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New Year's Resolutions 2025
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New Year’s Resolutions 2025: Let’s Make This Year Musical!
Happy New Year, tonebase pianists! As we kick off 2025, it’s the perfect time to reflect, dream, and set new goals for our piano journey. Whether you're aiming to master a challenging piece, tackle scales with more precision, or simply find more joy in daily practice, we’d love to hear your resolutions!
Here are some ideas to spark inspiration:
Learn a dream piece you’ve always wanted to play
Improve sight-reading or ear-training skills
Dedicate time to consistent daily practice (even 15 minutes counts!)
Record and share more of your playing with our supportive community
Share your goals in the comments below and let’s keep each other motivated throughout the year. Together, we can make 2025 our most musical year yet!
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It's inspiring to see what others have posted!
My rep goals:
- polish up Chopin's Ballade no 1 and record it 'live' with no edits
- complete learning Ballade no 3 to final tempo, polish and record it
- assemble Ballade No 2 and play through at whatever tempo I can sustain
- Get Ravel's Sonatine out of mothballs 35 years after learning it
- Address my Debussy deficiency starting with Claire de Lune
- Gershwin! (Any smaller pieces, Rhapsody in Blue will wait for some other year.)
- Bach French Suite no 5
- something by a still-breathing composer - I'm open to suggestions.
I'm starting up with an in person teacher this month. I was 20 the last time I had one. I feel like I'm going on a first date again in my 50s!
Personal goals: Run and cycle again, get back to reading poetry, and do more writing. And get back to Adamant!
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Looking forward to this year, pianowise and beyond. I have a lot to improve on, mainly memory, music theory, practice habits and technique.
The one piece I want to have learnt and best case memorized is Mozart‘s Fantasie & Sonata c-minor KV 475/457.
Personally, I hope to brush up on my French and Polish and spend lots of quality time with my kids.
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MAYBE RESURRECT:
Ravel - Ondine
Chopin - Polonaise-Fantasie; Ballades 1 and 4; B minor Sonata, last movement; C# minor Etude Opus 10 #4
Beethoven - Sonatas, Opus 54; Opus 101
Brahms - Various Intermezzi and Capriccios
Debussy - L'isle joyeuse
FINISH LEARNING:
Gershwin arrangement of "Someone to Watch Over Me" (notated from his wild 1926 radio performance)
Oscar Peterson arrangement of "Georgia on My Mind"
Rachmaninoff transcription of Minuet from Bizet's "Arlesienne Suite"
CONTEMPLATE LEARNING:
Chopin - Etude in C major, Opus 10 #1 (impossibly difficult but I'm inspired by a couple of 11/24 NYC Tonebase sessions where two co-participants played it really well)
Debussy - Pour le piano
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No, new year resolutions, but framing it as time to embark on new adventures in my joy of learning new things. I love playing the piano for my own enjoyment, but knew it was time to refresh and challenge myself. I have taken myself out of my comfort zone and sign up for the below.
I just started the Tonebase 90 Day Technique Tune up program for piano. My coach is awesome. Even though I am only on day 3 of this process I am seeing improvement. I am working first on the fingering. I have ordered an adjustable hydraulic piano bench. It is observed I am not high enough. The piece that I am working on is Clara Schumann Four Fugitive Piece, Op. 15, No 1 Larghetto, and my coach has added Bach Prelude and Fugue No 2 in C Minor BWV 847. Not sure I will ever play the Bach piece so fast, but if I learn it enough to enjoy that is fine.
I plan on not just practicing, but to play other music just for fun!
My motto is to enjoy life as every day is a gift, and music makes it even better!
Happy New Year everyone.
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Happy New year to all!
My goals for 2025:
- Polish and maintain Chopin Scherzo No. 1, Chopin Etudes Op. 10 Nos. 1 and 5, and Chopin Nocturne Op. 72 No. 1
- Finish Rachmaninoff Prelude in C# minor and Chopin Etude Op. 10 No. 9
- Add more Baroque and Classical works to my repertoire (or just anything that isn’t Chopin
… but that’s hard because who doesn’t like Chopin?!)
- Improve technique, particularity in terms of even notes and more accurate articulations
- Set minimum practice time of two hours and have two piano lessons a week instead of just one
- Work on performance anxiety and remember that when I perform I’m not playing what I think the audience “wants” to hear, but rather what I genuinely feel like expressing
- Maybe: give a formal public recital, and, after that, learn a chamber piece (!!!)