Hey everyone,
So I am somewhat of an ambitious, if impatient amateur. I have been playing on-and-off since I was 3 (very musical family, good genes), but I have never really progressed far with it as I lost all interest at age 10 or so (I think from being pushed too hard). I worked my way up to Fur Elise, Moonlight Sonata, and a few pieces in between, and well, that was it; picked up a keyboard in favor of piano when I went to college, did some composing, lost interest in that too, then life got in the way and now here I am, 10 years later, having inadvertently acquired an old Mehlin & Sons spinet and trying to figure out what to do with it.
Well actually, that was about half a year ago. It took me a good two months (on and off) just to brush up on Moonlight Sonata, however at the same time, I got the relatively insane idea of jumping directly into Chopin Op.10 No.12 and Glinka/Balakirev's The Lark. I brute-force'd my way halfway through Chopin (up until the left hand gets really difficult, measure 28 or so, could put up a convincing performance up until that part, skipping ahead to the awesome-sounding second chorus that starts with G-D-A-B) and dabbled in the Lark a bit, figuring out the flowery middle section for the most part but skipping around the very intimidating cadenzas.
It was somewhere around this time that I discovered Rachmaninoff and immediately added C#minor, Gminor and G#minor preludes, oh and Concerto No.2 Moderato to my to-do list. It was at this point that I finally decided that I needed a bit of help and got a teacher. 5 lessons later over two months and I am playing C#Minor flawlessly, besides advice with most efficient fingering I really did not need a lot of help (rubato, tone, pace all comes naturally and apparently I have a perfect ear, thanks genes!!).
The one thing that I will say is that I have no patience for exercises, warmups, arpeggios, etc. I know little about music theory and mostly play by ear, although I can read music well enough to get my hands in the ballpark to the point that my ear will correct and I can commit to muscle memory with practice.
I also have no patience with learning music that I am not interested in. I have spent a lot of time recently listening to classical piano, and am broadening my ("I like this and want to learn it" list), for the most part, I seem to have an aversion to Mozart and all the people and pieces that sound like him, and am more drawn to dramatic in-your-face after-work stress relief stuff. Here is a quick list, including everything mentioned above, along with my progress:
Moonlight Sonata first movement - 100%
Rach C#Minor - 95%
Rach GMinor - 25% (currently working on)
Rach G#Minor - not started
Rach B Minor - suggested by coda_colossale, not started but will likely work on next and put GMinor on hold (
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:B%C3%B6cklin_Die_Heimkehr_1887.jpg for reference - allegedly Sergei's inspiration for this piece, also
for listening)
Chopin Op.10 No.12 (Revolutionary) - 75% left hand, 95% right hand
Glinka \ Balakirev The Lark - 20%
Chopin Prelude Op 45 - 0% (recommended by mjames)
Bach \ Gounod Meditation (this one-
, except that she skipped last part, so hard to find a recording of the "best" transcription of this, maybe I will make one!) - 75%
Shumann Intermezzi Op.4 No.V (
https://www.youtube.com/watch?Tchaikovsky Seasons - Troika (want to get this under my belt at some point) - not started
Bach(?) Toccata Fugue (Busoni! beginner editions do not interest me) - 20%
Rach Concerto No. 2 (at some point!? actually using first section as warmup lol) - 2%
Rach Etude Op. 39 No. 6 (Little Red Riding Hood) - VERY long-term goal (seems like most difficult of all?), not started
So yeah, I dove right into Rach GMinor (womp womp), I am here because, yes, it is difficult, my piano teacher thinks that I am a bit crazy (but that I can probably handle it), and I am feeling a bit more open to learning pieces that are impressive to play and will help bridge the gap between what I can do now and what I want to do in the future (GMinor, Concerto No.2, perhaps a few Etudes Tableaux); yes I fully realize that C#Minor, while being a good gateway to greater things, is not quite up there in terms of difficulty.
Now that you know a little about me, how would you advise me to rearrange the order in which I am learning? I may be open to adding "intermediary" pieces to the above as long as I "like" them, also I may actually ask my teacher to suggest a few exercises that will help my left hand but I am not seeing her for another month so perhaps you guys might have some ideas? Also open to working on parts of the above pieces at a time (ex. right now doing the arpeggio section of GMinor, think I can handle it but the parts of the song where you are merrily hopping around are more intimidating; in contrast the Agitato section of C#Minor was by far the most difficult so perhaps I should be building finger dexterity, maybe using parts of The Lark?).