Let's not forget that ARCT isn't the highest you can go with piano!
Maybe some of the pieces you are looking for are on the Licentiate or Fellowship exams......
And who says no one in RCM is playing concertos etc... I played a Concerto with my piano duet partner (and friend) and they even have competitions you can compete in around here!
And, Examinations should be only solo performers. If you want someone to mark your concerto, go to a competition!
You are missing my point completely, other than your comment about Licentiate or Fellowship exams. I never said that no one in the RCM is playing concertos, I merely said that it should be a requirement, because not ALL of the ARCT level RCM students are playing concertos. Furthermore, it is completely absurd that examinations should only be for solo performers. In almost every competition I know of (at least the reputable ones) there is always a chamber music requirement, during which ONLY the soloist is judged. Chamber music is such an important part of playing the piano...there is simply no way around it.
Now for lagin, I will elaborate on the technical requirements. What is missing are finger exercises that focus on particular problems. The best book I have ever come across is Dohnanyi's book of finger exercises. After studying the book for one year, and playing through all of the exercises, I could easily play any of the technical requirements on the ARCT exam. As long as you kno your key signatures, there isn't much to it. The sight-reading component was just lame...I had to sight read a movement from an relatively unknown Haydn sonata (not one of the difficult ones). OK, now for the real downer...ear training.
1) The only time signatures eligible are 2/4, 3/4, 6/8, 3/8. If you are playing any contemporary music, you're screwed if you can only do these.
2) Interval recognition is something I would expect to be mastered by at least grade 6. At the ARCT level, students should have to be able to identify every single note in a chord progression.
3) The melody playback is only in two voices...uhm sorry...but in th real world pieces usually have way more than two voices. After all, the purpose is to be able to transcribe or play by ear, no?
4) The harmonic progression does not modulate (uhm HELLO!), nor does it contain anything but diatonic chords (no chromaticism), and it doesn't include vii chords!!! The cadential 6/4 is the big thing that is stressed in these progressions, but that is such a simple sound to recognize.
5) What happened to atonal music? If you complete the ARCT, you have "mastered" music until 1900...the list of 20th century repertoire is hardly representative, and the ear training does not encourage this music.
6) The theory co-requisites are adequate.
Anyway, just my thoughts again.
- Andrew