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#1227192 - 07/04/09 10:04 PM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: Debussy20]
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3000 Post Club Member
Registered: 03/13/06
Posts: 3288
Loc: Earth...hopefully
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I edited it to make it a little more geared to "the solo pianist" and only included solo pieces and piano concertos.
Solo Works
Albeniz -Iberia, Bk. 1
Bach: -2 part Inventions -Sinfonia No. 1, 15 -Chaconne (Busoni's arrangement) -Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue -English Suite #2,3,5 -French Suite 5 -French Suite 6 -Italian Concerto -Partita 2, 3, 6 -WTC Book 1: 1, 2, 5, 7, 8,, 17, 21 -WTC Book 2: 5, 16
Bartok: -Six Dances in Bulgarian Rhythm No. 1 -Six Dances in Bulgarian Rhythm No. 6 -Op. 14 Suite
Beethoven:
-Sonata Op. 2 No. 1 -Sonata Op. 2 No.3 -Sonata Op. 7 -Sonata Op. 10 No. 1 -Sonata Op. 10 No. 2 -Sonata Op. 10 No. 3 (1st and 2nd Movement) -Sonata Op. 13 -Sonata Op. 14 No. 2 -Sonata Op. 22 -Sonata Op. 26 -Sonata Op. 27 No. 2 -Sonata Op. 28 -Sonata Op. 31 No. 1 -Sonata Op. 31 No. 2 -Sonata Op. 31 No. 3 -Sonata Op. 49 No. 1 -Sonata Op. 49 No. 2 -Sonata Op. 53 -Sonata Op. 81 -Sonata Op. 90 -Sonata Op. 101 -Sonata Op. 109 -Sonata Op. 110 -Sonata Op. 111 -6 bagatelles Op. 126
Berio : -Wasserklavier -Erdenklavier -Luftklavier -Feuerklavier
Boulez: - Notations
Brahms: -Hungarian dance #6 -Intermezzo Op. 116 No. 6 -Intermezzo Op. 118 No. 2 -Rhapsody Op. 119 No. 4 -Rhapsody Op. 79 no. 1 -Op. 116 -Sonata No. 1 -Handel Variations
Chaminade: -Meditation 76/6
Chopin:
-Barcarolle op.51 -Berceuse op.57 -Ballade: No 1,2,3 -Etudes: Op. 10 No. 1,2,4,5, 12 -Etudes: Op. 25 No. 5, 6,7,10, 12 -Fantasy Op. 49 -Polonaise Op. 53, Op. 40, Op. 44 -Preludes: 4,6,7,12,18,20 -Scherzi 1, 2, 3, 4 -Nocturne Op. 72 No. 1 -Nocturne Op. 9 No. 2 -Nocturne Op. 27 No. 1 -Nocturne Op. 55 No. 1 -Nocturne Op. 37 No. 1 -Nocturne Op. 9 No. 1 -Nocturne Op. 9 No. 3 -Sonata No. 3 -Waltzes Op. 64 -Waltz Op. 34 No. 1
Clementi: -Sonata Op. 25 No. 5 (2nd movement)
Dodge: -"Any Resemblance is Purely Coincidental"
Ginastera: -Danzas Argentina (2nd Movement) -Creole Dance -Tribute to Roberto Garcia Morillo -Sonata No. 1
Debussy: -La Fille aux cheveus de lin -La Cathedrale engloutie -Minstrels -Les sons et les parfums tournent dans l'air du soir -La plus que lent -Arabesque No. 1 -Clair de lune -Soiree dans Grenade -Images bk. 1
Fibich: -Poem
Field -Nocturnes 9 and 10
Filtsch: -Adieu and Mazurka
Gershwin: -Three Preludes
Godard: -Toccata
Granados -La maja y el ruiseñor (from Goyescas)
Haydn : -a couple sonatas -Sonata No. 35 in C Major -Sonatas Hob. XVI:8, 23, 26, 27, 34, and 46 -Andante and Variations in f minor
