Back in January, I wrote about my modest plan for the first half of 2026. In a nutshell, I wanted to spend six months becoming less of a piece-collector and more of a musician: building fluency in stride, harmony, and lead sheets; developing a smaller number of creative projects; and maintaining just enough repertoire to keep sharing music with other people. And guess what. I did it. I did all these things. Excuse me while I pat my goal-oriented self on the back. I'm actually not very goal-oriented, but years of life experience have taught me that I'll never make progress if I don't set manageable goals. And I set manageable goals back in January. I started the year with no "list of pieces to learn." None at all. I did end up learning two pieces, both of them "core" courses in the Piano With Jonny ragtime/stride track: After You've Gone and Ode to Joy. I'm planning to play After You've Gone at the PWJ recital in June, and I expect to have Ode...
What does it feel like to learn music under deadline pressure, the way a working musician has to? Apparently, I have given myself the chance to find out. On Monday I did a dumb thing and signed up for the Piano With Jonny Student Recital on June 18. The problem: neither of my two potential recital pieces is quite ready. If the recital were July 18, I’d be able to take my pick. But it’s June 18, which means I have about four weeks. So here’s what I’m working with. After You’ve Gone I learned Jonny May’s stride arrangement of After You’ve Gone earlier this year, but the improv solo section was giving me headaches, so I set it aside. I picked it up again a few weeks ago and found I have renewed interest and something of a vision for what it can become. I could sit down and play the version I learned earlier for the recital right now — muddle through the improv section, play the simple stock outro I added a few days ago, and call it done. And that may indeed be what I play on June 18. But...