Putting in more effort does not necessarily mean greater improvement, writes violin professor and soloist Andrej Bielow
Our way of thinking about interpretation develops over time. One year you will play a piece with your coach in a certain way, and ten years later you might have very different ideas about it – for example, about how much passion, expression, or objectivity it needs.
Today I played a Mozart Sonata to Alfred Brendel, with pianist Kit Armstrong. We talked about the second movement, which we played rather expressively, and he said, 'You play too emotionally – this is serioso'. We had to exclude our emotions, in a way, and just look at the score, and it made the music even more beautiful.
It is a very paradoxical thing, because you believe that the more effort you put in, the better it is. But the movement of this particular sonata was exactly the opposite.
Andrej Bielow discusses how to make students more
musically creative in the
August 2014 issue of The Strad, out now.
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