NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTIONS!
Happy New Year to the whole tonebase Piano community!
As much we may love the piano, it’s not so easy to set goals and stay committed to realizing them over the course of a year… at least, it’s not so easy to do this alone, which is how I often try (and fail) to undertake such goals.
That’s why I’ve created this thread. Here is a place for anyone and everyone in the tonebase community to come up with your individual piano-related New Year’s resolutions and support each other in our efforts to realize them.
PARTICIPATION
- Make a post below to announce your piano-goals for the new year,
- over the coming days, weeks, and months, use the sub-thread of your own post to keep us all updated us on your progress (videos encouraged!)
- and in the meantime, scroll through to read each other’s resolutions and click “reply” to offer advice or words of encouragement.
RULES
- Please try to keep conversations within sub-threads, and only make a single new post to share your resolutions. This will help keep the mega-thread clean so we can navigate more easily and check in on each other.
- Keep in mind that there are people of all ages and ability levels in the tonebase community, so if you’re one of the more advanced ones don’t gloat about it, and if you’re a novice don’t be shy.
- If you don’t want to share your goals, you’re still welcome to comment on other members’ thread.
SEE MORE SEYMOUR
- Watch the inspiring new video from Seymour Bernstein (see below) where he gives new year's advice to pianists from all walks of life. And, if you ever feel discouraged or stuck, this video is always there for you!
MY RESOLUTIONS
- I will go first! I’m supposed to play Rachmaninoff’s 2nd Concerto (henceforth: “Rach 2”) with an orchestra in the fall. I’m usually a terrible procrastinator with learning new music, so my resolutions will try to counteract that:
- I resolve to give a beautiful, original, and confident performance of Rach 2 this coming fall!
- I resolve to have the full piece learned by the summer, with the 1st movement memorized and in my fingers by February 1, the 2nd movement by April 1 (Rach’s birthday), and the 3rd movement by June 1.
- To get there, I resolve to practice the piece a minimum of 30 minutes every weekday, and 2 hours each on Saturday and Sunday.
- Finally, I commit to mindful practice, enjoying playing the piece slowly and carefully (it’s sounds great slow), and always listening.
NOW IT’S YOUR TURN! LET'S GO!
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As your enthusiasm is contagious, I am going to write my New Year's resolution: to learn and play in a dignified way (you know, from today an entire year seems to be a very long time to do it; but I think I'm fooling myself a bit...):
Chopin's Ballad nº 1 in G minor op. 23!!!
Well, the resolution is already formulated (Alea jacta est...)
And to find help and comfort, I will read at the same time Alan Rusbridger's book: "Play it Again. An Amateur Against the Impossible" (387 pages, where he, journalist of The Guardian, tells us his own one-year adventure with this wonderful piece).
Of course, besides this I will learn and play a lot of other pieces inspired by Tonebase activities and the encouragement of Tonebase piano friends.
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Happy 2023, dear piano friends!
Since my favorite part of playing the piano is playing WITH other musicians, I’ll just keep that theme going:
1) Re-launch our “Goldberg” challenge with our lovely Saturday Zoom members and edit and post a compilation video once we are ready
2) Host a chamber music Soiree in my home and hopefully locate a high-quality cellist to form an amateur trio (I had a trio in ATL before I moved to FL, so I have a few nice trios already “in my fingers).
3) Ask the conductor of the Baroque orchestra I play with if he might consider having me do a Bach concerto?
4) Complete the Mozart Sonata I started as part of Orli’s class and do at least one Chopin Etude from Hanry’s class
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First I want to summarize my first year piano progress with a private teacher: I'm now on G#minor (COF clock-wise), and 16 small pieces of music (Burgmuller op100, Bach littles preludes, Schumann Album for the Young, William Gillock and 1 Clementi Sonatina). My goals in 2023 are:
1. be more patient and self-accepting that we are not perfect players and enjoy the learning process.
2. be more mindful and strategic in practice. I want to learn more Bach and more romantic pieces
3. Play often for people and overcome the nerves. Attend TB community concert as much as possible.
4. more sight reading of easier pieces.