smallz Posted May 6, 2006 Posted May 6, 2006 I just finished playing the Arutunian Trumpet Concerto and I'm working on the Hindemith Trumpet Concerto. Quote
PianoBeast10489 Posted May 6, 2006 Posted May 6, 2006 I just finished learning the 1st movement of the Mendelssohn G minor Piano Concerto. I'm moving onto the second movement now. I'm working on a Bartok Rondo (No.1), Chopin - Nocturne No.13 in C minor, Beethoven Sonata No.5 in C minor (as a short piece to have ready in case something comes up short notice), and I can pick between a few Bach Preludes and Fugues to start learning... I'm not sure which one I want to learn yet though. Quote
Ravels Radical Rivalry Posted May 6, 2006 Posted May 6, 2006 Hey, Piano Beast - If you want to learn a Bach Fugue then you really ought to consider Fuga I A 4 Voci BWV 846. I think this is from the Well Tempered Clavier. I really do not know what the A 4 Voci and the BWV 846 mean. I think that the A 4 Voci is probably talking about 4 different voicings of the melody. I have no idea what the other is about. This is my favorite Bach Fugue. It would be great to learn though it is a little diffucult to keep the melodies alive. :D Quote
PianoBeast10489 Posted May 6, 2006 Posted May 6, 2006 BWV is categorizations for Bach... like WoO for Beethoven, K. for Mozart, and Hob. for Haydn. Quote
Hallaballa Posted May 9, 2006 Posted May 9, 2006 I have played piano for about a year, and i'm learning Beethovens Grande Sonate Pathetique. Quote
J.Br. Posted May 12, 2006 Posted May 12, 2006 I'm in the middle of playing Ravel's La Valse Rachmanninoff's Prelude No.5 "The Military" Chopin's Etude no. 4 in C sharp Minor Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 in C sharp Minor and I finished playing the following at my concert on Saturday Beethoven's Pathetique Chopin's Fantasie-Impromptu Bach Prelude and Fugue in D Minor Shostakovic 3 little Dances Cyril Scott's Lotus Land Brhams' Rhapsody No.2 in G Minor Rachmanninoff's Elegy My new stuff is a lot more challenging. I might not have them for a year. I think my teacher is crazy. Quote
PianoBeast10489 Posted May 18, 2006 Posted May 18, 2006 Wow, Nico. That was kinda mean. Though technique-wise the Pathetique isn't very difficult, its still one of the greatest Beethoven sonatas. Very beautiful piece. And, J.Br: WOW! Quite an impressive repertiore! I love the Liszt Hungarian Rhapsody No.2... gorgeous piece. Quote
AehrasYT Posted May 18, 2006 Posted May 18, 2006 Piano[only been playing les than 8 months], I just finished learning and playing two part Invention #1 for a recital last week. Classical guitar, almost any of Agustin Barrios' pieces. The Sor studies are GREAT. Paganini caprices on a guitar are beautiful, Paganini's classical guitar compositions are amazing too. Bitterduck have you ever played any of Sor's major works like the grand solo op.14? Quote
Shadow Posted May 18, 2006 Posted May 18, 2006 Mozart Concerto for Clarinets. That is for my college aditions in the coming year. :happy: Quote
Monkeysinfezzes Posted May 20, 2006 Posted May 20, 2006 I just love playing jazz fake books! They're sooo fun :wacko: Most piano players find it the hardest thing to make things up with just a melody and chord symbols, them needing a grand staff. I'm the opposite, and I actually find it harder that way. I just bought the Real Book Volume 2 in Ottawa on Thursday. Really snappy Quote
