Hi AJ,
Such an amazing playing!!! I really enjoyed your playing of this piece. This is considered the hardest ballade by most pianists, (even though I play the third and I think it's pretty hard), and I think you are doing a fantastic job even on the technical side. (It really depends on how long you have been playing the piece.) I can see that you have inputted so much of both the composer's and your own thoughts into playing this piece. I think that your contrast in dynamics, voicing of the melody/harmony, etc. are coming along very nicely. I like how you also move with the piece, (with cresc and decresc markings).
Here are some things that I might suggest; (I have never played this piece)
- Opening: don't take so much time! Rubato happens within a tempo. Chopin never tells you change tempo (except with rit. and accel.) For example, you are really slowing down on Measure 7 ritenuto and the fermata.
- This leads to my next point, have pulse. To be somewhat rude, I don't feel the sense of pulse. You might be feeling it, but I want the 1st and 3rd beat. It's like a swing. A professor from Indiana University told me that I need swing as if I was in space, using gravity to move.
- The second and the third time that the theme comes back, it gets bigger.
"No matter how big it [the theme] gets, it is still a theme. Therefore, play it like one." - Karen Shaw (from a master class)
I felt like you were thinking too much about making a grand sound that you forgot to add some musicality to your melody.
- Measure 207; play the last note louder so that it sustains more (for 4 whole entire measures)

Again, I haven't played this piece so I don't have much to say about technique... Good luck on your practicing

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Natsu Ozawa
Seattle, WA