Kabalevsky: -Prelude Op. 38 No. 14
Kuzmenko -Memoir for the victims of Chernobyl
Lecuona: -Malaguena
Liszt: -Consolation 3 -Mephisto Waltz 1 -Mephisto Waltz 3 -Sonata in B minor (up to the fugue) -En Reve -Un Sospiro -Hungarian Rhapsody 2 -Liebestraume No. 3 -Harmonies du soir -Transcendental etude 10 -Petrarch sonnets 104 and 123 -Liszt legende no. 2
MacDowell: -To a Wild Rose, Op. 51 No. 1 -March Wind, Op. 46 No. 10
Mendelssohn: -Rondo capriccioso Op. 14
Messiaen: - Vingt Regards: Regard de l'Etoile, Noël - Petites Esquisses d'oiseaux: La Merle noire
Moszkowski: -Etude Op. 72 No. 2
Mozart: -Sonata K283 (1st movement) -Sonata K284 (1st movement) -Sonata K309 -Sonata K310 -Sonata K330 -Sonata K331 -Sonata K332 -Sonata K333 -Sonata K457 -Adagio in B minor K540 -Soanta K545 -Sonata K576 -12 Variations on Ah! Vous dirai-je, maman
Mussorgski: -Pictures at an Exhibition
Nancarrow: -Tango?
Prokofiev: -Prelude Op. 12 No. 7 -Sonata No. 2 in dm -Sonata No. 3 -Sonata No. 5 in C (first movement) -Sonata No. 6 in A (first movement) -Sonata No. 7 -Sonata No. 8 -Sarcasms -visions fugitive
Rachmaninoff: -Prelude Op. 3 No. 2 -Prelude Op. 23 No. 4,5,6 -Vocalise -Moment Musical 3 -Elegie -Sonata No. 2
Ravel: -Miroirs -Sonatina -Le Tombeau de Couperin, Prelude -Pavane pour une infante defunte -Jeux D'eau
Reger: -Variations and Fugue on a Theme of Bach, Op. 81
Rzewski: 10 variations from The People United...
Scarlatti: -2 or 3 Sonatas -118/132 -Sonata Bm
Schoenberg -6 Kleine Klavierstücke op.19
Schubert : -Sonata D. 784 (a minor) -Standchen -Impromptus Op. 142 Nos. 2 and 3 -Four impromptus op. 90 -Moment musicaux op. 94 no. 4
Schumann: -Kreisleriana -Eusebius -Traumerei -Widmung -Fantasy -Kinderscenes -Davidsbundlertanze -Arabesque, -Faschingsswanck aus Wien -Waldszenen -Fantasiestücke op.12
Scriabin : -Sonata No. 2 -Sonata No. 8 -Sonata No. 9
Sibelius: -Romance Op. 24 No. 9
Stravinsky - Piano Rag Music
Tcherepnin: -Bagatelles Op. 5 No. 1, 10.
Ustvolskaya: - Sonata No. 5 - Sonata No. 6
Vladiguerov: -Improvisation -Rhapsody Vardar -Prelude and Autumn Elegie, op. 15
Concertos
Beethoven: -Piano Concertos: 1,3,4
Brahms: -Piano Concerto No. 1 -Piano Concerto No. 2
Haydn: -Piano Concerto No. 11 in D major, Hob. XVIII/11 (3rd Movement)
Mendelssohn: -Piano Concerto Op. 25 No. 1 (1st Movement)
Mozart: -Piano Concertos: 5,6,12,15,16,17,20,22,23,25,27
Prokofiev: -Piano Concerto No. 3
Chopin concerto no. 2 in f minor
Rachmaninoff -Concerto no. 2
Saint-Saens -Concerto no. 2 in G minor
Schumann: -Piano Concerto
Matt
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#1227196 - 07/04/09 10:12 PM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: Thracozaag]
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1000 Post Club Member
Registered: 02/08/03
Posts: 1205
Loc: U.S.
