That guy from "The bulletproof musician" has been around for quite some time now and he's been reaching out in to other areas outside of his experience, which is piano, and doing well. He first came in to my sights about 12 years ago when he was doing his how to practice and how to memorize music back then. He's done a lot of good things.
What does expressive virtuosity mean to me? I don't want to sound like I am putting anyone down, but for me it is a fancy term for "play with feeling". People often need to make something simple sound grandiose and awe inspiring.
Giving something an impressive title to me is a simple waste of time. Call it what it is... play from the heart. "Expressive Virtuosity" is making a mountain from a molehill and makes my teeth itch... loll
Understand me, I am not denigrating playing with feeling, just the word choice used to define something simple. I'm a simple person and as I age, I find I LIKE simple talk. Leave your scrabble award winning vocabulary in the closet... lol
When I was in my late teens and up to mid 20's, I was top of the heap technically speaking. Flight of the Bumble Bee, Trieste Overture, Fantasie Impromptu, Prelude and Fuge #2 and others were literally warm-up pieces for me. I played well, but I was not mature enough to play WITH HEART. It is rare that you will find a young person play with emotion (there are exceptions of course... somehow, I feel that the Asians have a way around that trap, because when I see a 5-year old on a violin with great emotional intensity, it is beautiful).
Today I know why **I** was unable to do so at that time, because for me, music back then was the torture device that was applied to me by others. I played flat, emotionless because it gave me no real joy. Ultimately, it cased me to stop playing altogether.
For most of us here, we are now of a certain age, a certain experience, and fewer things in life will help one enjoy the music better than the experience of life and what that brings, and perhaps the nice thing is now that because we become less technically adept as we age, we get to take our time and play the less demanding music we enjoy and that pleasure comes through... at least in many pieces of music, I tend to gravitate to now when in private, they are slow, emotional and make me feel the joy of happiness or sadness.
I am finding a lot of pleasure in playing songs like "I Left my heart in San Francisco" or Liszt's "Leibestraum" (though the horrendous bass jumps will challenge anyone... lol). They tend to bring out the emotion in me, which, if I ever recorded, would likely be visible to the viewers.
Playing with feeling... call it what you want, but a rose, is a rose, is a rose, and always smells with the exact same sweetness no matter what you call it. Why call it anything else other than what it simply *really* is??