Week 3: Keep the Momentum
By now, the challenge is getting real!
You’ve chosen your piece, spent time with it, and hopefully started to hear it take shape. But this is also the point where things can get hard. The easy excitement of beginning fades a little, and you’re left with the more important part: staying with it.
That’s what Week 3 is about.
Not perfection. Not having everything solved. Just continuing, even when the going gets tough.
Maybe you’ve hit a section that still won’t settle. Maybe progress feels slower than you hoped. Maybe you’re realizing how much more there is to do. That’s normal. In fact, it’s part of the process. This is often the exact moment when real growth happens, if you just keep showing up!
This week, the goal is simple: keep the moving forward!
Even a small step matters:
- one passage a little steadier
- one phrase a little freer
- one practice session where you stayed patient
- one moment where the music started to sound as you like
That is momentum.
This week, share where you are right now:
- a short clip from your practice
- a passage that’s improving
- a place where you’re still stuck
- or a few thoughts on what it’s been like to stay with the piece
And if you need, share what might be frustrating you, too.
We are all in this together.
Week 4 will be about recording. This week is about building the resilience to get there.
Keep going. Stay with it. You may be closer than you think.
167 replies
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My update for the week is that I have no update! I had to travel for work and didn’t touch the piano for the week. I just flew back home today and now have to play a part of Rach 2 in a masterclass tomorrow so I gotta clean that one up 😬 That piece is also an unfinished business situation…
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Hello! I've been quiet since the 1st week! Congrats to all of you on your progress, i've been enjoying the recordings. This is a way-too-late-tree-fell-in-a-forest-but-i-should-still-conclude update:
I worked on Beethoven Op 109, his 30th piano sonata in E major. I once fell in love with it and would think, ah, someday i'll really work on this, but those were the lazy days. This time it was a joy to practice and work out transitions daily. It was also helpful to listen to a few performances - Uchida, Ashkenazy, Barenboim. It's been so gratifying to ACTUALLY study this piece, especially given the clear room for improvement in dynamics and precise, sensitive pedaling. I've yet to achieve consistent fluidity and cohesion on a playthrough as well as allow every detail to be part of something larger, and I wouldn't deem my playing passable for the most famous section - the late, extended trills - but I'm so happy about where I've gotten. Glad I joined you all, even if silently!