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I'll add a list of pieces in my rep that I would perform only with an "obligatory-ten-hour-makeout-session-with-Danica McKellar" clause in the contract:
Scriabin: Sonata #8, Op. 66 Godowsky/Chopin: Ignuus Fatus and/or Winterwind etudes Reger: Variations and Fugue on a Theme of Bach, Op. 81 Nancarrow: Tango? Martucci: Piano Quintet, Op. 45 Liszt/Horowitz: Scherzo and March Tchaikovsky/Feinberg: Scherzo from Symphony #6 Brahms: Concerto #2, Op. 83
This is nothing new, but you are amazingly awesome. When do the Koji groupies get recordings of your Chopin/Godowsky? I have played quite a bit of stuff over the years, but my actual repertoire is relatively small. I'll just add one or two things that I don't think are on there yet (haven't looked closely), and so Alkan and Bolcom can have coverage: Alkan: Symphony for Solo Piano Bolcom: The Garden of Eden Suite Mozart: Fantasy and Sonata in C minor Liszt: Funerailles, Vallee d'Obermann Brahms: Op. 10 Ballades Gershwin-Finnissy: "They're Writing Songs of Love, But Not for Me"; "How Long Has This Been Going On?"; "Love is Here to Stay" (more to come soon, I hope) I'll probably add some more as they come to me. I don't think those are on there yet.
Edited by Goldberg (07/04/09 10:14 PM)
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#1229796 - 07/10/09 10:17 PM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: gooddog]
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5000 Post Club Member
Registered: 09/22/06
Posts: 5322
Loc: St. Louis area
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I'm finally home. Some I can play right now. Many would need reviving and polishing. Here's mine:
Bach JS Bouree From 2nd violin sonata Bach JS Concerto D minor BWV 1052 1 movement Bach JS Concerto F minor BWV 1056 Bach JS Italian Concerto Bach JS Prelude and Fugue E major Book 1 BWV 854 Bach JS Prelude G# minor Book 2 BWV 887 Bach JS Prelude F# minor Book 2 BWV 883 Bach JS Prelude and Fugue C minor Book 1 #2 Bach JS Prelude and Fugue D major Book 1 #5 Bach JS Prelude and Fugue Eb minorBook 1 #8 Bach JS Prelude and Fugue Bb major Book 1 #21 Bach JS Prelude and Fugue F minor Book 2 BWV 881 Bach JS Prelude only C major Book 1 #1 Bach JS Sonata II for flute and piano Eb major Beethoven Fur Elise Beethoven Sonata Opus 27 #2 (part) Beethoven Sonata Opus 2 #1 Beethoven Sonata Opus 31 #3 (part) Beethoven Sonata Opus 13 (Pathetique) Beethoven Sonata Opus 47 (Appassionata parts) Brahms 2 Rhaposidies Opus 79 Brahms Intermezzo Opus 118 #2 Brahms Intermezzo Opus 117 #3 C# minor Brahms Waltz Opus 39 #15 Chopin Etude Opus 10 #9 F minor Chopin Etude Opus 25 #9 G flat major Chopin Etude Opus 10 #3 E major Chopin Etude Opus 10 #12 Chopin Grande Valse Brilliante Opus 18 E flat major Chopin Impromptu Opus 66 C# minor Chopin Mazurka Opus 17 #4 A minor Chopin Mazurka Opus 67 #3 C major Chopin Mazurka Opus 67 # 2 G minor Chopin Mazurka Opus 67 #4 A minor Chopin Mazurka Opus 68 # 2 A minor Chopin Mazurka Opus 68 # 3 F major Chopin Noctourne Opus 9 #1 B Flat Major Chopin Noctourne Opus 9 #2 E flat major Chopin Noctourne Opus 15 #3 G minor Chopin Noctourne Opus 27 #2 D flat major Chopin Noctourne Opus 37 #1 G minor Chopin Noctourne Opus 55 No 1 F minor Chopin Piano Concerto E minor Opu 11 E minor 1st & part 2nd mvmnt Chopin Polonaise Opus 40 #1 A major Chopin Prelude Opus 28 #4 E minor Chopin Prelude Opus 28 #7 A major Chopin Prelude Opus 28 #15 D flat major Chopin Prelude Opus 28 # 20 