Do you realize you're playing this in E minor and not F minor??
say, on the third page at measure 43 - the fingering is really bizarre for cut-time. it shows 5 to 1 and then a fingerpedal switch to 5. this seems ridiculous at this speed. i would rather play 5 to 1 and hold the lh where it is and continue with rh on the last of the triplet (holding 1 with rh thumb). it's pedalled anyways - so we can do what we like, right?! as long as the notes are strong - they will carry.
respect. i had just finished playing for my husband and he said - can you move my piece down 1/2 step. i forgot to move it back up and it was late and i was sightreading the piece. i did think - this sounds a bit flat. but, it was more sightreading issue and i was somewhat unsure of the piece -- so i didn't catch that. (my digital automatically transposes down by 1/2 steps).
what do you think about using the rh sooner than it calls for in the cut-time section? basically using the lh only for the immediate octave - and possibly the rh alone for the rest of the section or doing some kind of cross over (either playing one note with lh - held note - or a few notes). what fingering do you use there?
what did i do? hit a wrong note? i'm wondering now what i did. oh. dear - did i play it in F major too soon. yes. i could have done that. leave the A -natural? well, as a way to defend myself (if i did this) i would say there is an A-natural in measures 41-42. but, still no excuse. have to listen to this again to remember what i did.
The problem is that my wife doesn't like piano, classical music, or practicing, so I have to wait for her to go out on errands.