Week 2: First Steps

Week 2: First Steps

You’ve chosen your piece. Now the real work begins.

This week is all about getting into the music without worrying about perfection yet. First impressions matter. The way a piece feels under your hands, the sounds you’re drawn to, the passages that already feel natural (or completely confusing) are all part of the process.

This is the stage where pieces often feel the most fragile. Things are slow, uneven, and uncertain. That’s normal.

For this week, we’d love for you to share:

  • Early practice clips
  • First impressions of the piece
  • Passages you’re struggling with
  • Musical moments you already love
  • Questions or discoveries from practice

A few ideas to focus on this week:

  • Finding a comfortable tempo
  • Experimenting with sound and tone
  • Discovering patterns in the music
  • Identifying one or two “problem spots”
  • Practicing smaller sections instead of full run-throughs

Looking forward to hearing everyone’s first steps into the music.

122 replies

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    • Noel_Nguyen
    • 5 days ago
    • Reported - view

    Friends, I feel bad about posting this, but this is all I have in terms of this week's horror show. The view is bad, only the left hand! but I think the audio is more important. You can see how chaotically I practice. And I did remove the parts with excessive repeating, for this is a horror show, not a tedium show, although I'm afraid it did end up being tedious nonetheless. I also removed small parts where I did obscene gestures that help me relax during practice.
    Those with a keen eye will see that I use the middle pedal at some point. Sorry to disappoint, but this is not for sostenuto! I actually completely changed the mechanism of the middle pedal on my acoustic piano (on which I intend to record the "final" product), into a mechanism that lifts the hammer rest rail in order to bring all hammers closer to the strings to create a lighter sound, a la 4th pedal on a Fazioli F308! I can tell you more about this later. However you cannot hear this on this practice instrument. In fact neither the middle nor left pedal work on this electronic piano (a Kawai ES920). I put the pedals there just to practice the foot motion, a la   aka the fastest feet on Tonebase.

    Oh and near the end a key of my Kawai stops functioning (something with the blue thingies inside), so I lost patience and briefly noodled a few notes from a certain new piece that I'm learning. Oh well. You have been warned!

      • Pediatrician
      • a_weymann
      • 3 days ago
      • Reported - view

       this is pretty amazing already and not nearly as horrifying as you are making it out to be! That big, full Rachmaninoff sound is all there, and it has crispness and clarity at the same time. It’s coming together! The “noodling” at the end, especially the bit of self-conscious hesitation right at the beginning of it, made me laugh out loud. 🤣 

      • Akzent oder Diminuendo? • Hanon/Herz student
      • Maria_F
      • 3 days ago
      • Reported - view

       I personally noticed that last year when I was out of the house for an extended period with no access to my piano and had to play a digital, it was a pretty different experience from playing the acoustic, and I missed my piano.

      I got my Seiler a few months after the remodeling was finished, because the old piano was pretty out-of-tune and rehabilitating it was going to be expensive, and because I was planning to upgrade at some point anyway we just decided to upgrade then. My playing improved quite a bit when I switched from the digital to the Seiler.

      Anyway, I do not believe that they are interchangeable. I actually had the unhappy realization while testing pianos (more specifically, when I played a Bösendorfer 225) that my unresponsive Yamaha digital had caused me to build bad habits such as "threshing" and etc.

       said: 

      Guess who agrees with me on this?  Just only every great composer from the past!  Ha ha.  Including this guy....

      And including this composer!

      • hot4euterpe
      • 3 days ago
      • Reported - view

       No need to feel bad! Any effort to share your work at the piano is definitely appreciated and respected. I must admit, I do not know Rachmaninov's piano sonatas very well at all but I enjoyed listening to your different fragments here. You really get an impressive sound out of that digital piano. Thanks for sharing Noel; looking forward to hearing more =)

      • Noel_Nguyen
      • 3 days ago
      • Reported - view

        Thanks Dustin! Rachmaninoff's sonatas are underappreciated works, perhaps even by the composer himself. It's too bad he didn't record his renditions of them!

