Thursday 24 January 2013

The modern art world

taken from a very good article "Beyond the Froth and Jargon" in the FT by their art critic Jackie Wullschlager 24/11/12.

"The expansion of the artworld in the 1960s... rightly challenged the old elites... What could not have been predicted, however, was that within a generation of critical theory hijacking academe, a revolution in humanities teaching - employing semiotics, structuralism, the idea that culture and society form a system of self-referential signs and symbols - would empower a conceptual art that depends on curators and advisers to explain it. As this became a professional business, the chatter of deconstruction -lite morphed into a self-contained deliberately obfuscating gallery-speak that Robert Hughes already noted in 1989, "extorts assent as the price of entry" and urges a critical vacuum. "If all signs are autonomous and refer only to one another, it must seem to follow that no image is truer or deeper than the next, and that the artist is absolved from his or her struggle for authenticity", the late art critic wrote. ..

But the reign of theory is not inevitable. The best response is what Cyril Connolly called "the resonance of seclusion". Hundreds of artists still battle alone in studios to make authentic work that does not need a curator to explain it  (...Frank Auerbach, Howard Hodgkin...) There is a new hunger for work that engages with lived reality... Every age has to cut through its own academicism - salon pictures in the 19th century, theory and money today - to get to art that is original and matters: a challenge but also a pleasure.


Tuesday 1 January 2013

Best YouTube piano videos clips part 1

Listening homework for my advanced piano pupils, Abhinav, Mike, Emmy, Maya

 Please set aside minimum 10-15 minutes per week to listen to great pianists.

Gradually you will get to know your favourite composers and performers, and so then you can explore them more. 
Please notice
+ horizontal forearm and flattish fingertips.
+ freedom of upper arm and forearm, while fingers stay close to keys.
+ upper arm and back muscles used when playing loudly (sitting not crouched over, not hunched)
+ Very intense concentration
+ very intense emotional expression

The Greatest Piano video of all time
Josef Hofmann plays Rachmaninov
Rounded movements. Beautiful hands. Inside the music.


Daniil Trifonov chopin scherzo 4
(slightly distracting facial expressions?!) Try and get tickets to see him sometime
in London in 2013. Possibly best young pianist alive (apart from my pupils!)




Ivo Pogorelich Chopin sonata 2 movt 1
If only I could copy his hairstyle! One of the most original pianists alive.




Gilels plays Rachmaninoff
Long pedals. Jumps around very fast and accurately!




Horowitz chopin ballade 1
Perhaps the greatest pianist of 20th century.
He makes you listen very carefully. Great concentration.
Unusually flat hands, much less curvy then almost everyone else! Expressive fingertips.


Mike and Abhinav

Zimerman Pathetique sonata Beethoven

Best YouTube clips part 2


Richter plays Schumann at 24.11 into this one.
Notice how loudly he plays his 5th finger - and often held very straight for repeated chords.
Fingers inside the keys despite huge arm flexibility.


Martha Argerich makes it look so easy! She is beautiful even in black and white!





Rubinstein plays Liszt Liebestraum

warm hearted, warm cantabile singing tone. best posture keeping head up!


Quite funny comedy sketch at the piano Victor Borge


such intelligent hands, perfect hand positions,
Jean Yves Thibaudet, at just before 2 minutes into this video (or 5.42 - 6.00)




perfect arm freedom
Alicia de Larrocha recital


Arcadi Volodos plays his own arrangement of Mozart’s Turkish March
Mr Rubber Fingers certainly knows his way round the keyboard!
Slightly annoying video editing at the beginning.