musicofnote wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2024 12:13 am
As I explained in my music education at the time, with the exception of music theory, we did not learn "rules based". We learned "my way or the highway" based. Which is one reason why, after going to a couple Masterclasses towards the end of my educational career, I never went to another.
I'm sorry you had that experience, and I know how it felt. I had a similar experience in my very first class in graduate school that caused me to immediately change direction in terms of the faculty I was working with. It was at once something of a shocking and enlightening experience.
I don't think there are any fully accurate generalizations about "programmatic formal study" that don't rely on certain assumptions about who's dishing out that formal study and how they're doing it. Some of the best people in their fields are lousy teachers, and you can't learn from them (or at least YOU can't learn from them -- OTHER people may be able to). Some of the best teachers won't be able to take you beyond a certain level. And most students aren't very able to see that and make those distinctions.
That doesn't mean, in any particular case, that formal study (or more of it) wouldn't have "made you better" (in one way or another) or might have slowed you down or damaged your progress, or that it wouldn't have been beneficial to you to some degree or other. So when someone asks a question like "How would that have helped ME? Would it have made ME better in certain ways?", the answer is "That depends a lot on YOU -- and on what YOUR goals and capabilities were, and YOUR ability to respond and adapt to a program, or to find a program that fit YOUR goals and needs." And that often becomes more of an exercise in analysis of emotion, personality, goals, and circumstances than anything about what any kind of formal training program has to offer in general. Other people can't answer those questions for you. It's difficult enough to attempt to answer them yourself from a distance of half a century.
Other than that -- or perhaps with that context -- I can say this: I've been to master classes led by people like Pat Sheridan, Oystein Baadsvik, and James Galway. I'm pretty sure that I'd be very happy to have them as instructors, and that I'd benefit greatly from that. On the other hand, none of them are classic ("professorial"?, "career academic"?) music faculty members, although each teaches in (or has taught in, or runs) various formal training programs.