Week 1: A New Hope

Starting on May 4th...

Welcome to the Unfinished Business Challenge — and the beginning of our four-week musical adventure!

Every great journey starts with a first step (and some hope!) This week is about choosing your piece: something you’ve always wanted to learn, something you started and left behind, or something unfinished that keeps calling you back.

This Week’s Mission

Choose one piece (or excerpt) to stay with throughout the challenge.

A few ideas:

  • A piece you’ve always meant to finish
  • Something abandoned years ago that deserves a second life
  • A new piece you’ve been waiting for the right moment to begin
  • A small excerpt from a larger dream piece

Big or small, all choices are welcome. What matters is that it feels like your unfinished business.

This Week, Share:

  • What piece did you choose?
  • Why this piece?
  • Is there a musical challenge or goal you hope to work through this month?

If you’d like, post a recording of where you’re starting from — even a rough first read. We’d love to hear it.

Over the next four weeks we’ll build momentum together!

 

334 replies

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    • May_t
    • 6 days ago
    • Reported - view

    I would like to finish learning Liebeslied (Widmung), by Schumann (arranged for piano by Liszt). I first listened to this piece in 2021 on YouTube during the recital by the winner of the 18th Chopin Competition. The performance inspired me to learn it. I started practicing but stopped as life got busy. Now that I have more free time, I would like to go back to this beautiful piece and finally play it through all the way.

    • Mom, fitness instructor, lover of music
    • Michelle_Russell
    • 6 days ago
    • Reported - view

    End of week one, I can actually play all the way through at a relatively steady, albeit devastatingly slow, pace reminiscent of a slow-motion scene in a horror movie (actually, I'm thinking of Austin Powers and the steam-roller....horror-ible in a different way). This is the first time I've ever played all the way through, and normally at this stage I'm still doing sections - which I will now go back to! One goal is to improve this tempo by the end of 4-weeks, improving from devastatingly slow to merely outrageously slow. Another side goal is to have it memorized.

    https://youtu.be/e1-iv3Ycljk

      • vbashyam
      • 6 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Great job getting through the whole piece so soon! I love slow practice too! 

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

       Slow practice can definitely be boring, but is also very helpful!

      When my teacher told me I was practicing way too quickly, and as a result, building bad muscle memory, she assigned me C major scales/formula patterns, Hanon Exercises, and hands-separate practice of the Wandererfantasie, all at 30, 40, and 50 BPM and at least 20 repetitions hands-together/12 hands-separately. I reluctantly followed her advice/assignments, and she was definitely correct. 

      • Mom, fitness instructor, lover of music
      • Michelle_Russell
      • 6 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Thanks, Vidhya. Slow practice and I get along quite well!

      • Mom, fitness instructor, lover of music
      • Michelle_Russell
      • 6 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Thanks. My teacher encourages me to move quickly as soon as possible, because I tend to linger in slow-practice-land. My son, on the other hand, is encouraged (same teacher) to SLOW DOWN his practicing. We are all such different creatures, aren't we?

      • hot4euterpe
      • 6 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Great work for week 1 Michelle! How's the tension you were mentioning in the other thread? In this second recording, you seem to be using your wrist more actively to support the outside of the hand and relaxing your thumb when not in use! =)

      • Mom, fitness instructor, lover of music
      • Michelle_Russell
      • 6 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Thanks, Dustin! The tension is much better. I spent considerable time working super slowly with the right hand, deliberately relaxing the thumb when it released the key. My forearm still gets tired if I spend too much time on this piece, but that will get better with time as I become accustomed to this constant movement. 

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

       I always found slow practice boring. My previous teacher always said that if I could play something quickly, than I should, but my current teacher pointed out that practicing too quickly reinforces bad technique, so now whenever I start a new piece/section/scale/drill, I have to practice at 30 BPM for at least 3 days before I can speed it up. 

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

       

       said:
      The tension is much better.

      My teacher said I had a tension problem (I did not think I actually did; my hands did not feel tense), but she said it resolved when I started sitting lower. My elbows were previously a bit above the keys; now I sit with them level with the keys) and further from the piano.  

      • Mom, fitness instructor, lover of music
      • Michelle_Russell
      • 5 days ago
      • Reported - view

       I typically only have tension of the bad variety when learning a new technique or just something new. Once I figure things out, I’m good. 

      • hot4euterpe
      • 5 days ago
      • Reported - view

       That's fantastic =) Your efforts are clearly getting results!

