomings, but which, nevertheless, are
so slight that they do no more than give character.
Look at a painting by Van Dyke, and then at one upon
a similar subject by Rembrandt, and you will realize
how these little characteristics influence the whole
outward aspect of an art work. Both Van Dyke
and Rembrandt were Dutchmen, and, in a sense, contemporaries.
They used pigments and brushes, canvas and oil, yet
the masterpieces of each are readily distinguishable
by any one slightly familiar with their styles.
It is precisely the same with pianists. All of
us have arms, fingers, muscles and nerves, but what
we have to say upon the keyboard should be an expression
of our own minds, not a replica of some stereotyped
model.
When I listened to the first record
of my own playing, I heard things which seemed unbelievable
to me. Was I, after years of public playing,
actually making mistakes that I would be the first
to condemn in any one of my own pupils? I could
hardly believe my ears, and yet the unrelenting machine
showed that in some places I had failed to play both
hands exactly together, and had been guilty of other
errors no less heinous, because they were trifling.
I also learned in listening to my own playing, as
reproduced, that I had unconsciously brought out certain
nuances, emphasized different voices and employed special
accents without the consciousness of having done so.
Altogether it made a most interesting study for me,
and it became very clear that the personality of the
artist must permeate everything that he does.
When his technic is sufficiently great it permits
him to speak with fluency and self-expression, enhancing
the value of his work a thousandfold.
BROAD UNDERSTANDING NECESSARY
“It would be a great mistake
for the student to imagine that by merely acquiring
finger dexterity and a familiarity with a certain number
of pieces he may consider himself proficient.
There is vastly more to piano-playing than that.
He must add to his digital ability and his repertoire
and comprehensive grasp of the principles of music
itself. The pupil should strive to accomplish
as much as possible through mental work. The
old idea of attempting to play every single study written
by Czerny, or Cramer or the other prolific writers
of studies is a huge mistake. A judicious selection
from the works of these pedagogical writers is desirable
but certainly not all of them. They are at best
only the material with which one must work for a certain
aim, and that aim should be high artistic results.
It should be realized by all students and teachers
that this same study material, excellent in itself,
may actually produce bad results if not properly practiced.
I have repeatedly watched students practicing industriously,
but becoming worse and worse and actually cultivating
faults rather than approaching perfection. The
student must always remember that his fingers are only
the outward organs of his inner consciousness, and
while his work may be mechanical in part he should
never think mechanically. The smallest technical
exercise must have its own direction, its own aim.
Nothing should be done without some definite purpose
in view. The student should have pointed out
to him just what the road he must travel is, and where
it leads to. The ideal teacher is the one who
gives the pupil something to take home and work out
at home, not the one who works out the student’s
lesson for him in the class room. The teacher’s
greatest mission is to raise the consciousness of
the pupil until he can appreciate his own powers for
developing an idea.
FREEDOM FROM CONVENTION
Oh the horror of the conventional, the absolutely right, the
human machine who cannot make an error! The balance between the frigidly correct
and the abominably loose is a most difficult one to maintain. It is, of course,
desirable that the young student pass through a certain period of strict
discipline, but if this discipline succeeds in making an automaton, of what
earthly use is it? Is it really necessary to instruct our little folks to think
that everything must be done in a cut and dried manner? Take the simple matter
of time, for instance. Listen to the playing of most young pupils and you will
hear nothing but a kind of railroad train rhythm. Every measure bumps along
precisely like the last one. The pupil has been taught to observe the bar signs
like stone walls partitioning the whole piece off into sections. The result as a
whole is too awful to describe. As a matter of fact, the bar signs, necessary as
they are as guide-posts when we are learning the elements of notation, are often
the means of leading the poorly trained pupil to a wholly erroneous
interpretation.
The trouble with the pupil in playing the above is that he
seems inclined to observe the bar lines very carefully and lose all idea of the
phrase as a whole. Music should be studied by phrases, not by measures. In
studying a poem you strive first of all to get the poets meaning as expressed
in his phrases and in his sentences; you do not try to mumble a few words in an
arbitrary manner. The pupil who never gets over the habit of playing in
measures, who never sees the composers message as a whole rather than in little
segments can never play artistically. Many students fail to realize that in some
pieces it is actually misleading to count the beats in the measure. The rhythm
of the piece as a whole is often marked by a series of measures, and one must
count the measures as units rather than the notes in the measures.
Every pupil knows that the first beat
in each ordinary measure of four-quarter time carries
a strong accent, the third beat the next strongest,
and the second and fourth beats still weaker accents.
In a series of measures which may be counted in fours,
it will be found that the same arrangement often prevails.
The pupil will continually meet opportunities to study
his work along broader lines, and the wonderful part
of it all is that music contains so much that is interesting
and surprising, that there need be no end to his investigations.
Every page from a master work that has been studied
for years is likely to contain some unsolved problem
if the student can only see it right and hunt for
it.
QUESTIONS IN STYLE, INTERPRETATION, EXPRESSION
AND TECHNIC OF PIANOFORTE PLAYING
SERIES XIII
MAX PAUER
1. Define technical ability.
2. Describe some useless technical tricks.
3. Do great pianists devote much
time to writing upon piano technic?
4. State the evils of too much discipline.
5. How may machine-like playing be avoided?
6. State how faults are most frequently developed.
7. Why must one seek to avoid conventions?
8. Should music be studied by phrases or measures?
9. Play the Chopin Valse
Opus 64, No 1, indicating how it may best
be counted.
10. Where must the student find his problems?