Week 4 – Play Through & Share
Welcome to Week 4 of the Romantic Music Challenge.
This week is about letting go of the microscope and trusting the arc you’ve built. You’ve worked through notes, texture, and character. Now it’s time to experience the piece as a whole.
This week, your goal is to play through your piece—or your chosen section—as a complete musical thought.
Practice Prompts
Choose one or two and explore:
- Play through without stopping, even if something goes wrong
- Decide where the emotional high point of the piece lives
- Notice where your attention drifts, and gently bring it back to the narrative
- Imagine you’re performing for one specific listener
Sharing for This Week
When you’re ready, share a recording of your full piece or selected section. Audio or video is welcome.
We’ll begin compiling submissions for our Romantic Watch Party on February 13, where we’ll listen together and celebrate everyone’s work.
Press record, play it through, and let it be what it is!
60 replies
-
So here's my recording of Rach, op.33 no.3, from his Etudes Tableaux:
Looking forward to hearing everyone else.
-
Hi Dominic, hello everyone, I finally managed to record my video without too many jams; it was a really big challenge for me, as I kept getting too excited with every recording attempt... I thank the teachers who from time to time with great care and expertise have accompanied us during these weeks, which have been truly exciting and constructive🤩; it has been an honor and a great privilege to be yours.❤️
I embrace you and thank you all from the bottom of my heart.🎉 -
Here is my interpretation of the Brahms Intermezzo Op. 118 No. 2. I was really pleased I made it ALMOST all the way through on a single recording. But then I hit some wrong notes, but I kept going. I was going to try to re-record it without that mistake, but since Dominic said to "Play through without stopping, even if something goes wrong," I decided to post it anyway. The BIG DEAL is that I kept playing after the noticeable mistake. I didn't scream, I didn't cry, I didn't melt into a quivering pile of nerves, I kept going. For me, that's a big deal.
So now I hope you can ignore all the above silliness and enjoy most of the piece.
(Note to Dominic: I prefer a slow tempo for this piece so it's about 6 minutes and change. Please feel free to cut it short for the Watch Party).
-
I have been working on memorizing the sections of the Nocturne in F# and settling on a tempo. Here is a video of one of my run throughs today from memory of the opening section.
-
Thanks Dominic! Good advice to sit down, play and record. Chopin part od op. 61 - 1:34min. https://youtube.com/shorts/8pmqvwj-yVo?si=76qF8CBSTzhn8Z94