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Technique and expression in Carl Czerny's teaching: a critical study of Czerny's Piano-Forte School, Opus 500, demonstrating the direct relation between mechanical teaching and expression in performance

Carl Czerny (1791–1857) lived at the turn of the nineteenth century, when the piano

underwent significant development as an instrument, and subsequently generated a huge

repertoire. While Czerny is mostly remembered for his piano exercises and etudes, his

writings about music as well as his works in serious style reveal a man with a sophisticated

awareness of the importance of piano technique, entwined with profound musical ideas and

an understanding of music that make him a forerunner of the romantic style.

This study focuses on Czerny’s Opus 500 Complete Theoretical and Practical

Piano Forte School (1839), and its Supplement (1845). Through analysis of the tutorial’s

content it attempts to prove the deep connection between piano technique and expressive

playing in Czerny’s teaching.

The first five chapters of this work compare elements of expressive playing, such

as articulation, dynamics and tempo, as presented in different tutorials written before

Czerny’s opus 500, clearly relevant to Czerny. The remaining chapters of this study discuss

the pedagogical path that Czerny suggests to master those same aspects, especially through

scales and scale-based exercises, and through constant attention to improving the listening

skills of the student.

The purpose of this work is to reassess Czerny as a key figure of modern piano

technique, as a teacher and pedagogue able to introduce pianists to mechanical training

while honing the essential skills to perform any piece of music in any style expressively.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bu.edu/oai:open.bu.edu:2144/20893
Date13 March 2017
CreatorsVanoni, Miriam Conti
Source SetsBoston University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation

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