Leon Posted May 24, 2006 Posted May 24, 2006 I've been playing a little over a year... I'm currently working on a helluva lot of pieces, and have just finished some. Here's the list: Debussy- Doctor Gradus ad Parnassum Serenade for the Doll Chopin- Chunks of the Revolutionary Etude op. 10, no. 12 Military polonaise Lecuona- Malaguena W.A. Mozart- Sonata in F K332, a portion of the first movement, working currently on completing the finale (Allegro assai) Nikolai Medtner- Fairy tale in E Minor (Very unknown piece to many, study for left hand) Sibelius- Serenade in D-flat I've recently finished Debussy's 'The Golliwog's Cakewalk' and 'Little Shepard', Bartok's 'Bulgarian Dance 2' from Mikrokosmos, and Toccata in E-Flat Minor by Aram Katchaturian. In case you didn't notice, I'm trying to complete the entire Children's Corner suite by Debussy. We're going to be learning the Snow is Dancing next, then lastly Jimbo's Lullaby. The hardest one is def. Dr. Gradus, as i've been working solidly on it for about 6 months. The Malaguena we just started today, so i've been working on it alot tonight. The Medtner has been ongoing for awhile now, and we're only learning the first two pages. The Sibelius was recently started as well. The Mozart is def. one of my favorites. I've been working hard on that one for awhile, and it's coming along good. Hopefully we'll get to the whole sonata after I finish the 3rd movement. The Chopin etude is for the techniques, so we're only learning chunks of out it, currently the first two techniques (The runs in the beginning and the c-minor arpeggios in the left hand) and the polonaise is on hold for right now to finish the Children's corner. ...Yikes... I didn't realize I could do all that stuff at one time now I look at it. Quote
Arthur Reglay Posted May 31, 2006 Posted May 31, 2006 My piano repertoire has: 1- "The Wild Rider" (R. Schumann) 2- "Wohltemperierte Klavier No.1-2" (J.S.Bach) 3- Three Menuetts from Bach (violin) 4- "Turkish March" (W.A.Mozart) 5- "Piano Sonate K.330, 333, 545" (W.A.Mozart) 6- "Little Serenade" (J.Haydn) 7- "Escossaise" and "Für Elise" (L.v.Beethoven) 8- All 25 ètudes from J.F.F. Burgmüeller. 9- Toccatta and Fugue in D minor (Bach) (harpsichord) 10- "Hallelujah" from "The Messiah" (G.F.Handel) (violin) 11- "Revolutionary", "Fantasie Impromptu" (F. Chopin) 12- "The Entertainer", "Maple Leaf Rag" and "Peacherine Rag" (S. Joplin) 13- "Hungarian Folk Dance" (B.Bartók) They are wonderful pieces, but my dream is to play "The Sugar Plum Fairy" from Tchaikovski. Anyone else? Quote
Dirk Gently Posted June 1, 2006 Posted June 1, 2006 Right now I'm working on three Chopin preludes (1, 3, and 22) and a Tocotta by Aram Khachaturian for a competition. I'm learning the Appasionnata by Beethoven and the Revolutionary Etude by Chopin, as well :D. Quote
David Posted June 1, 2006 Posted June 1, 2006 Mozart Concerto for Clarinets. That is for my college aditions in the coming year. :( How many clarinets is this concerto for? Quote
Arthur Reglay Posted June 2, 2006 Posted June 2, 2006 I've found a difficult one: "Giga" from George Friedrich Händel. What a darned fast partiture. But something for my consolation: I've finished (at last!) the "Moonlight Sonata" from Beethoven. Excellent one! Quote
Daniel Posted June 2, 2006 Posted June 2, 2006 How many clarinets is this concerto for? [/b] It's for one, although a concerto for more than one wind instrument would hardly be surprising. He isn't a native English speaker, so if that was your motivation, then back off a bit. Quote
