Roskell and/or Taubman?
Hello there,
first thing first:
1. I'm not trying to spark a debate on which one is better etc. absolutely not.
2. I'm just an intermediate level person that puts effort to get better.
I watched the Durso course on the Taubman approach and I must say from the little I practiced I already noticed improvements, several ah! moments, amazing stuff.
I also watched the Roskell course and also there I had ah! moments and can see the great value.
So my question is: should a learner like me choose a 'school' and remain focused on it, either Taubman or Roskell or should try to practice/integrate both?
Should I practice both and become very conscious of the feeling, movements, tensions in my body and start to make my own decision on which approach to make?
Or simply put how should I approach the study of these great teachers?
Any of you had this dilemma? if yes, what did you do at the end?
Thanks for any suggestion
edit: And in this context, I also watched Cheli webinar on Hanon, that got me a bit confused as both 'school' above do not seems to endorse particularly the Hanon method.
Any thoughts here?
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I started taking Taubman lessons in January after finishing the course here with Robert Durso. I'm really really enjoying it. This is my first time actually taking private lessons in piano; I have a masters in classical percussion.
What I got out of watching Robert Durso's course is that TA is really subtle and that I did not want to be attempting the movements without supervision. The feedback that I get from my teacher really surprises me sometimes since we're building my technique from the ground up, and the movements we did in the first month of lessons are not the same as how I'm moving now. I've had to keep adjusting things every week; not always because they were wrong, but because it was time to move on to a subtler and more sophisticated version of the gross movement. I have a lot of sensitivity and body awareness, and my lessons are going really quickly, but I'm totally convinced that I would not have gotten anywhere trying to learn from videos, even though I did think this video course was really good and had wonderful attention to detail.
Something to consider as you make your choice between Roskell and Taubman is what kind of habits you have now and how strong they are. My teacher said I'm lucky because I have far less to unlearn, and it's the unlearning that can be the most frustrating or difficult. It looks like TA asks you to do things REALLY differently from other schools of piano playing, so I don't think it's a good idea to try to mix it with Roskell's approach. You might end up building even more habits that you'd later have to unlearn. I won't call them bad habits; just ones that make it harder to perform the TA movements correctly. -
Hi Ivan.
What a great question/s. I'm retraining in the Taubman approach with a qualified Taubman-trained teacher and benefiting greatly from it. As I have a general interest in piano technique and injury prevention, I also purchased Rosekell's book and have watched the excellent videos on Tonebase.
For a while, I tried a bit of this approach and a bit of that, which didn't really work for me. In the end, I had to choose, so I decided to go down the Taubman route. Even my own teacher has said to me that whilst I'm retraining it isn't really helpful to mix and match different technical approaches whilst the body learns to get use to new movement patterns. With some distance, I can now understand why. That said, I've also studied Alexander Technique and Body Mapping which are complementary to the approach and helpful.
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Becky Reid , Andrew McMillan and Ivan thanks for your sharing your experiences. I鈥檓 also trying to rebuild my technique from scratch since my harpsichord-based finger powered approach has resulted in recurrent injuries. I think Taubman is more or less the way to go, but I also see potential in the technique of Arrau as detailed in von Arx鈥檚 book (which is very similar). I鈥檓 trying to retool by applying these methods (as best I can without supervision) by abstaining from playing any familiar music, and practicing Donald Waxman鈥檚 Etudes and Exertudes. I鈥檓 making progress, but I鈥檓 wondering if before I go too deep I should get some help from a qualified Taubman teacher.
May I ask if either of you is taking lessons remotely by video, or in person? Taubman instructors are rare birds. Did you use the referral service on the Goldansky institute website? Very few certified instructors are identified there.
Do you think taking Taubman lessons in person would have a great advantage over taking them remotely?