C minor Chopin Prelude Opus 28 No 3 G major Chopin Waltz Opus 34 #1 Ab major Chopin Waltz Opus 34 #2 Chopin Waltz Opus 34 # 3 Chopin Waltz Opus 42 Ab major Chopin Waltz Opus 64 #1 Chopin Waltz Opus 64 #2 Chopin Waltz Opus 64 #3 Chopin Waltz Opus 69 #1 Chopin Waltz Opus 69 #2 Chopin Waltz Opus 70 #1 Chopin Waltz Opus 70 #2 Chopin Waltz Opus 70 #3 Chopin Waltz Posthumous E minor Chopin Waltz Posthumous E major Clemente Sonatinas Durand Valse E flat Gershwin 3 preludes Grieg Wedding Day in Troldhaugen Opus 65 #6 Haydn Sonata E minor 1778 Haydn Sonata C# minor 1780 Haydn Sonata G major 1784 Haydn Sonata F major 1773 Haydn Sonata E flat Major 1766 Haydn Sonata B flat major 1784 Haydn Sonata G major 1766 Haydn Sonata g major 1766 Haydn Sonata Lully Courante Massenet Aragonaise from El Cid Mendelssohn Rondo Capriccioso Opus 14 Mendelssohn Songs Without Words Many Moussorgsky Pictures on Exhibition Promenade, Gnome, Old Castle Mozart Fantasie Mozart Piano Concerto #19 F Major 1st & 2nd movements Mozart Sonata K280 Mozart Sonata K279 Mozart Sonata K283 Mozart Sonata K311 Mozart Sonata K310 Mozart Sonata K330 Mozart Sonata K331 Mozart Sonata K332 Mozart Sonata K333 Mozart Sonata K457 Mozart Sonata K545 Pachelbel Ciaconna Pieczonka Tarantella A minor Poulenc Improvisation 15 C minor Prokofiev March From Love of 3 Oranges Rachmaninoff Elegie Opus 3 #1 Rachmaninoff Etude Opus 3 #2 Rachmaninoff Moment Musical Opus 16 #3 Rachmaninoff Moment Musical Opus 16 #5 Rachmaninoff Noctourne Opus 10 #1 Rachmaninoff Prelude Opus 32 #2 Rachmaninoff Prelude Opus 32 #9 Rachmaninoff Prelude Opus 32 #11 Rachmaninoff Prelude Opus 32 #12 Rachmaninoff Prelude Opus 23 #4 Rachmaninoff Prelude Opus 23 #3 Rachmaninoff Prelude Opus 23 #5 Rachmaninoff Prelude Opus 23 # 9 parts Rachmaninoff Romance Rachmaninoff Serenade Opus 3 #5 Satie 3 Gymnopedies Schubert Impromptus Opus 90 Andante Mosso G Flat Schubert Impromptus Opus 90 Allegretto Schumann Etude Opus 13 #2 Schumann Scenes from Childhood Foreign lands Tchaikovsky Seasons:October, November Villa-Lobos Le Polichinelle Wow! I'd be extremely happy if I could play that many pieces. I don't think I can remember more than 10 at a time.
_________________________
Nothing primes the pump like the panic of impending performance.
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#1229824 - 07/10/09 11:15 PM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: Damon]
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5000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/15/07
Posts: 5579
Loc: Down Under
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I don't think I can remember more than 10 at a time. Except that we're not necessarily talking about memorised works.
_________________________
Du holde Kunst...
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#1229845 - 07/11/09 12:01 AM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: currawong]
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8000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/15/06
Posts: 8184
Loc: Pacific Northwest, US.
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I don't think I can remember more than 10 at a time. Except that we're not necessarily talking about memorised works. I would hope not. As an organist, I can play a mountain of service music at short notice, but hell, none of it is memorized. Doesn't need to be, any more than those myriad Anglican anthems, some of which aren't worth more than a quick run-through prior to the service. 
