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#1995715 - 12/07/12 12:34 AM Re: how to get over traumatic memory slip experience [Re: Entheo]
Pogorelich. Offline
4000 Post Club Member

Registered: 12/28/08
Posts: 4128
Loc: in the past
Originally Posted By: Entheo
Originally Posted By: Pogorelich.
You cannot use music for a Rachmaninoff sonata... you kind of need to be looking at your hands... hahaha


richter did.

you don't have to look at the music the whole time.


Yeah. He's Richter. He can do anything.
_________________________

'I want to invest my emotions only in music; it will never disappoint me or hurt me - it is a safe place to be.'

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#1995746 - 12/07/12 02:53 AM Re: how to get over traumatic memory slip experience [Re: BruceD]
ando Offline
2000 Post Club Member

Registered: 11/23/10
Posts: 2667
Loc: Melbourne, Australia
Originally Posted By: BruceD
Originally Posted By: ando
[...]some ultra-urtext transcription [...]


"... urtext transcription..."? Isn't that an oxymoron?


It was meant as a joke. But what I meant was it might be a transcription that predates the published version. An early pre-published version.

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#1995845 - 12/07/12 08:43 AM Re: how to get over traumatic memory slip experience [Re: BruceD]
wr Offline
6000 Post Club Member

Registered: 11/23/07
Posts: 6500
Originally Posted By: BruceD
Originally Posted By: im@me
I recently played a Mozart sonata by memory, and half way through the last movement my mind went blank, so I improvised all of the recapitulation, and no one noticed laugh


That may say as much about your audience's level of musical knowledge and sophistication as it does about your improvisatory skills.



Not only knowledge and sophistication, but the amount of attention they were paying, too.

Back in the days when I did live performances, it always annoyed me a little when people would dismiss errors I made by saying that "nobody even noticed". Well, if they didn't notice, were they really listening? And if they weren't, what would be the point of playing?

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#1995860 - 12/07/12 09:14 AM Re: how to get over traumatic memory slip experience [Re: Pogorelich.]
Piano Again Offline
1000 Post Club Member

Registered: 08/12/04
Posts: 1156
Loc: Washington metro
Just look at it as a sign that you're a human being. smile In a way, that's what makes live performance exciting: you never know what's going to happen. You're not a machine.

My only comparable experience on the piano is when I try to play for my in-laws at their house after a holiday dinner. I ALWAYS totally bomb, whether I use music or not, even though the next day I can play the piece note perfect at home. It's probably a combination of their not-great piano, a too-low bench, and having imbibed a couple of glasses of wine in the preceding couple of hours.
_________________________
Recovering cellist, amateur pianist.


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#1996171 - 12/07/12 10:26 PM Re: how to get over traumatic memory slip experience [Re: Pogorelich.]
kathyk Offline
6000 Post Club Member

Registered: 08/19/03
Posts: 6969
Loc: Maine
I chickened out of my piano performance major because my nerves (and self confidence?) were too frail. THis was 30+ years ago To this day, when I'm under pressure, my nerves just go bonkers and cause my fingers to turn to jello. I can play in front of hundreds of people in church when I know no one is really listening to me with no problem, but when I'm doing solo piano or am in a chamber group where I feel I'll let people down if I goof up, I have the most ridiculous bouts of nerves. I have started wondering about beta blockers. A friend of mine from Apple Hill Chamber Music Camp (a physician) has talked to me about how he has used them therapeutically with people to help them feel what it's like to be completely free of the extrinsic sorts of static that can cause memory blocks so as to let one know what it feels and from there work to understand how those outside pressures work and eventually overcome them. I'm very tempted to try it.

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#1996306 - 12/08/12 09:10 AM Re: how to get over traumatic memory slip experience [Re: wr]
Entheo Offline
1000 Post Club Member

Registered: 01/12/04
Posts: 1099
Loc: chicago, il
Originally Posted By: wr
Back in the days when I did live performances, it always annoyed me a little when people would dismiss errors I made by saying that "nobody even noticed". Well, if they didn't notice, were they really listening? And if they weren't, what would be the point of playing?


but therein lies the rub IMHO; we put all of this undue pressure on ourselves believing that the audience knows (or should know) every score by heart, when in fact, unless it's a jury or an audition, they are simply there to enjoy the music (and themselves). what's noticeable to audiences in general is not the lack of note perfect but the big collapses -- no music degree required to recognize those.

so if you're skilled enough to play thru the lapse or you use the sheet music as an aid, there's no shame in either of them, as long as the spirit of the music shines thru. IMHO.
_________________________
BA music performance
former professional touring & recording musician (drums, percussion)
former member, board of directors, music arts school and music inst. of chicago
adult restarter (piano) circa 2000
diary of an amateur pianist

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#1996327 - 12/08/12 09:39 AM Re: how to get over traumatic memory slip experience [Re: Pogorelich.]
debrucey Offline
2000 Post Club Member

Registered: 01/18/06
Posts: 2516
Loc: Manchester, UK
People listen to music in different ways. It doesn't mean they're not paying attention. Also, sometimes they do notice, but they just don't care, because they realise that live performances are rarely perfect.


Edited by debrucey (12/08/12 09:40 AM)
_________________________
Kapustin - Preludes Op. 53, Nos. 8, 12, 9 and 10
Beethoven - Moonlight Sonata
Ravel - Une Barque sur l'Ocean
Esa-Pekka Salonen - Organisme, from Dichotomie
Chopin - Ballade No. 4

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#1996334 - 12/08/12 10:03 AM Re: how to get over traumatic memory slip experience [Re: BruceD]
im@me Offline
Full Member

Registered: 09/21/12
Posts: 61
it was on a recent piano course with various good pianists 2 of them concert pianists. And are Estonia pianos widely regarded as good pianos?







__________________________________________________________________

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#1996349 - 12/08/12 10:29 AM Re: how to get over traumatic memory slip experience [Re: debrucey]
carey Offline
4000 Post Club Member

Registered: 05/13/05
Posts: 4899
Loc: Phoenix, Arizona
Originally Posted By: debrucey
People listen to music in different ways. It doesn't mean they're not paying attention. Also, sometimes they do notice, but they just don't care, because they realise that live performances are rarely perfect.


AND they're grateful that it is YOU up on the stage sweating bullets and not THEM !!! grin



Edited by carey (12/08/12 10:34 AM)
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