The plan requires that I learn 1 sonata mvt a month, is that reasonable?
I think thats reasonable.
It's all about how dedicated you are to practice !
Practicing is like running a marathon. You have to be fit.
It's more that you have to know how to be fit.
We need 1 whole sonata/ sonatina for 1 semester. I know they do more in your school, bro. But I'm not used to this yet.
But I'm not used to this yet.
Well I get these high days when I could play through exhaustion and still be focused for 2 hours straight. And then there are the lows when I'm too distracted and sick to think. Like today. I think consistency is the missing link here, also has something to do with physical/ mental health. Practicing is like running a marathon. You have to be fit.
you'd be surprised that we don't, we're just required one sonata for a year. of course there's the other pieces.......Just be patient. You can try like one page a day and before you know it your done already. BTW I like the wide variety of composers you chose.
I might visit Manila. So where does DB_05 study and where can you find him
I am Done with the & Impromptu's After you rest for a while then you will be as lively as a firecracker. I kind the like Mitsuda's "sands of time" of yours.
I am sick right now and taking a break. I haven't practiced at all yesterday and I still feel awful. *cough cough* I'm glad I copped out of the Halloween party. I'm in no shape for partying.I discovered Satie's Sonatine Bureaucratique and now it's one of my favorites. I wantwantwant to play it. The hard part is convincing my teacher to teach me. Maybe I'll learn it on my own. I still have to do First Lessons in Bach, if it's the entire book I'm in an awkward situation. I don't sight-read that well; assign me a short piece and I have to work at it and partially memorize it. That takes a lot of time and throws the plan waaaaaay off.I'll edit the list above as I go.
Satie is such a strange man . Try gymnopedie no.1
Dont forget to add some etudes, trying to play these pieces only will keep you behind your competitors
Oh. You replied on here, too. What do you mean? It's too easy? I forgot to mention that I'm always learning something from Hanon and Czerny. Scales and arpeggios, required stuff... Other etudes I know little about, except Chopin is out of reach atm. I'm obviously confused, and I posted this even though I haven't decided to continue studying yet. Taking this seriously implies that I'm going to continue, and I'm not so sure.PS. I saw your guide on how to learn (Chopin) etudes. You are one weird fellow. Like sir lostin, I never thought of getting technique from Chopin.
The problem is that you have a wishlist of pieces wich all have about the same grade. That means you will spend an entire year learning pieces that will hardly improve you.
What do you mean? I think the updated list is pretty hard, for what I'd expect to play in a year's time.Edit:Whatever do you mean, gyzzzmo? What pieces do you have in mind, for instance? And what etudes? I can't venture to guess. Your suggestion is so weird that it's interesting.
No reading of books or articles about piano playing is required. As long as you have insight in WHAT and HOW you're practising things. Anyway, i'm gonna stick to that other topic of yours on the student corner, switching between 2 doesnt make much sense and is probably only confusing
Insight. That goes much deeper, doesn't it? Whether my classmates have it or not, I wouldn't know. All I know is I was always the careful one. Maybe you're right, and I should push the envelope a little. But I'm not familiar/ interested in more technical pieces. As you can see, I'm quite fond of slow, lyrical pieces... So I don't know... For the sake of study, I'd learn some technique, but I don't see the point.
You should be very interested in etudes/more technical pieces, because they are the basis to be able to play more difficult (and beautiful) pieces, AND they are the basis for being able to put musicality into those pieces. And 'hacking' into pieces isnt that bad, as long as you perform when you have to.
That explains it. Although I really feel that some etudes are just a bunch of fast notes. Either I'm not getting the point or it's just not my type of music. I'll add some technical stuff anyhow. Not giving up... yet. Thanks.