I've just been reunited with my piano after three months of not playing. I'm working on two pieces and doing a little dabbling in two others.
1. Bach's Sinfonia #9. I've mostly avoided Bach, but I'm wanting to develop my contrapuntal playing, first with a few Sinfonias, and next year or sooner with the WTC, depending on my progress. I really have to work out fingering in Bach.
2. Emile-Robert Blanchet (a pupil of Busoni), Etude 1 from Treize Etudes Pour la Main Gauche. My left hand is much better than my right, and I'm fascinated by left hand repertoire. I want to learn a selection of these or maybe the whole set, because they're easier than a lot of the repertoire--I'm kind of taking a stepping stone approach. This is an etude of thirds with accompaniment, but it's a bit of a finger twister, with double finger crosses for the thirds (fingered 23, 14) while the fifth finger plays a slower accompaniment figure. Written nonlegato, I'm practicing the piece staccato and focusing on articulation--once the basic choreography is down, the piece isn't challenging, but making it sound good is more difficult.
Things I'm working on a little bit at a time:
1. Mozart K545 first movement. This is sort of where my right hand is technique wise right now. I'm really working on refinement and attention to detail with this one, controlling the tone. There are really only a couple trouble spots, but it's hard to be enthusiastic about this piece, because unless it is played with finesse and understanding, it loses all its interest, and I'm not making it elegant just yet.
2. Scriabin Op. 11 C minor Prelude (20?). I've played about 8 preludes from this set in the past--it's a bit of a push piece though. I've never really worked on right handed octaves, so I'm just learning a couple bars at a time, in no rush. I played hands separate last night, but the trick will be negotiating jumps in the left hand while not losing track of the right.