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

    Thank you for this challenge! I am working on the Waltz in E op34 by Moszkowski.  I started this piece some time ago and would like to work on being able to play the whole piece with confidence. I find this waltz challenging as it is long, intense and technically demanding. I love the different sections and images that are created throughout the piece.  

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

    Here is my "baseline video" - actually, there are six of them, but they are all very short. I did not record a baseline status of the entire movement because, as I had said initially, that's not what I practiced this week. Instead, I practiced the left hand only of the six sections that constitute the major hurdles of this movement. No one should feel compelled to listen to any of these videos; they are joyless practice recordings and mainly for my own use to document a starting point. If you do listen to them and hear odd breaks in the line of the figurations: yes, sometimes those are hesitations before finding the next note, but usually those are spots when a note would be played by the right hand. 

    https://vimeo.com/1191021599/a0b725a3ed?fl=ip&fe=ec

    https://vimeo.com/1191022142/6bd21e129c?fl=ip&fe=ec

    https://vimeo.com/1191022770/e61bafe6e0?fl=ip&fe=ec

    https://vimeo.com/1191023092/c223761c78?fl=ip&fe=ec

    https://vimeo.com/1191023649/4a685442f1?fl=ip&fe=ec

    https://vimeo.com/1191023896/58a407e4b1?fl=ip&fe=ec

      • Noel_Nguyen
      • 5 days ago
      • Reported - view

        Colossal work! 

      I don't think I have the moral fortitude that you have, to systematically practice hands separately. My hands feel so connected to each other that practicing hands separately would feel like practicing only the parts played by fingers 1-2-3 of a hand, then the parts played by 4-5! But it is without a doubt an excellent exercise, notably to reinforce memory, so bravo!

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

       thank you very much indeed. It is comforting to know that someone is listening to this who can appreciate the untold hours of work that have gone into these barely three minutes of music. These six sections are unspeakably difficult, and the movement in its entirety is one of the five, maybe even three hardest pieces I have ever played - which is saying something, coming from someone who has been playing the piano for 50 years. 

      • hot4euterpe
      • 5 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Great work! Your commitment to your systematic plan is paying off; your segments are consistent in facility and your lateral movement is already quite efficient for week 1. You have your music up but seem to have the passagework mostly memorized with the way you move? (If so that is also impressive!) A great approach to this challenging piece. I look forward to hearing your next steps on this =)

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

       thank you so much, Dustin; you are very kind. Yes, I think much of it is memorized, just not consciously and reliably yet - that’s where I would love to be at the end of this month because that, of course, would be needed for a concert performance. Many pieces, even very difficult ones, can be performed while looking at the music, but this movement is not one of them. 

      • vbashyam
      • 5 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Love seeing how you tackle this complex piece! Sounds pretty cool- even just the left hand.

      • Mom, fitness instructor, lover of music
      • Michelle_Russell
      • 5 days ago
      • Reported - view

       I don't know this piece, but even just the LH alone looks super complex. I imagine even these sections took quite a bit of time just to work out! I'm impressed already!

      • Astrida_Gobina
      • 4 days ago
      • Reported - view

       I listened to Elia Cecino playing this in last Cliburn quarterfinals (?) and thought the music certainly has a magic magnetism that just traps and locks pianists until they digest everything and own it in their own ways. Because, looking at the score, it seems almost unplayable (to me). Congratulations and bonne courage!

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

       thank you; that’s a beautiful description. Elia Cecino’s performance was fantastic. Yes, that sonata certainly has an almost magical magnetism and is irresistibly seductive. 

      • TT2022
      • 4 days ago
      • Reported - view

       thank you for sharing the behind the scenes videos with all of us! It’s inspiring.  I’m particularly impressed with your discipline in working through it all sans pedal! 

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

       Great work with the left hand! Also love your clear strategy with learning this piece. Looking forward to hear how this one develops!  

    • bjarne
    • 4 days ago
    • Reported - view

    Tried been part of challenges before but never completed them. Want to change this now. Want to bring back a piece I tried for little over a year ago, Chopin Nocturne in C# minor. Have just started to relearn it, and going to use the new "tracks"-function.

    - Is there a musical challenge or goal you hope to work through this month?

    My biggest issue was to get the scale part smood enough. But want to try and relearn the whole piece. Should still be somewhat in my fingers if I spend some time with the piece.

Content aside

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