_________________________
Jason
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#1229846 - 07/11/09 12:01 AM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: currawong]
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4000 Post Club Member
Registered: 06/08/08
Posts: 4326
Loc: Seattle area, WA
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Yes, and as Currawong said, most of these pieces are not memorised and of course I can't play all of those at the drop of a hat. Matt invited us to list: "Pieces you feel you've completed.". Many of those on my list would require some work to revive. I haven't played some in many, many years.
_________________________
Best regards,
Deborah
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#1229848 - 07/11/09 12:05 AM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: gooddog]
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8000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/15/06
Posts: 8184
Loc: Pacific Northwest, US.
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Many of those on my list would require some work to revive. I haven't played some in many, many years. I hear you. Harold Schonberg relates an anecdote about Liszt: late in life he was reminded of a silly, but difficult piece he had played (probably something by Herz) in his earlier years. Liszt sat down at the piano and rattled it off.
_________________________
Jason
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#1230174 - 07/11/09 08:32 PM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: argerichfan]
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Junior Member
Registered: 08/06/08
Posts: 19
Loc: Oregon
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Rachmaninoff: Etude-Tableaux No. 9 in D minor
Liszt: Hungarian Rhapsody No. 11 Hungarian Rhapsody No. 13
Scriabin: Etude Op. 8 No. 5
Mendelssohn: Etude Op. 104 No. 3 in A minor
Paderewski: Chant d'Amour
Stravinsky: Petrushaka - Only the first movement, Danse Russe. Does that still count?
Does anyone have some idea of how much of the entire classical repertoire the board collectively have covered percentage-wise?
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#1230181 - 07/11/09 08:51 PM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: Swordfish]
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3000 Post Club Member
Registered: 03/13/06
Posts: 3288
Loc: Earth...hopefully
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Rachmaninoff: Etude-Tableaux No. 9 in D minor
Liszt: Hungarian Rhapsody No. 11 Hungarian Rhapsody No. 13
Scriabin: Etude Op. 8 No. 5
Mendelssohn: Etude Op. 104 No. 3 in A minor
Paderewski: Chant d'Amour
Stravinsky: Petrushaka - Only the first movement, Danse Russe. Does that still count?
Does anyone have some idea of how much of the entire classical repertoire the board collectively have covered percentage-wise? I'm beginning to think that no matter how many times I add things to the list... people will have more, that's a good thing in my book. It probably could have been easier saying pretty much everything from almost any well known composer is covered and even some obscure guys are covered.
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#1230197 - 07/11/09 09:10 PM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: Swordfish]
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Yikes! 10000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/29/01
Posts: 17603
Loc: New York City
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Does anyone have some idea of how much of the entire classical repertoire the board collectively have covered percentage-wise? Much less than 1%.
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#1230217 - 07/11/09 09:58 PM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: pianoloverus]
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Yikes! 10000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/27/02
Posts: 13077
Loc: Iowa City, IA
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For example, we do not yet have a single work by a baroque French composer. None of the Couperin family, no Rameau, or Daquin. Not a single pre-classical English work (Byrd, Bull, Gibbons, etc...) Nothing by Handel or Telemann. None of the little fantasies or odd miscellaneous pieces by Bach. Very little by Les Six or the Russian Five. No Copland. No Muczynski. No Liebermann. No Gade. No Kirchner. No Thalberg. No Janacek. No Dussek. No Crumb, Cowell, or Ives. No Kapustin or Roslavets.
etc...
However, I do believe we have covered at least 90% of what you'd find in the average undergraduate piano literature course.
_________________________
"If we continually try to force a child to do what he is afraid to do, he will become more timid, and will use his brains and energy, not to explore the unknown, but to find ways to avoid the pressures we put on him." (John Holt) www.pianoped.comwww.youtube.com/user/UIPianoPed
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#1230243 - 07/11/09 11:23 PM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: signa]
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Full Member
Registered: 06/23/09
Posts: 457
Loc: Melbourne, Australia
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There seems to be a startling lack of Schubert in the repertoire! Shame PW, Shame!
