Theres only 8 grades in AMEB, I'll be finished in a year.
HeyHope this post doesnt sound stupid.. lolI Am Currently at 7th grade (AMEB) And just turned 16, The problem is when i perform i sometimes hit wrong notes, or stop and look confused! stupid mistakes. When im 18 i would like to enter the 2008 sydney piano comp in australia... But i never see people in the chopin competition, sydney comp..etc make mistakes like me, wrong notes OR stopping, they never stop or look confused.... i know if i make one mistake or look confused or stop during a performance in the comp its an automatic failure and i lose. During now and 2008 (through 2006 and 2007) what could i do to work my way up to those standards, maybe i just need to play more in public, or practise the songs more, i just dont know! the people like yundi li, martha argerich, ingolf wunder, never make big noticable mistakes, how do they do it, ARGH!!!!! I would be embarassed to stop in a performance at something that big.If you are not 100% confident with your pieces you will play, should you still enter the comp and give it a try, and embarass yourself or wait another 4 years, i just want to hear peoples opinions, helpful tips, anything!thanks
You have to definatly consider difficulty in big competitions. It is like gymnastics, people want to see impressive stuff, not safe stuff. Safe stuff wont win it for you.
I must disagree. Last year was our international competition here. The Unisa International. Apparently quite big internationally. A pianist by the name of Spencer Myer won it. He didnt really play an impressive show off program throughout. His semi-final round was filled with Debussy preludes and other rounds had works like Bach suites etc. His final round: He played Mozart 9 and Beethoven 4 against others playing Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninoff, Chopin etc (all exceptionally well!) His win was because of his musicality and sound and as you say, legendary, performances of beautiful, well chosen repertoire rather than difficulty. He was up against 4 other Russians in the finals and won because of it. Another competitor played ALL the Transcendental Etudes as a set in the semi final round... and he got past her because of his musicality. (His technique was also incredibly up to scratch, dont get me wrong, it's just not all that matters in the musical world)
I must disagree. Last year was our international competition here. The Unisa International. Apparently quite big internationally. A pianist by the name of Spencer Myer won it. He didnt really play an impressive show off program throughout. His semi-final round was filled with Debussy preludes and other rounds had works like Bach suites etc. His final round: He played Mozart 9 and Beethoven 4 against others playing Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninoff, Chopin etc (all exceptionally well!) His win was because of his musicality and sound and as you say, legendary, performances of beautiful, well chosen repertoire rather than difficulty. He was up against 4 other Russians in the finals and won because of it. Another competitor played ALL the Transcendental Etudes as a set in the semi final round... and he got past her because of his musicality. (His technique was also incredibly up to scratch, dont get me wrong, it's just not all that matters in the musical world)Do NOT, under any circumstances go if you are not ready and you know you're not. You have to be on an incredible polished standard of playing and music. If you are serious about becoming a pianist, you dont want to give yourself a bad name in the music world. Its tough enough as it is.
The Unisa International. Apparently quite big internationally. A pianist by the name of Spencer Myer won it. He didnt really play an impressive show off program throughout. His semi-final round was filled with Debussy preludes and other rounds had works like Bach suites etc. His final round: He played Mozart 9 and Beethoven 4 against others playing Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninoff, Chopin etc (all exceptionally well!) His win was because of his musicality and sound and as you say, legendary, performances of beautiful, well chosen repertoire rather than difficulty.
Gordon Kerry Figured in the Drift of Stars was a set peice by the competion that everyone who got to that stage of the competition had to play. It is an annoying and very difficult piece!
I am often misunderstood on here so I'll have to clarify what I meant. I said you have to CONSIDER difficulty. Why? Simply because when playing in big competition you need to present listeners with all the types of sound that the piano can produce. If you play something safe you are not extending the piano to its limits. Yes you can win with easier repetoire and there of course should be a balance, it is stupid to make every piece you play insane and difficult, the competition requirements would not allow it. Most competitions expect you to play a Beethoven Sonata or a Bach Prelude and Fugue, so in that case what you play does not have to be so supremely difficult. However when you are "neck and neck" with your competitor and they pull of something more "difficult" that yourself, that can determine if you win or not.The fact is you must have SOME exceptionally hard pieces in your competition repetoire, you WILL NOT SURVIVE if you do not have any to compete with.Gordon Kerry Figured in the Drift of Stars was a set peice by the competion that everyone who got to that stage of the competition had to play. It is an annoying and very difficult piece!
where did you find the repetoire for John Chen and Rem Urasin! ?
She probably still has the programme notes from last year, I still have mine too. All but one or two of the participants chose the Kerry piece.
Why do you assume I am a she...although you are right!!! I often wonder why i assume certain pf members are a specific gender!!!
I didn't assume anything, I remember you mentioning that you are "a sydney girl". Yes, I have a good memory for useless information.
omg james moon is way overhyped... hand injury... pffft what crap.he won minor comps by fudging his age and entering groups under his age group, from what i heard.