Greetings from North Vancouver, BC
I am currently working on my Grade 10 repertoire and studying Grade 3 harmony for my Grade 9 RCM certificate.
Grade 10 Repertoire I have chosen is as follows;
Study No.8 - A Trifle, Op.2, No.12 by Anatol Lyadov
Study No.10 - Etude-tableau, Op.33, No.8 by Sergei Rachmaninov
List A - Prelude an Fugue in D major by Bach
List B - Sonata No.8 "Pathetique", Op.13, Movements 1 & 2 by Beethoven
List C - Nocturne in Bb minor, Op.9, No.1 by Chopin
List D - Claire de lune by Debussy
List E - Plainte calme by Olivier Messiaen
I did my first piano exam (Grade 8 ) ever in 2000 when I was 49 years old and my Grade 9 piano exam in 2002 at 51.
This was accomplished after starting to play the piano again in 1995 after a 20+ year hiatus from playing. I started formal lessons for the first time in my life 3 years later in 1998 (took lessons though as a kid from my mother).
Needless to say, it was tough when I started, not so much the Grade 8 pieces but, all the technical stuff that I never really studied seriously. I did play on my on through high school and into University, but never scales.
Anyway, I guess the reason I'm mentioning this is that anyone, no matter what age they are, can do their piano exams if they put their mind to it.
The only problem now is having the time to practice while working full time and raising teenage daughters. I do find that at the Grade 10 level, I need to be practicing a lot more than the 30 hours a month I managed to do through Grade 8 & 9 and still get first class honours and honours respectively.
I will be able to retire in 2 years, then it's full steam ahead on my Grade 10. I hope to have all the theory our of the way by the time I do the Grade 10 exam.
My ultimate goal, (if I score high enough on the Grade 10 exam) is to do the Performers ARCT. Hopefully before I'm 70. I only hope I get a geriatric (like me) piano examiner who thinks that the Fantasie-impromptu at half speed sounds fast enough!
Cheers
"allthumbs"