sorry, sorry - that's what happens when you start giving (stoopid) advice at 2 am after 16 hours of work! i was talking about op. 25 no.2

as for both op. 10 no.1 and no.2: these are both endurance etudes (especially no.1), since they rely completely upon wrist&arm movements. and no.1 is easier - i know many of you will disagree with me, especially since no.1 is way longer - but it's almost completely written in
ff! with no.2, you also have to suspend your arm weight for the most part of the time.
(PS: I practice at full speed HT. With some pieces I have a second phase in which I practice the piece agan slowly (I did this with Op.10 no.2 and some Bach fugues). I practice in 5 min blocks, at the end of each block I move on to a different piece. After 20 mins I have a break. I practice 1 hour a day. )
and can you perfect a work practicing this way? i could never. i practice in 30-60 min blocks (depending on how i feel - i take breaks when i feel i need to), and i always practice at least 1 hour/day the most demanding work in my repertoire.
I am experiencing a strange thing when I practice. Last night I could play it without tension, but these two days, it seems that my technique has changed unconciously for the worse. I can only play it at 120BPM and I seem to get tired at the end OF THE 8 BARS. What is happening?
It happened also last time with Op.10 no.1 where I learned the first two pages up to speed in half an hour, with good technique, no tension etc. but all the next times I played those two pages, my technique had warped, and I found I was causing damage to my wrist, which was so bad it forced me to give up the piece.
What is going on?? I seem to get a segment perfected, then suddenly the next day, I wake up to find my technique has gone funny.
i am a fast learner too, and my teacher used to "curse" me: "you, fast learners, you think you can learn a work AND get it to tempo in a matter of hours and still think this is ok!"
based on what he used to tell me - and on my personal experience: the fast learners are the most superficial category of musicians. it takes a real mature one to know how to use this "gift" and turn it into an advantage.
what you (most probably do) is: you get the work memorized and up to tempo TOO FAST and now, when you play the work you focus on "playing the score" (meaning notes, dynamics, etc) and not on playing the piano. especially when you're dealing with technically challenging works, you have to give yourself some time to really memorize the work - not just superficial learning.
one more thing about fast learners: actually one question: did it ever happen to you that you learned a work in a matter of minutes/hours, then didn't have a chance to practice it over the few days and then found that you have completely forgotten it? (i had to learn the great gate of kiev 5 times over a 6 weeks period cause i was learning it in 1/2 hour, then the next time - which was sometimes the next week - i got a chance to practice i had completely forgotten it!)
so much for fast learners
