So, I'm the type that can't practice a single piece so I generally work on multiple pieces (which I know is bad, but it's impossible for me to force myself to practice one piece) and cycle through groups of 3 pieces depending on what I want to practice.
I'm currently working on:
Liszt Mephisto Waltz 1
Liszt Trancendental Etudes after Paganini no. 6 (not the famous one)
Liszt Liebestraum 3
Chopin Etude 10 no 12 (Revolutionary)
Chopin Etude 10 no 4
Chopin Etude 10 no 5
Alright, I know I'm tackling too much, but that's just how I practice.
Background: Played Liszt Etudes such as Mazeppa, La Campanella, etc. Chopin etude 10 no 3, Polonaise Heroique, Fantasie Impromptu (although it was very hard for me)
I generally have no trouble with leaps and octaves.
Max reach is between 9 and 10, if on black keys, I can barely do a 10. Octaves seems to be the perfect thing for me right now.
My problem is Chopin - like playing in general (fast finger movement)
Questions...
Mephisto Waltz (referencing
for times):
1a) I listen to recordings, and although it's allego vivace, I hear a presto/prestissimo. I tried playing at both tempos, and I like it presto, but looking at other forums, I hear criticisms regarding how people over - speed it. Can anyone explain the reasoning behind the criticisms except because it says it on the score? (youtube: 00:00 ~ 00:28)
2a) After the second key change (from F minor to A major), there's a piano scherzando with the 32nd notes (it goes G# F# rest F# D# rest G# F#), but on recordings, I hear the two notes between the rests (G# and F#, F# and D#) played as if a chord, not even a rolled chord. Is it fine to play it as a chord, because that'll make this section a lot easier? (youtube: 01:11 ~ 1:17)
3a) I have trouble playing (2:05 ~ 2:09)
4a) I have trouble playing (4:56 ~ 5:07), and also the other one that's just transposed
5a) I have trouble playing (8:17), the <E> <F#> <octave E>
for 3a, I have trouble playing the right hand (doesn't catch up with tempo), my hand loses its endurance right at the G#. I also don't want to play the Ossia, so please don't tell me to.
for 4a, I have trouble playing it with the mystical tone on the part where you are supposed to use the pedal, it gets sloppy
for 5a, I just can't reach the E and the F#, and if I leap for the F#, my thumb leaves the E so the next octave E becomes a problem (I might as well as wait for a month or so and let my hands grow)
Liszt Trancendental Etudes after Paganini no. 6 (referencing
)
This is the unnecessarily hard one, but I personally like this a lot more compared to the famous one (Paganini Etude no 6), recommend listening to this sometimes, and maybe practicing it.
1b) I have trouble playing Var 1's first part (0:29 ~ 0:38) any suggested fingerings for the chords on the right hand? (I can reach up to a 9, C to D)
2b) On Var 6 (2:14) The left hand seems very weird. The top staff for the left hand suggests a fingering of 2 and 4, and the bottom staff asks you to play the same note as the one played with 2, and a note that's tenth higher. Does this mean Liszt wanted the pianists to play tenths with 1 and 4 and octaves in 1 and 2? (This questions is just out of curiosity, I can't play this var due to reach and probably technical abilities.)
Chopin Etude 10 no 4 (referencing
)
I just can't play this...
1c) I can't play the right hand for (0:35 ~ 0:43) the fact that I have to play a key with the thumb while the chromatic ascensions with 2,3,4 is the challenging part for me. I tried playing the right hand thumb part with the left hand, but I realized that lost the whole point of an etude, and I'm trying to redo it.
2c) The left hand in (0:58 ~ 1:03) troubles me, I always get mistouches, especially from the part right before the C D# F# A C D# F# A C part on the right hand.
3c) And the last part (after 1:47) is just a disaster. The leap on the left hand really throws me off
In summary, I basically have trouble with the parts that require fingering or fast moving fingers that does not involve leaps.
Not to mention, I have the same kind of trouble with...
- Revolutionary Etude in general (although I heard it's not as hard, IMO it's the hardest piece, harder than mazeppa)
- Black Key Etude in general, again because my right hand is a disaster
- climax of Liebestraum 3 when the left hand does a variation on the C major scale and the F minor(?) scale and the A minor scale... (C E G C E G ... )
- the cadenza ad libitium (?) of Mazeppa and the parts where 1,2,3 does a chromatic scale and 5 hits a note and goes up (or down) by 3 half steps (it's not bad, but definitely a room to improve in terms of legato and rhythm)
Is there any exercises except Czerny Etudes and Hannon (tried Hannon, hate it) that will help me improve over the problems I've presented? Or are there any other pieces that's like Op 10 no 4 (but easier) or Fantasie Impromptu that will help me work on my major problem?
Thanks in advance!