112 submissions
From Thurston book 3, this is etude number 12: on a variation from Tchaikowsky's Piano Trio.
This one was really fun, but difficult because it was so fast! I always enjoyed playing this kind of flowing arpeggio stuff.
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About the etude project:
I've been challenging myself to practice a different etude every day and prepare it to the best of my ability in one day. This has been very helpful, but I wanted to add an additional element of pressure/nervousness. So I started recording them to post here.
It's not a real performance- I usually AM playing with a metronome, and I usually record these in a couple of takes and put them together later. I'll try to do them in a single take when possible, but usually I'll break them up.
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Recorded on 4/17/2013.
This one was really fun, but difficult because it was so fast! I always enjoyed playing this kind of flowing arpeggio stuff.
_________________
About the etude project:
I've been challenging myself to practice a different etude every day and prepare it to the best of my ability in one day. This has been very helpful, but I wanted to add an additional element of pressure/nervousness. So I started recording them to post here.
It's not a real performance- I usually AM playing with a metronome, and I usually record these in a couple of takes and put them together later. I'll try to do them in a single take when possible, but usually I'll break them up.
_________________
Recorded on 4/17/2013.
Category Music / Classical
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 107 x 120px
File Size 1.08 MB
It's like a kid at the park constantly enjoying a slide, climbing up the ladder and then sliding down, over and over, because it never gets old.
Heh, it's alwaysannoying fun to switch from scales to arpeggios on the spot. The solo piece I'm working on has an animato section that has me constantly doing either scale runs or arpeggios. My fingers get stupid though at the speed I have to take it. XD
Heh, it's always
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