Did you tell your teacher your goal of entering a conservatory?
Unfortunately I wasn't able to, he kept rambling about how he was going to help me improve then gave me a bunch of assignments, we haven't had any time to talk, since he has another student waiting in line, I'll tell him, but I don't know if I'll be able to fit into a conservatory since my work is so much time constraining.
I estimate it will take me 5 years of practicing 2 hours a day to be somewhat within the realm of okay.
Isn't 2 hours a bit too short for practice? Even on working days I average about 3-4 hours at the piano, then on days off, I max out at 7-10 hours(of course 1 take short naps when I get too exhausted). Am I doing too much?
Don't beat yourself up about your recordings. There's lots of potential and you obviously love the music. Your teacher sees it, too, I think. Just clarify what he meant about Czerny (and switch to Cramer, if he'll go for it; technically similar to Czerny but much more interesting musically.)
Actually, I listened to it multiple times before posting it, and I was like "What the heck anyway! It's not like they actually know me IRL."
My teacher doesn't answer my text/calls, what the heck is wrong with him. Letting me blindly study these exercises. What specific cramer books? I'll try to suggest it to him when I meet him again this weekend.
For the advanced pieces I had played before I've only gone back to a few of them, and that after more than a year. After I came back to it it was so much easier.
So, should I do the same and drop my current piece(s)? Won't that make me an empty pianist?
I think speed walls come from gradually increasing the speed step by step. I don't do that, I just work on the piece until it feels comfortable and then speed up all at once [but, I can do that because my teacher has shown me motions to use that are capable of being played at tempo]. And there are limits, of course. I'm not rattling off the Chopin Etudes at the given metronome markings, not by a long shot.
Yes I, believe the metronome speed trick is a quick wall to a speed wall, at least that's what I've read from bernhard's posts about practicing.
About the etudes, the metronome markings are insanely fast, playing two consecutive 11th octaves at 182mm is freaking insane! But when I watch other performers, they seem to handle difficult sections with ease. Maybe its all in the motions or the largeness of the hand span?
And yes, I agree with you regarding comfort and speed. The speed seems to come to me automatically if I am able to master a passage when I get lucky and discover the correct fingerings and movements.
It's really a comprehensive work, and almost have to completely buy into her approach for all the individual parts to really work at their best.
So it's like a part 1 part 2 book. You have to grasp the knowledge of the first book for the second to be discernible? Man, sounds like tough work, but still, both might come in handy. thanks.
Sight-singing and self-conducting are actually very basic music skills that get ignored in the US in the basic training of most early aspiring musicians when it's actually needed the most.
In actuality, my grandfather TRIED to teach me sight singing, and failed miserably in making me do it, I was so young and was very shy of my voice so I was sick of the idea of sight singing notes. But now, after my new teacher gave me the danhauser, I was thinking "The f**k, I think there's no escaping this singing part of learning". I'll do it this time for the sake of my growth and development.
The cantabile in this piece is best brought out only after you have a masterful control of the background ostinato. The background needs to be treated just like the trills/tremolo I mentioned earlier. There's a rhythm in the upper arm that balances on the keys almost like a tight rope, and it should feel self-sustaining like a pendulum. The dynamic level of the background should be controlled by this rhythm.
The important notes in the melody are than coordinated to that rhythm without ever disturbing it if you want to be able to consistently bring it out. It's only after you've mastered the background rhythm, can you make the melody interact with it and make it sing.
Sounds tedious, so master the background first then add the voice? Even if i did master the background, I have no idea on how to voice the melody out, It sounds all the same, be it soft or loud. But I have a recording of maurizio pollini, and I was thinking how did he voice out that top notes while keeping the background soft or dim. Is there a magic finger trick to it?
Except and specific to me, if you decide to contact me by PM, I offer the same consulting contract that I always have.
This is not a solicitation. Your talent is substantial, and you can accordingly be given a common sense path to substantial piano technique.
I respectfully decline sir louispodesta, I may have resorted to you had my teacher rejected me. Since there was a handful of teachers in my area, I was thinking of through the net as a last resort. But now I am under the supervision of a teacher, I'll consider your advices if you post them here if you're kind enough. Thank you.