There are two concerto competitions coming up in January and February that I would like to play in. I have fallen deeply in love with Rachmaninoff’s Concerto no. 1 in F-sharp minor. I think about it all the time, I finger it on every flat surface everywhere, and I even dream about performing it.
HOWEVER, my piano teacher would like me to play Schumann’s Piano Concerto in A minor instead, because:
1. HAND SIZE. My left hand can now reach a ninth, and my right hand can just reach an octave. However, in Rachmaninoff’s First Concerto, there is rarely anything past an octave for the R.H. (though there are several octave chords)--I’m hoping that my right hand will stretch with practice.
2. I have never really played any pieces of Rachmaninoff before (unless you count “Polichinelle”). My teacher compares this to jumping in a pool of ice water from a diving board.
3. I go to a very rigorous high school, and may/will not have much time to practice during the school months before competition. Could this equal disaster?
4. Schumann is a beautiful concerto…and it’s a little easier.
I have a copy of the Rachmaninoff, and have been sightreading/playing sections of it without too much difficulty (including the cadenza). But is this feeling “false,” i.e., will I melt down with the stress, pressure, and unfamiliar piano of performance?
I feel this music very deeply, and everyone who has ever judged me has been in awe of my overall technique and musicality. I have won a concerto competition before, playing Mozart.
Other little considerations: I have heard that Rach’s first concerto does not have a “memorable” enough melody/theme. Is this important to note? Also, is Schumann the type of concerto that can win competitions and compete against equally-well played Tchaikovsky, Liszt, Saint-Saens, Rach…?
Feel free to suggest any other concertos that are “competition-worthy.” Thank you all in advance.