In my journey through the Learn New Repertoire Faster Challenge at Piano with Rebecca B , I’ve reached Day 10 of Jonny May’s stride arrangement of Ode to Joy . Each day of the challenge has a particular topic, and today’s topic is chunking (focusing on small chunks of just one or two measures). This is a regular practice technique for me, and I’ve been using it a lot lately. Day 10 Today I continued with Batch 3 (measures 48–59) and reintroduced Batch 2 (measures 24–31 and 40–47) into the rotation. I started this morning with Batch 2. My chunking work consisted of 4-minute sessions on 1- or 2-measure sections before moving to the next one for another four minutes. I rotated through four different chunks, hitting each one twice, for a total of about 35 minutes. I was pleased to find I retained most of what I worked on last week. I did need to clean up a few spots, including the one where I had changed the fingering. It turns out the original works better, so I h...
Well… I had a major piano development last weekend and somehow didn’t write about it. I PLAYED BACH'S C MAJOR PRELUDE (BWV 846) IN ALL 12 KEYS! Folks, I transposed this baby. No sheet music, no written progressions, no lead sheet. Just what’s been settling into my brain over the past couple of weeks. I’d been experimenting with transposing it here and there, but the switch flipped sometime Saturday evening. I played it from memory in C, then transposed to G. Then F. Then B♭. Then E♭. Those went pretty smoothly, since I've tried transposing to those keys before. But then, at some point, I thought, “What about A♭?” So I tried it ... and it wasn't hard. So I moved on to D♭. Then G♭ (not exactly a friendly key). Still worked. Then B (even less friendly). A few stumbles, but I made it through. Then E, A, and D ... and they felt easy. Then G, then C ... full circle! I was in a serious flow state. Part of it was the prelude itself—I could listen to it all day—but a bigger part was...