Hello all,
I'm relatively new to the piano scene, but as utterly enthralled and in love with it as any veteran. I began playing about 7 or 8 months ago one day when I was ill and off from school. In my boredom I decided to get out my basic Casio keyboard and start learning a song called "monologue 1" from the infamous film "american psycho". Despite the limitations of my equipment and learning from a synthesia tutorial, I picked it up quite fast, and within a few days had over half the song memorised.
I then began playing on the piano in my schools music room at lunch and break times, consolidating the piece, and soon discovered and began to attempt others. This detracted my focus from "monologue 1", and for over a month it was neglected whilst and began to dabble in bits of other pieces. Then one day, whilst doing some piano related browsing, I stumbled across a little piece called "L'escalier du diable". The very name of the piece, with its allusion to a profound spiritual metaphor captivated me. I watched the piece being performed by many pianists, but the best rendition I found was one by a young pianist named Yutong Sun. He executed every passage flawlessly, and powerfully conveyed the metaphor as Ligeti intended. Sure enough, I decided to ask a music teacher if he had a copy of the sheet music. He found one, printed it off, and left me in his words to "scare myself silly". I had thought back then that he'd been referring to the sinister tone of the piece, but now looking back I suppose he could just of well have been referring to its complexity...
Anywho, I hadn't known how to read sheet music at the time, and so downloaded a couple of pdfs and learned the basics in about half an hour. Anything I couldn't decipher while studying the sheets I asked the music teacher about, and he happily clued me in. I learned the first stave of the piece and went after school to practice it every day that I wasn't revising for exams. It took a working week just for that, and when I incorporated the second stave in, I was stuck for weeks trying to get it to sound seamless.
One day, when I went after school to bash away at the devils staircase again, the music teacher asked me if I'd be willing to perform a piece at a little concert the school was having. I told him I'd think about it, and pondered what piece I could possibly play. I'd so wished that I was a piano master who could memorise and perfect "L'escalier du diable" in two weeks for the recital and wow the small group, but I was - and still am - a beginner, and didn't have the stamina, skill, knowledge, or even the time to do so. So this is when I decided to revisit "Monologue 1". I'd finished four fifths of the piece before abandoning it in favour of Ligeti's chilling thirteenth etude. I finished up the piece and perfected it, and after enduring a week of anxious, sweaty palmed and fingered anticipation did a good performance at the concert, after which the teacher asked me and a couple of others if we would perform for all the teachers the following morning. I agreed, and did so. I'd felt so proud after doing these performance, I'd felt for the first time like a real pianist.
After this I returned to the devils staircase, stagnating my growth as a pianist for another month before I had to stop practicing because of exam revision, and not having a piano of my own. Now I'm in the middle of a holiday which is likewise slap bang in the middle of my exams. When the holidays began I paled at the thought of not having access to a piano, and again as I contemplated how much more torturous the long summer would be away from one. But I recently discovered that my city library has several practice rooms, and plan to book one out once or twice a week to practice once my exams are finished - so all is not lost.
So that's pretty much my introduction...now onto the advice section...
I would like to ask for some suggestions of intermediate pieces I should learn to develop my skills so that in the future I will be able to learn and perform my dream repertoire - this being: L'escalier du diable by Ligeti, Un sospiro by Liszt, La campanella by Liszt, Liebestraum No. 3 in A flat minor by Liszt, Prelude in G minor by Rachmaninoff, and Apassionata movement 3 by Beethoven. I'm currently planning to learn the long version of "comptine du'n autre ete'" by Yann tiersen, Moonlight sonata movement 1 by Beethoven, a piano version of the star wars "imperial march", composed and transcribed by a fellow by the name of DJ Knighten, and some pretty cool sections from a synthesia medley of the dark knight films soundtrack. Aside from that, I haven't really found much that I like. I have a particular liking for slightly ominous pieces, and ones that convey a lot of passion. Anything bearing any similarity to the pieces in my dream repertoire, in terms of technique, would be much appreciated as it would serve as preparation. All suggestions are welcome, and appreciated.
Thank you