I have an example from the trombone world
(maybe it has no application to piano, I dunno; nyi usually jumps in about now to insult me)
Listen to Rolling Thunder
We're attempting it in one of the community bands I play in
Now understand that community bands are groups of fun loving amateurs with no audition requirements
A piece like this is within the grasp of top conservatory bands like Eastman or Dallas or most but not all military bands, but taken at tempo is way beyond virtuosic for many groups
To play this at MM 160 demands clean double tonguing and fast accurate slide technique
Neither can be developed moving slowly So the way most amateur trombone players attempt this is to start somewhere about MM 60 or 70 and put it up one beat a week, and utterly fail no matter how long they live
While all the pros can do this one, I'm the only amateur I know who can pull it off
I learned it at tempo, setting the metronome to 160, and playing the whole measure but not changing the note, then changing one note, then changing two notes, etc
Now that I can play it at speed, I am trying to refine it, making it cleaner and working out minor intonation faults I have to slow down to do that, but I use the same technique as when playing fast You can't hear all those problems at speed in normal acoustic settings but I know I can continue to get this one better and better