Sgisela I think youāre being hard on yourself!
Youāre probably rightā¦. The only thing I want to say to that is that one goal I have for performing is to not have a gap in playing where I come to a complete stand-still. In the recording I shared here, thereās one spot where thereās kind of a too-long pause, but thatās about it, itās barely noticeable. Iām ok with that.
But in the recordings that I didnāt share, there is one spot in each piece where I came to a complete stop, total silence. And itās long enough IMO to be awkward and a little bit uncomfortable ā certainly uncomfortable for me but also uncomfortable for the audience. IMO thatās worse than wrong notes. And that, coming to a complete stop, is something Iād like to be able to not have happen in future performances. To keep the music going.
I think thatās a good goal to have, and itās do-able ā unlike setting a goal like ādo a note-perfect performance,ā which is not only going to be unachievable but also isnāt an interesting goal in terms of musicality.
Sgisela I will venture to guess that delta between this performance and the you were really happy with may not have been as big as it currently feels.
This is a super interesting point and one that I hadnāt thought of!
With regard to the recording I posted here, Iām sure youāre right. Again the only thing Iāll add is, with regard to the times where I came to a compete stand-still, to me that is where the big difference comes from. That not having that āfreezeā moment makes a huge difference.
The other thing is that I think the real difference with my Thursday performance is something completely intangibleā¦ something outside of the realm of assessment or evaluation, something completely detached from questions like ādid I play the right notes, correct tempo, good dynamicsā or that sort of thing.
I think itās what we all hope for, why we even play piano in the first place, that intangible connection to music that is beyond anything we can express in words. And itās probably not something I could have captured on a recording even if I could have played that well with a recording going.
Iām just grateful to have been able to experience it, to have been able to create it, and to have been able to share it.
And at the risk of repeating myself, Iām really grateful that I was able to have that experience so quickly after the concert, because it really helped to dispel the lingering disappointment and helped to re-motivate me. š