Well, I think it's certainly gratifying to perform a piece, especially the first time, after long hours of practice.... and it certainly feels good to impress the ladies!!! Ultimately, though, I think we perform because we simply love to do it, and we feel as though it is a part of us. That said, I'd like to share the story of how I began to play the piano, and one personal thing I gain from performance:
First of all, I love music, and I always have. In the second grade, I took piano from a teacher for a while. She, however, stopped teaching after about a year, because it became too much for her. I didn't take any more lessons until the summer after my freshman year in high school. I didn't take lessons, I didn't learn anything, and I didn't perform. Well, I started messing around with my little 61 key keyboard that I owned at the time, and I began to learn the simplified versions of the pieces on it. I would just watch the little notes play on the screen, and I would learn the pieces, note by note. I learned a little arrangement of Canon in D from there, and, since it was too hard for me to play in D, I just transposed it to C in my head while I was learning it, and I learned to play it in that key. I also composed a short piece for piano that year. It was extremely simple and minimalistic. It consisted simply of modulation between Bb and C in different variations. I played Canon and the original piece at the school talent show, not winning anything, of course. Well, there was a certain person at my school whom I have always been a bit competitive with, and he laughed at the piece, and told me he could play ten times better, which, at the time, he probably could, because he played at his church and had taken a few years of piano lessons. The thing was, he kept going on and on about how I "really sucked at the piano," and I finally had ENOUGH! I vowed that I would begin to take piano lessons and that I would begin performing just to surpass him and be better than he was. Well, he continued to take piano lessons, and I began. I was overly ambitious, and I set ridiculous goals for myself, and attempted to play pieces that I can't even play now. Well, I finally got a sense of where my skills were at, I developed them and my technique for hours. After I performed at the talent show this year and won second place (over him, he didn't win anything) for a certain arrangement that I wrote, It felt good to know that I didn't "suck at the piano" any more! My competitiveness and my love of music has brought me a LONG way. For every performance I play, I gain more confidence that now, I have surpassed him and made him eat his words, again and again. That is one thing I personally gain from performance. I can't stand people who belittle others and look down upon them because they think they're perfect. I perform to make a statement to all the people like that, who think I can't do anything. I perform to prove to those people that I CAN do something, and that I will put in any amount of time and effort necessary to improve myself in doing it. That is one reason I perform.