*sigh* ok I'm sure it's quite obvious that I am bored and typing this at school even though I shouldn't be...anyway, I have too much time on my hands...
I found this in a book, though, called The Art of the Piano by Dubal. Some of you probably already have this but I thought it was REALLY cool. Unfortunately, he has a semi-unflattering passage about Cziffra, but he makes up for it with his hilarious comments about Lang Lang (as hilarious as you could expect in a book like this, I guess).
Anyway, this part is super-cool, at least for me. He list's 12 "Commandments" set forth by Busoni (not called that in the book) for pianists:
1) Practice the passage with the most difficult fingering; when you have mastered that, pla it with the easiest.
2) If a passage offers some particular technical difficulty, go through all similar passages you can remember in other places; in this way you will bring system into the kind of playing in question.
3) Always join technical practice with the study of interpretation; the difficulty often does not lie in the notes, but in the dynamic shading prescribed.
4) Never be carried away by temperment, for that dissipates strength, and where it occurs there will always be a blemish, like a dirty spot which can never be washed out of a material.
5) Don't set your mind on overcoming the difficulties in pieces which have been unsuccessful because you have previously practiced them badly; it is generally a useless task. But if meanwhile you have quite changed your way of playing, then begin the study of the old piece from the beginning, as if you did not know it.
6) Study everything as if there were nothing more difficult; try to interpret studies for the young from the standpoint of the virtuoso; you will be astonished to find how difficult it is to play a Czerny or Cramer or a Clementi Etude.
7) Bach is the foundation of piano playing, Liszt is the summit. Beethoven makes the two possible.
8 ) Take it for granted from the beginning tha everything is possible on the piano, even when it seems impossible to you, or really is so.
9) Attend to your technical apparatus so that you are prepared and armed for every possible event; then, when you study a new piece, you can turn all your power to the intellectual content; you will not be held up by technical problems.
10) Never play carelessly, even when there is nobody listening, or the occassion seems unimportant.
11) Never leave a passage which has been unsuccessful without repeating it; if you cannot do it in the presence of others, then do it subsequently.
12) If possible, allow no day to pass without touching your piano.
I find 3, 5, 8, 9 and 10 most important to my own practicing right now (5 especially for the HR6, heh). I'll copy these by hand into my book of PE's and concert etudes...it's great advice, even if some of it is common sense.



