For every piece you decide to learn, try to answer the following questions:
1. Who composed the piece? What was his life and times like?
2. When was the piece composed and at what stage of the composer’s life? Do we know of any particular meaning attached to the piece – either by the composer or by his biographers? Is this a programmatic piece (if so, what is the story)?
3. What does the title mean? (In the case the title refers to a musical form, e.g., sonata or prelude, or fughe, what characterises such pieces? In the case the title refers to a dance, e.g., Sarabande or allemande, what was the dance like? Compare the general form with the form of the piece and see the similarities and also the points of departure).
4. Signs. Look through the score and identify all the signs and make sure you know their meaning (e.g. performance directions like p and f, accent markings, fermatas, ties and slurs etc.). Note clefs and changes of clef.
5. Rhythm and tempo. Look at the time signature. Look at the rhythm and identify repetitive patterns. What is the tempo (speed)? Is there a metronome marking? And if so was it by the composer?
6. Melody. What are the melodic patterns? Scales? Harmony derived? Ascending/descending?
7. Harmony. Make a harmonic reduction of the piece. Make sure you can identify all the chords and chord progressions in the piece. Are there modulations? Which key is the piece in (if tonal)?
8. Form.What is the form of the piece? (binary, ternary, fughe, sonata form, etc.), Identify the episodes (e.g. in a fughe ,entries of the subject; countersubjects; in sonata form exposition, development and recapitulation). See how much the piece conforms with the form and how much it departs from it.
9. Phrases. Size of phrases, climaxes.
10. Dynamics. Dynamic markings; hairpins; accents.
11. Pedal. Did the composer/editor supplied them?
12. Fingerings. Distribution of notes between the hands.
13. Ornamentation. Have ornaments been supplied by the composer/editor? Or are you supposed to improvise them? Ornament realisation must obey period and geographic conventions.
14. Problem areas. What problems do you anticipate in this piece (for you, for the piece).
Just the tip of the iceberg.

Best wishes,
Bernhard.