Bernhard does that mean that you can learn the complete fugues of the wtc 1 in one month and spice everything up with the Hammerklavier(4 pieces) if it is February. On any other mont you would of of course learn Beethoven opus 111 as a little encore.
24 + 4 + 2= 30.
Of course not.
You are not reading the links.
Are the WTC fugues easy for you? Is the Hammreklavier just challenging?
And I was quite clear when I mentioned that this didi not mean that you would finish a piece in a month.
But an advanced player could easily tackle the following selection (just an almost random example) on a daily basis working 5 - 6 hours a day:
Easy (for the advanced player, of course)
1. Chopin preludes op. 28 nos. 2 - 4 - 6 - 7 - 20
2. Scarlatti sonatas K25 - K32 - K54 - K 112 - K213
3. Beethoven sonata op. 49 no. 1 first movement - 2nd movement (for learning purposes sonata movements are regarded as separate pieces) - Beethoven Six Ecossaises
4. Grieg - Lyric pieces op. 12 no. 1 - op. 12 no. 3 - op. 47 no. 3 - op. 71 no. 7
5. Satie - Gymnopedies no. 1 - no. 2 - no. 3 - Gnossienes no. 1 - no.2 - no. 3 - no. 4 - no. 5 - no. 6.
(25 easy - for our pianist - pieces)
Challenging:
1. Chabrier - Idylle.
2. Beethoven - Sonata op. 79 - 1st movement - 2nd movement - 3rd movement.
(4 challenging pieces)
Difficult
1. Chopin Etude op 10 no. 1.
These pieces are tackled not by playing them everyday from beginning to end, but in very small sections (sometimes as small as one bar). So first you must break down each piece in manageable chunks, then you must order the chunks ion a daily basis so that at the end of a certain time you have mastered the piece. (Read the links in reply # 8 for the details).
Some of the easy pieces will be mastered after 6 - 7 days working on them as little as 5 - 10 minutes a day. Some will take 14 - 15 days working 20 minutes a day. The challenginc and difficult pieces will take maybe 30 - 45 minutes of daiily work and may take 30 - 45 days to complete.
So, what matters is that you are doing 30 pieces a day, and at the end of the month most of them will be in your repertory (most of them are easy, yet superior pieces). As you get one piece ready you replace it by another one that you would like to play. It is important that the great majority of the pieces you are tackling be "easy" (for you, of course). As time passes, you will notice that many pieces that in the first year you considered "challenging" have now become easy, and the difficult ones will have become just "challenging". This is a result of your technique improvement from tackling such a diverse repertory.
At the end of one year you could well have 250 - 300 pieces on your repertory - worth anything between 15 and 40 hours of uninterrupted playing.
I believe is perfectly reasonable to expect my students to have 40 - 50 pieces in their repertory after one year of lessons.
Best wishes,
Bernhard.