Originally posted by Ventilhorn
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I think it's all very well to compare young instrumentalists with the all-time greats, but if you expect them to be equally good while still in their early twenties they have nowhere else to go. It's the same with, for example, Benjamin Grosvenor. Yes, these youngsters get recording contracts, their records sell, they become 'rich and famous'. I think it needs successful teachers to tell us how much improvement can be expected and how it can be achieved, teachers who've worked with the best.
The kind of generally contemptuous comments which suggest a player should give up are pretty silly. Plenty of 'second-' and 'third-rate' players have worked hard and had very successful careers. Most of them aren't as good as Heifetz but they've done quite well in their little way .
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