Theodore Servin Posted July 13, 2018 Posted July 13, 2018 (edited) The Etude-Tableau was written for the Moscow Conservatory's 2018 International Winter School, along with the Nocturne in C major, Op. 5, and the Romance in E major. This piece was the first piano piece I had written in over 2 years, and was also my first attempt at virtuoso piano writing. I brought it to the school as one of my piano performance pieces. I later recorded it at home, and this is the performance on Youtube. I hope you all enjoy it. 🙂 Theo Edited September 12, 2018 by Theodore Servin 2 Quote
Luis Hernández Posted July 15, 2018 Posted July 15, 2018 Very passionate. I would love to se the score, too. Quote
Theodore Servin Posted August 8, 2018 Author Posted August 8, 2018 Thank you, @eternum1968! I really appreciate it! All the best, Theo 🙂 1 Quote
Mark101 Posted August 8, 2018 Posted August 8, 2018 Another beautiful performance of a really accomplished piece, well done Theo. The Russian influence is extremely evident in your work and you pull it off very well. I would also love to see the score, do you not like to post them? Regards Mark Quote
Theodore Servin Posted August 8, 2018 Author Posted August 8, 2018 Hi, @Mark101! Thanks for commenting. Thank you for your feedback! I'm glad you like the piece and my performance. However, at this moment, I'm not ready to share the scores of my pieces. All the best, Theo 🙂 Quote
Carl Clausewitz Posted January 16, 2020 Posted January 16, 2020 Marvelous piece, could I have the sheet music? I am thinking of performing it on my musical school recital Quote
Theodore Servin Posted January 17, 2020 Author Posted January 17, 2020 @Carl Clausewitz I have just sent you the score. Please enjoy! Quote
PeterthePapercomPoser Posted September 28, 2020 Posted September 28, 2020 (edited) Wow - the style of this etude is very heavy and accented (pesante). Such heavy playing on the piano is not my favorite type of pianism and I wish that sometimes your virtuoso parts were more than mere arpeggiations. Although it does end very softly. It's very emotional and passionate but I wish you maybe varied the beat on which you place your biggest accents to give the listener some more variety in the loudest parts. Some of the softer parts remind me of one of the Rachmaninoff piano concertos (don't know which one by memory LoL - EDIT: it might actually have been a Rachmaninoff piece for two pianos that I heard a long time ago) - a few seconds after 2:30. Besides some of those complaints - it was quite a showy and enjoyable piece! Thanks for sharing. Do you know of the Stravinsky Etude in F#? It's one of my favorites. Edited September 28, 2020 by PaperComposer Quote
Theodore Servin Posted September 29, 2020 Author Posted September 29, 2020 (edited) @PaperComposer Thank you for commenting! I suppose I could have put a little more variety, in terms of texture and dynamics. As you could probably guess, I sort of modeled this piece after one of Rachmaninoff's Etudes-Tableux (which to me seemed inspired by an etude by Scriabin), which was also somewhat heavy in texture, so I guess that's one reason why the texture is like this. Otherwise, I'm glad you liked the piece! I don't know that piece you sent me; generally, I'm not crazy about Stravinsky's works, but I'll check this one out. Thanks for sending it to me! Edited September 30, 2020 by Theodore Servin 1 Quote
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