Okay!
Well i've been playing piano and taking lessons for around 7-8 years now (I'm 16). Only about a half a year of this has been serious training (2-3 hrs of practice a day). A little while ago I realized that I want to major in music in some of the better universities, so i really needed to up my game. I had composed around 200 to 300 2-4 minute pieces by this time, however, they were not classical in a sense of music theory. For a long time I had just been focusing on my own pieces, when my piano teacher told me that if I wanted to improve my skill in composing, I had to learn other pieces. So i started from the basics again, Turkish March. When he went on tour I decided to challenge myself, so I tried to play Chopin's Revolutionary etude as well as Fantasie impromptu, which I did both perfectly. After those, which took me roughly 3 to 4 months total to complete, I started to play Liszt's Un sospiro. (Needless to say, my composing has sky rocketed, and often when I play snipetts of my own peices during class, he confuses them with actual great composers.)
So my question is, based off of this exponential growth in music, do you think that by the end of Un sospiro (around 1-2 more months) I will be ready for Transcendental etude no. 10? I've tried to play the first 4 bars, which I hear are the key to the whole piece, and ive been doing well. I just don't want to get myself stuck in a dump or something.
Thanks.