Hello,
This is my first post .
I enjoy tremendously reading the enlightened comments on this forum and I have an important question to ask.
Does there come a time when you say I just cannot do this?
I have been learning for just over four years, I have an excellent teacher who is very knowledgeable, helpful and supportive.
As far as pracising, I usually put in about 2 - 3 hours a day, doing scales, arpeggios, sight reading, followed by practising my pieces, at which I work at each section assiduously for 20 minutes, take a break for five and then try another section and so on. And I enjoy it and am not bored.
My teacher says I am doing ok, and not to worry.
My progress though is very limited, I can just about get through things like Bach, prelude in C, that short Chopin prelude in A and I am just starting on Debussy's Le petite Negre and I know it is going to take 6 months or so before I can even get through it.
One of the pieces I am working on at the moment is a Little Prelude by Bach, so simple but I am unable to play it through without many errors - pieces with counterpoint are really difficult for me.
I have everything going for me, a good teacher, time to practice, encouragement from my wife and I am massively motivated, even so it is not happening. I don't even want to perform in public or anything remotely ambitious, just for my own enjoyment, but I am reaching the point where it may be sensible to face the facts that it never is going to happen and move on to something else.
I love music and the piano but if this is the level I am going to stay at then as a senior I need to give it up and try something else before major frustration sets in.
Any crumbs of comfort out there?