_________________________
Oz Marcus Currently working on: Schubert Impromptu in C minor - D899 Chopin Prelude Op28 No 15, nocturne Op48 no 1 Bach Prelude & Fuge WTC II No 12 in F minor Aspiring to Rautavaara - Piano Sonata 2 - Fire Sermon
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#1230650 - 07/12/09 09:45 PM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: pianoloverus]
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Full Member
Registered: 06/24/09
Posts: 21
Loc: Ohio
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no duets? man... that sucks...
This is really fantastic! Thanks so much; great idea Debussy20!
_________________________
College Auditions (currently): Prokofiev Sonata No. 2-IV Bartok Suite Op. 14 Beethoven Sonata No. 21 in C, Op. 53 "Waldstein" Chopin Etudes 10/5&8 Bach P&F WTC Book 2-XV in G
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#1230651 - 07/12/09 09:50 PM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: Oz Marcus]
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5000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/15/07
Posts: 5579
Loc: Down Under
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There seems to be a startling lack of Schubert in the repertoire! Shame PW, Shame! Well I have quite a bit of Schubert in my repertoire - both piano trios, the A major violin sonata, F minor Fantasy, Winterreise, Die Schöne Müllerin and hundreds of other Lieder. But they're ensemble pieces, aren't they, and not included.  So, Oz, where's yours? 
_________________________
Du holde Kunst...
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#1230693 - 07/12/09 11:40 PM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: Kreisler]
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8000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/15/06
Posts: 8184
Loc: Pacific Northwest, US.
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For example, we do not yet have a single work by a baroque French composer. None of the Couperin family... Yet count me in for that, though only as an organist. François wrote two incredible organ masses (music I use in church... but please don't ask how I adapt for British instruments  ), but quite frankly I've never found much of interest in Louis's music. It is dull beyond belief, at least what he wrote for keyboard. Daquin wrote a fair amount of organ music, though it tends to sound much the same. Haven't found any Rameau for organ, though the Gavotte & Variations work quite effectively on the piano. Quite interestingly about Rameau, his 'appearance' on the printed page bears a striking similarity to Alkan. Make of that what you will.
_________________________
Jason
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#1230697 - 07/12/09 11:50 PM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: gooddog]
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5000 Post Club Member
Registered: 09/22/06
Posts: 5322
Loc: St. Louis area
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Yes, and as Currawong said, most of these pieces are not memorised and of course I can't play all of those at the drop of a hat. Matt invited us to list: "Pieces you feel you've completed.". Many of those on my list would require some work to revive. I haven't played some in many, many years. By that criteria, I could list things that I'm comfortable sight-reading. Beethoven's Sonatina in G for instance, which I played for the first time an hour ago. As long as the music is front of me, I could play that in a recital tomorrow. So if there is no grade level restrictions, this list could become truly huge.
_________________________
Nothing primes the pump like the panic of impending performance.
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#1231362 - 07/14/09 10:24 AM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: Damon]
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4000 Post Club Member
Registered: 06/08/08
Posts: 4326
Loc: Seattle area, WA
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Yes, and as Currawong said, most of these pieces are not memorised and of course I can't play all of those at the drop of a hat. Matt invited us to list: "Pieces you feel you've completed.". Many of those on my list would require some work to revive. I haven't played some in many, many years. By that criteria, I could list things that I'm comfortable sight-reading. Beethoven's Sonatina in G for instance, which I played for the first time an hour ago. As long as the music is front of me, I could play that in a recital tomorrow. So if there is no grade level restrictions, this list could become truly huge. Damon,I suspect the "spirit" of the list would exclude sightreading. To me, "works completed" means music you have played and finished to your satisfaction. Abandoning music for a while might require work to revive but the basic structure, fingering and understanding of what the music is saying is still in your brain/hands and just needs a refresher. This is quite different from reading through a piece of music for the first time.
