Hi Birba, thanks for your video, I am watching right now. I appreciate your thoughts. Yesterday I could only go very slowly through the chordal part of the coda, working to really clean things up and get it ultra clear in my mind (which, I can't say I've *truly* and *deeply* fully done before). I hear you about making sure the following section is truly in synch rhythmically, vs. just "strumming" the bass chords. I like your score, btw

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As I've said in my initial recording posting, I've had this piece as a "project" for quite awhile, and it's starting to take on a new life for me, just in the last couple of days. As with many of the pieces I've been working on, for a long time it (the Appassionata) has just been this monster ... ball of something (indefinable, a bit) that does something like present its existence to my consciousness and deepest self ... and it's almost like I couldn't hardly think in detail (not that my teachers haven't been giving me detail to think about, btw!) because I've just been so hugely busy and distracted trying to digest the overall, monster part of it (which I think it also needs, obviously). It's only just recently that I feel capable to truly be thinking in at least more detail and to be getting capable of thinking to refine sections like I might do very, very early on in the learning process with a very small piece. I'd love it if that were different for me, but so far it just hasn't been and I feel I've needed to work with what I've got! In any event, I have yet to address the monster (in detail

), today! I'll definitely use your suggestions

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Or perhaps it all just happens in levels and in waves? I've been thinking in some detail, but not necessarily felt personally able to truly refine ... yet those details have aided in the bigger picture, too. But then, there's reading about and taking in Beethoven's life and the world around him (of course still loads to do, here, too) ... reading through his Sonatas (I don't think it was all of them, maybe only one book so far and it was awhile ago), reading through Mozart Sonatas (all of those!) ... having a working knowledge of Haydn Sonatas ... understanding sonata form in general, other musical forms, musical practices, better understanding the Baroque era and where the sonata came from, then, dealing with myself and the need for spiritual/personal/musical/technical growth ... haha ... I promise, it's a huge project for the likes of me

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