The feels like one hand motion thing is what should happen, so sounds like you're doing it right.
Is that bit directed towards me? If so is doing that frowned upon?
its played pre significantly slower.. i dont think i would have troubles with the section i posted if i played it at the speed in the vid (mebbe still some troubles with the F octave). why do composers fking mark their pieces at crazy speeds? leonard bernstein plays it at nowhere near 160 crochets/min
its played pre significantly slower.. i dont think i would have troubles with the section i posted if i played it at the speed in the vid (mebbe still some troubles with the F octave). why do composers fking mark their pieces at crazy speeds? leonard bernstein plays it at nowhere near 160 crochets/minwhen i first read the score of the piece, i thot it was easy t . t but it's actually hard.. harder imo than the grieg a minor concerto i played last year
Nope - not at you.On your point:Doing the double octave thing you talk about is generally fine - even to be encouraged in some cases. But be careful you aren't upsetting an intended balance. Pianos ofttimes had fewer octaves until the early mid 19th century (some earlier Liszt pieces even have explicit ossias to allow for this), so the missing octaves may just be because the notes weren't there at the time. For later pieces, I'd be cautious that the difference in texture wasn't explicitly intended.
This is it played (at 160 or thereabouts) by Dimitri's son: