Hi!
Hi and welcome.Not exactly sure if you had a question, but hello nonetheless. Realize that 180 views does not equate to 180 independent people. There is also an introduction thread here where new people say hi and introduce themselves.
SMF features a powerful Package Manager, allowing you to quickly apply any of the hundreds of modifications in our database, as well as a variety of custom themes that change the way your site looks.
Real name John, 59, and returning to studying and practising the piano after about 40 years. It was one of those curious twists life throws at us now and then.
We gradually decided it would be good to have more space, but it had too much sentimental value to let go of easily. Long story slightly shorter, it ended up in the hallway, with the idea that I'd see if I played it - if not, we'd get rid. This was after asking all the family, especially my sister, if they wanted it, but they were too far away or had electronic keyboards, or also didn't have room. I was making enquiries whether it was worth thirty quid to anyone able to shift the enormous weight or if I'd have to give it away, even pay to have it removed...scrapped!?
I guess life would have gone on without it, but I'm so glad it's still there. I asked my sister what the gorgeous, sombre piece was I remember her and Mum both struggling over parts of and described it - the answer came back, Chopin Prelude in E-minor - and she sent a book of Chopin with that in. So I'm learning again.
My great love is baroque, particularly Bach, and I'm working on a few Bach pieces too (from a book called Bach Gold or just downloaded stuff). The awkwardness I felt about disturbing people is gone, since there's now another internal wall between us!
As well as the Chopin, I'm learning Bach's Prelude in C, Prelude in C-minor, Two-Part Invention Nos.1, 4 and 8, and a simplified version of the Largo from Concerto for Two Violins (most of the counterpoint is missing, which I'm thinking of adding some of myself in time). I toyed with Beethoven's you-know-what sonata, but might hold off until I can handle C#minor more comfortably - again, it's a great temptation to fail to read it.
Anyway, my other fault is blathering on endlessly, so I better stop. This looked like a really nice friendly forum and I was glad to see so much helpful advice, uploaded videos and mp3s, and no advertising.
It is not such an uncommon situation. I have taught a number of people who had been busy raising their family and/or working hard at their job and only after their nest is empty or retirement comes do they decide they might take up piano once more and other hobbies they didn't have time for previously.
I feel your situation when it comes to others listening in on your practice sessions.
That is a lot of work can you manage it? How long would it take you to play all of these from start to finish? It is generally a good idea not to set yourself up with a mountain of work until your practice method is strong or at least you should be working with music you can efficiently solve.
It has quietened down considerably over the years but you still can get some good responses especially from the long term members who all have a lot of experience and knowledge to share.
I think I have a double-whammy of this though. When I play something well, I start worrying that people can hear it and are judging me as a show-off. I can't win either way, either I'm rubbish and driving them nuts with my repeated bum notes and should give up or I think far too much of myself!
I try to keep a balance between too much and too little.
I've put some of those on hold for now (inventions 4 & 8 and the Two Violins thing), but I get too bored if I keep coming back to practise the same pieces.
One big weakness is my reading, so I need a good dose of new material, and I learn more that way.
We've had discussion about showing off, https://www.pianostreet.com/smf/index.php?topic=38790
What do you mean?
Think about hundreds of pieces a month and you will be on a good track for your sight reading training.
Me too. There are a couple of things that have helped. Try having a look at this video from Josh Wright. The basic idea is to work on reading very slowly without allowing yourself to look at your hands, so that you get a physical feel of where and how far apart the notes are on the keyboard. It's frustrating at first, but it really really helps. I saw a noticeable improvement in just a couple of weeks of doing it 20 minutes a day.
I'm guessing that you, like me, are not looking to sight read chamber music at tempo from scratch to play with others, but simply to get to a point where you can learn pieces faster because the first stage of decoding everything is quicker. For that, these two resources I mentioned have been very helpful.
(about the balance between too many pieces and too few)...Just so we're clear, I'm talking about pieces I want to learn and reckon I can do, rather than ones I use as reading practice, which might be just about anything.
I'm spreading my time thinly, possibly going to confuse myself more, and less likely to ever finish anything. If I have too few, there's a danger I get bored, because I work on the same piece more often.
Blimey, that's a lot. Hundreds, plural. So you're talking about maybe six pieces a day! Presumably not different ones each time!
Sight reading practice predominantly is done with pieces much easier than your playing capabilities. This is because there is usually a wide gap between the two for the vast majority of pianists. You can study sight reading with very difficult works but you would apply some constraints to it such as making the tempo extremely slow, neglecting rhythm etc.
Yes if you play very few pieces and stick to those for an extended period of time it will get rather boring. That is why learning pieces which you can complete quickly is a good idea.It seems like a lot if your idea of what consitutes a piece is not thinking small enough. For example you could go through this set: https://michaelkravchuk.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/354-Reading-Exercises-in-C-Position-Full-Score.pdf Of course if this kind of level is far too easy for you look for harder material but doing things which are too easy successfully is far better than struggling through works which are too difficult and this is especially true with sight reading.