Just curious: Can you tell me about the piano (Yamaha?), and also how you positioned the microphones for this recording?
Don't sweat wrong notes. This was a student recital, and you did very well. Not only are you not deterred by an error, but actually make it musical as well every time. With highly edited CDs on the market, many pianists make the mistake of believing that music is real, as if it were a first and last out take, as you know. There is that story of the artist who had a not-so-great recording session. When he returned to the studio the next day and the CD was played for him, he marveled at his playing, to which the recording engineer replied, "I bet you wish YOU could play like that!" It's so true. There is way too much of a fetish today on surgically clean playing which is... so boring! A pianist's personality cannot possibly come through in that kind of super cautious, robotic effort. What I appreciate in your playing is that you take risks. I do too. It draws the audience into your passion for the music and communicates it to the listeners for more effectively. When you take a risk, they move to the edge of their seats. So rather than sterile, nondescript, generic playing, you give them something to remember after they've left the hall. That's what it's all about. When I would go to hear Rubinstein, for example, he would sometimes hit klinkers, but the audiences brushed it off as totally insignificant, as his performance as a whole was so magisterial, and he was absolutely connected to his audience every second. We need more of that today.
Hi Donjuan, great job on this piece. I really like the opening line. I never figured out how to make sense of it, but I think you do a great job with the cresc and accel. (I'm going to go write the accel in my score so I know for next time). You got great technique, I wish I had your octaves just before those major thirds in the right hand. On the second to last page I could have used more time on the fermata just after the G major arpeggiation going up in the left hand. Again I also could have used more time on the fermata after the descending 1st inversion chords on the last page. This is all personal taste though. I really admire your performance of this. Feel free to listen to mine which is on Rachfan's thread of this about half way in. https://www.pianostreet.com/smf/index.php/topic,18549.0.htmlOnce again, I really like your interpretation of this.