      • Noel_Nguyen
      • 3 days ago
      • Reported - view

           Friends, thanks again for your kind words! And just so you know, my feeling bad about posting the video was mostly because of the bad view, and not some false modesty! I know it's coming along fairly nicely, thanks to the extra motivation I get from this community!

    • Ken_Radford
    • 4 days ago
    • Reported - view

    Working through Heartland a few bars at a time. Here are bars 49 to 76.

    • Pianist, composer and piano teacher
    • Sindre_Skarelven
    • 4 days ago
    • Reported - view

    Here's my week 2 post. Now I think it's time to step up! Goal for next week will be to learn the whole thing, so the last week can be mainly about nailing those fast passages, and then hopefully we get something presentable for the watch party. 

      • TT2022
      • 4 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Loooove! So contemplative and artfully done in a wonderful contrast to the fiery part. You have such a wide repertoire, I'm so impressed with how you're learning this on top of all your numerous other pieces! 

      • vbashyam
      • 4 days ago
      • Reported - view

       So beautiful already! This is the last of the 4 Ballades for you right? 

      • Pianist, composer and piano teacher
      • Sindre_Skarelven
      • 3 days ago
      • Reported - view

        Thanks, Tammy and Vidhya! 
      Yes, this is the last of the four ballads to learn properly! Then comes the job of refreshing them all, and eventually practice as a set.  

      • Have a growth mindset, no matter what!
      • Gail_Starr
      • 3 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Someday I want to have the confidence to play from memory like you do!  Great job, mon ami!

      • hot4euterpe
      • 3 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Great work so far Sindre! I like that you prioritize calm movement and control, even with the severe swings of character and figuration that this Ballade has. Also, impressive memorization!

      • Pianist, composer and piano teacher
      • Sindre_Skarelven
      • 2 days ago
      • Reported - view

        Thanks so much, Gail and Dustin!

    • Philippa.1
    • 4 days ago
    • Reported - view

    Here is a run through of the Waltz in E major by Moszkowski. I find it a challenge to play through the entire piece due to the technical challenges and also the musical requirements. This week I am working on the entire piece as well as drilling smaller sections.

      • Ken_Radford
      • 4 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Philippa, your playing is sublime! You have everything a classical pianist should have.
      It does stimulate a question that has been bothering me for some time, and I will consider this question very carefully before I present it for consideration. Onwards and upwards.

      • Philippa.1
      • 3 days ago
      • Reported - view

      Thank you for your kind words, Ken

      • hot4euterpe
      • 3 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Great work on this Philippa =) Very engaging sound and you navigate it so well already. Judging from your space, you appear to be a fellow piano instructor. If so, I know how hard it can be to find time for our own playing amidst all the teaching. Thank you for sharing - I really enjoy listening to your selections!

      • Philippa.1
      • 3 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Thank you Dustin...you are correct :-) I teach and practice time is a challenge every day. I am glad you understand. 

      • Mark_Cooper
      • 3 days ago
      • Reported - view

       wonderful rendition Philippa, i wasn’t familiar with this piece but what fun it must be to play 

      btw your music room looks fantastic, looks like a pianist’s paradise !

      • Have a growth mindset, no matter what!
      • Gail_Starr
      • 3 days ago
      • Reported - view

       I can't believe I didn't know about this piece before you shared this video.  Thanks a million!

      • Philippa.1
      • 2 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Thank you Mark. Yes, we have large piano ensemble where everyone gets a chance to play :-)

      • Philippa.1
      • 2 days ago
      • Reported - view

      Thank you Gail

    • TT2022
    • 4 days ago
    • Reported - view

    This week, I practised the LH jumps, one hand only, to get more used to the movement patterns. I also did slow, staccato, metronomic practice on other tough passages outside of the Barcarolle. This was the biggest challenge for me — dividing my time between different priorities both including and outside of the Barcarolle! 

    Something interesting — I wasn't able to stay exactly on the metronomic beat 100% of the time, and did not realize how and where exactly until when I watched the video! It was hard to self-diagnose while playing.   

    Here are two short practice videos from this week. 

      • vbashyam
      • 4 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Nice systematic practice methods! I need to do all of the above!

      • hot4euterpe
      • 3 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Great economy of motion in your LH! Your lateral wrist movement is hypnotizing. 😶

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