Ching’s Piano Adventures
I was inspired to return to the piano 4 years ago after hearing a 93 year old lady (Patricia) play Schumann’s Arabeske. It was the first time I heard this beautiful piece for the first time and her sensitive touch despite her frail frame just floored me. I couldn’t wait to get my hands on a score and start playing it. Since then I couldn’t stop playing the piano several hours a day (after 20 yrs hardly touching it) and have learnt to overcome technical challenges and play at a level I never thought possible. Such is life’s surprise, and never too late!
During Covid I set the goal of doing a Diploma exam as a way of motivating myself to play pieces I love at a decent level.
- Scarlatti sonata k 426 + k 427
- Mozart Rondo K 511
- Czerny variations on a Theme by Rode Op 33
- Verdi/Liszt Rigoletto Concert Paraphrase
- Debussy Pagodes from Estampes
- Falla - Spanish Dance no 1 from La Vida Breve
I might have bitten off more than I could chew - as half of this are quite virtuosic in some way. But after 8 months I’m getting somewhere and hope to share some of this with you.
Ching
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I’m taking a break, wisely or unwisely, from my diploma pieces the last 2 weeks to return to some pieces I have left off for a while. This includes the Schubert/Liszt Gretchen am Spinnrade which I started after feeling I’ve accomplished something with Widmung. I love Liszt’s transcriptions which also explains why his Rigoletto Concert Paraphrase is in my exam programme.
Not sure I’ll be able to hone Gretchen am Spinnrade to a decent level. The main challenges are 1) maintaining the song/voice in the RH which also carries the constant spinning of the wheel2) overall evenness of the spinning notes and maintaining a perpetual motion
3) Tricky sections that require some finger gymnastics, but possibly manageable with redistribution and reducing some notes
Here is a work in progress…Don’t think I can get it to a level for the community concert, but will try to submit for a masterclass.
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Back to focussing on my exam programme after Schubert. I’m 80%-90% there in terms of preparation, still some technically challenging passages I’d need to master. The exam involves submitting a video of the pieces in 1 take, I have no idea how to play/manage a 40 min programme without too many slips…Maybe Hilda will have some tips! My intention is to keep practising until I can play it all effortlessly, before I record for the exam.
In the meantime, here is the beginning of Czerny’s Variations on a Theme by Rode. I first heard this in Melvyn Tan’s performance in the Uk and fell in love with it, and it so happened to be in the diploma syllabus. It seems it was Horowitz who rescued this piece from obscurity by recording it, and one can’t say Czerny is boring after this!
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It's been a long time. Have been practising but have not recorded much, which is a mistake. Now I'm realising how much I could have progressed if I've listened back on myself more often. Here is a run through of Falla's Spanish Dance no 1. There are still certain passages whose difficulty i can't still seem to overcome which is very frustrating. But here goes...