You really are learning fast. Apart from the little mistakes and some unwanted accents it was pretty good! And obviously your problems with rhythm were nothing to worry about, just a little practice.
Thanks Outin, really, really appreciate it! Well that rhyhm problem will hopefully sort itself out...It's just a pain, lol.
Never thought about it that way, guess you could say I don't have a favorite. I like works from most of the usual names that get bantered around. I will say that of those, working on Debussy never lit any fires for me.
I have yet to decide whether Rachmaninoff is to me what Debussy is to you.
The first part is quite good, it's steady and sounds reasonably secure and has a touch of expression going on. In the rest, you have some insecurity and that's leading to hesitating playing possible incorrect notes and derails the rhythm. But you will get there on that as well. Personally, if you get the last parts as good as the first in the next week or two, and the whole piece evened out, I'd then move on. That's enough time spent on that particular piece for now, you have more work to get to.. You can always re visit it later and pick up the pace then if you wanted to. With more experience it will be easy to blow it out then. Don't just take my word on it though, remember you have a teacher !
Incidentally a nice follow up to this piece is Anna Magdalena's Minuet in G minor. Only level 2 but pretty, IMO. It makes a nice pair to do in an early recital. You could almost modulate keys and morph them together into a medly if you didn't get herracy comments on so doing !
That's a coincidence, my teacher said I played the first part 'very sharp' which is a good thing he said. Like Outin and you said, I made a few mistakes. I forgot to hit the upper D before going to the higher G (if that makes sense), I've got that fixed now. Still playing the piece just because it is really nice!

The G minor is indeed pretty nice, but I was thinking of the G major 116 Anh:
But my teacher has me working on prelude C major bwv 847 which also is a pretty nice piece and handy because we're working on scales now I believe? Not sure because he only showed me the E major scale and the white chords (CEG and different positions of CEG, EGC, GCE. CEG etc).
I was thinking of letting my teacher decide what pieces we were going to work on, but is it normal for a beginner to suggest a piece?
Also.....Like I've stated previously, I really don't want to sound like some emotionless players on youtube.....I hope from the depts of my heart that I've mixed at least a shred of my emotion in the piece.
And excuse my phone for being such a crappy microphone=p.
Well, time to practise!
