Does anyone have any suggestions on what concerto should be my first? My piano teacher wants me to do one, but she says I should pick it. I... have absolutely no idea.Does anyone have any suggestions. Look at the songs in my signature to see what level I am on, assuming that I play them well, because I have no idea what level I'm on.Thanks in advance.
Well, the thing is that yes, they all are hard. Concertos are by their nature vehicles for the display of technical prowess (if not full-blown virtuoso showmanship!).I'm not familiar with the Scriabin prelude in your sig line (and he wrote several in that key), but the other pieces are of no more than intermediate difficulty. I know our reach should exceed our grasp, and learning a concerto will certainly be a growing experience, but any concerto seems like too much of a stretch from what you've played to date.I'm sorry if that sounds harsh (I don't mean it to be), but that's how I see it. And given that you're unable to assess your own skill level and you're admittedly clueless about which concerto would be suitable, your teacher's expectation seems unreasonable.
[...] But I don't know of any concertos, thats why I came here.As for my skill level, I'd say that I'm an intermediate/advanced level, but I'm not sure because I don't know what the standards are for each level.
I agree with your point about the Pathetique, but those last two points go to the heart of why I would question your teacher's judgment here. Your teacher (presumably) is familiar with the concerto repertoire and is able to assess your skill level. If she has the requisite knowledge for making this decision and you do not, why is she asking you to make it?Anyway, best wishes however you proceed with this. (And if I knew of any "entry-level" concertos to recommend to you, I would. )
While the 21st Mozart pianoconcerto isn't as technical as other concertos, it's still tricky.But really really doable for someone of your level (whatever that might be). The pitfall is in that it has to be tight, oh yeah.. tight and light. Anyhow, good luck
A teacher's measuring stick is the success of her students. She wants you to do well so follow her lead....