Been working on this beauty for a bit now and have some technique questions:
Measure 3 (and throughout): Is it a requirement to play the notes in the bass cleff only in with the left hand or can I rearrange the notes to making for less tangle in the hands? For example, on the first chord play E G# C# in the LH and E G# C# in the right hand. I'm thinking that I shouldn't do that, that it would change the balance of the notes but just wanted to make sure).
I don't believe rearranging the chords necessarily makes a difference in sound, because you can balance the thumb notes as you like, either way. Or if you do not have the skill to do this, it isn't going to matter. Not yet.
There is a larger problem. I would recommend that you learn the last page FIRST. Why? Because you have the same chords, only this time the are spaced an octave apart—no overlapping—and the missing notes in the chords (in the beginning) are now filled in. So if you master the last page (the return of the theme), you bascially have the same chords in the beginning, with a note left out ine the LH and RH. Since those big, powerful chords have to be nailed, since this is the climax, why not tackle this section now, since you will actually learn the whole piece faster AND it will allow you to play the biginning chords without rearranging them, since you will already have them "in the hands".
Measures 7-8: Fingering suggestions? Do I need to make the slurs perfectly connected? If so, how do I do that?
In my opinion, yes, those chords must be connected as shown, but if you are having trouble doing so, it is most likely your pedal technique that is causing the problem. Are you careful to lift the pedal only as the new sound begins (often called overlapping pedal, really a misleading term). Then, if you want to show a slight break between phrases, you can do it by lifting the pedal a split second early, producing an effect much like a very quick breath, a change in the direction of bowing or a light tongue attack on wind instruments.
Gary