iternabe
Great playing of the "Andante" so far. Interesting video showing 2 camera angles... the top as the audience would see it and the bottom to show the finger sequences in real time.
The only comment is keep the LH light to let the melody come through. It's probably the first piece you're playing that is the original by the composer than a version arranged for easy piano in an Alfred's or Faber Adult piano book. As your teacher said the first "real" piece of music.
I'm re-learning a set of pieces that I discovered a few years earlier. In the "First Lessons in Bach" book is the "Bourrée" from the Lute Suite #1 in Em which many students would perform. It's a keyboard piece from a suite. I was curious what the other movements sound like starting from the Prelude and then Alemande, Courante, Sarabande and after the Bourrée comes the Gigue. After doing an online search, found that the 4 Lute Suites are commonly performed as guitar arrangements than piano (keyboard) pieces like the 6 English & French Suites. Today few people play lute so guitar is a convenient substitute.
The reason the pieces are labelled as "Lute Suites" because many of the melody notes are in the bass than in the treble sounding like a lute. The other possibility is an old harpsichord made to sound like a lute.
Right now I'm doing the "Gigue" from Suite #1 (BWV996). Just finished learning the top part and made a recording. I like the piece with note runs alternating between the LH & RH. Like other typical Bach pieces you can hear melodic lines on both hands. I'm sure the piece can be played at a faster tempo. Connected the portable (travel) keyboard to a computer and used Pianoteq 8 for a Classical Guitar sound. I do practice the Bourrée occasionally but the Gigue not for a while.