johannhowitzer Posted June 2, 2006 Posted June 2, 2006 My senior recital had four piano works: 1. Beethoven's Sonata Op. 14 No. 1, first movement 2. Debussy's La Cathedrale engloutie 3. Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue (piano transcription) 4. My own To Good Friends, a solo written this year My current repertoire, alphabetical by composer: 1. C.P.E. Bach's Solfeggietto 2. J.S. Bach's Praeludium 1 from the WTC, book 1 3. J.S. Bach's Praeludium 2 from the WTC, book 1 4. J.S. Bach's Praeludium 9 from the WTC, book 1 5. Brahms' Waltz in Ab, Op. 39 No. 15 6. Debussy's Deux Arabesques, no. 1 7. Debussy's Suite Bergamasque: Clair de Lune 8. Debussy's Reverie 9. Debussy's La Fille aux cheveux de Lin 10. Debussy's La Cathedrale engloutie 11. Debussy's Children's Corner: Doctor Gradus ad Parnassum 12. Debussy's Children's Corner: Serenade for the Doll 13. Debussy's Children's Corner: The Snow Is Dancing 14. Debussy's Children's Corner: Golliwogg's Cakewalk 15. Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue (piano transcription) 16. Gershwin's Prelude no. 1 17. Gershwin's Prelude no. 2 18. Grieg's Zug der Zwerge 19. Joplin's Maple Leaf Rag 20. Liszt's Liebestraum 21. Mozart's Rondo alla Turca 22. Palmgren's May Night 23. Rachmaninoff's Prelude in C# Minor, Op. 3 No. 2 Two of these are additions from the past two weeks: Debussy's Children's Corner: Serenade for the Doll Grieg's Zug der Zwerge Fun stuff! Not all of it hard, and much of it fairly standard, though there's some really nice offbeat stuff I can play, like the Palmgren and the new Grieg piece. Yeah, the moonlight sonata's a monster, but it's on my "someday" list. For now I'm working on other stuff. (I think it's crazy that Leon and I have been learning the Serenade for the Doll at the same time! Woo!) Quote
Saiming Posted June 2, 2006 Posted June 2, 2006 Just finished Traumerai (sorry about the spelling), can't really decide which piece to learn next >_ Quote
Will Kirk Posted June 5, 2006 Posted June 5, 2006 The 1-20 etudes of Sor are one of the original guitar etudes that actually had some merit. The pieces are a real work out and usually required for entrance into any college of music for the guitar. The 24 caprices were violin pieces that have been transcribed for the guitar thankz to sor or sergovia? I can't remember which one. They are extremely difficult but rewarding. Especially the 5th caprice. :ninja: Neither, it was John Williams (not the guy who directed the Boston pops but the guitar Virtuoso Well the pieces I'm currently learning, are Variations on a Theme of Mozart by Sor (guitar) Witch's Dance (a somewhat less difficult arrangement for violin) Paganini's 24th caprice for Violin and not much else Quote
Saiming Posted June 6, 2006 Posted June 6, 2006 I'm lreaning Eric Satie's Gymnopedies and a Debussy piece, can't remember the name >_ Quote
Ephraim Reglay Posted June 8, 2006 Posted June 8, 2006 Behold the 1-9 Beethoven complete Symphonies for Violin Solo! It took me about three years learning them, but now I'm making Piano arrangements. Quote
Guest Bitterduck's Revenge Posted August 6, 2006 Posted August 6, 2006 Rio Ancho by Paco de Lucia. That's my current project. Quote
spirit_of_music Posted August 7, 2006 Posted August 7, 2006 Piano: Debussy- Arabesque no.1 Chopin- Fantaisie Impromptu Debussy- Childrens' corner suite Beethoven- Slow movement from Pathetique sonata Liszt- Sonata in B minor (just started attempting) Sinding- Rustle of Spring (just started attempting) Mozart- Sonata no.15 Bach- Allemande from Partita no.4 in D Scarlatti- Sonata in D Liszt- Den Andenken Petofis Mozart- Allegro moderato from Sonata in C Violin: Mozart- Sonata in E minor Smetana- Moderato- no.1 in From the Homeland Martinu- Etude rythmique no.1 Dvorak- Sonatina in G major Bassoon: Vivaldi- Concerto in E minor Senaille- Introduction and Allegro Spiritoso (arranged for bassoon) Milde- Tatantella Quote
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