_________________________
Best regards,
Deborah
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#1231385 - 07/14/09 11:00 AM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: Kreisler]
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8000 Post Club Member
Registered: 04/06/07
Posts: 8735
Loc: Boynton Beach, FL
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For example, we do not yet have a single work by a baroque French composer. None of the Couperin family, no Rameau, or Daquin. Not a single pre-classical English work (Byrd, Bull, Gibbons, etc...) Nothing by Handel or Telemann. None of the little fantasies or odd miscellaneous pieces by Bach. Very little by Les Six or the Russian Five. No Copland. No Muczynski. No Liebermann. No Gade. No Kirchner. No Thalberg. No Janacek. No Dussek. No Crumb, Cowell, or Ives. No Kapustin or Roslavets.
etc...
However, I do believe we have covered at least 90% of what you'd find in the average undergraduate piano literature course. I know! There's so much great music out there yet to explore, it is hard to know what to do next. I would like to work on some other Baroque composers than Bach (though I do love him lots!), and I have a book Muczynski I've been eyeing for a few years. And then there's all the vocal rep I want to learn... 
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#1554050 - 11/09/10 12:43 AM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: Debussy20]
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Full Member
Registered: 04/06/10
Posts: 192
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Hello im confused is debussy's repertoire the one stated in the first post? Because that is a very wide repertoire if its his:
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currently working on: Czerny School of Velocity Op 299
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#1554056 - 11/09/10 12:52 AM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: Kreisler]
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1000 Post Club Member
Registered: 01/31/10
Posts: 1974
Loc: San Jose, CA
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For example, we do not yet have a single work by a baroque French composer. I will play "Les Barricades Mysterieuses" by Francois Couperin at the drop of a hat, and often do, both on organ and piano. I play V Mlhach (In the Mist) and Cunning Little Vixen is my favorite opera.
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#1554071 - 11/09/10 01:33 AM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: vladimiroir]
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5000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/15/07
Posts: 5579
Loc: Down Under
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Hello im confused is debussy's repertoire the one stated in the first post? Because that is a very wide repertoire if its his: No, he edited his original list to include all the contributions as they came in.
_________________________
Du holde Kunst...
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#1554115 - 11/09/10 03:05 AM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: Debussy20]
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Full Member
Registered: 04/06/10
Posts: 192
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Oh so, currently his repertoire is not in this post, right? Thank you currawong/
_________________________
currently working on: Czerny School of Velocity Op 299
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#1554142 - 11/09/10 05:45 AM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: vladimiroir]
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5000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/15/07
Posts: 5579
Loc: Down Under
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Oh so, currently his repertoire is not in this post, right? Thank you currawong/ His is included in it. You'd have to read the whole thread (which is a year or so old).
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Du holde Kunst...
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#1554148 - 11/09/10 06:23 AM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: Debussy20]
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Full Member
Registered: 04/06/10
Posts: 192
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Oh, so i guess currently i cant really know his original repertoire<
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currently working on: Czerny School of Velocity Op 299
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#1554424 - 11/09/10 04:59 PM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: Debussy20]
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2000 Post Club Member
Registered: 03/29/10
Posts: 2443
Loc: Netherlands
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did you notice that some of us added nothing, just kept very silent indeed? it is an impossible thread, just calling people to show off on paper, let them play it all, by heart and tomorrow evening in Carnegie Hall...
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Longtemps, je me suis couché de bonne heure, but not anymore!
Chopin op.25/35/22, Liszt sonata, Schubert D.960, Kapustin op.40
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#1554476 - 11/09/10 05:50 PM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: dolce sfogato]
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6000 Post Club Member
Registered: 12/28/09
Posts: 6143
Loc: Here, as opposed to there
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did you notice that some of us added nothing, just kept very silent indeed? it is an impossible thread, just calling people to show off on paper, let them play it all, by heart and tomorrow evening in Carnegie Hall... Yes, I noticed 
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"And if we look at the works of J.S. Bach — a benevolent god to which all musicians should offer a prayer to defend themselves against mediocrity... -Debussy
"It's ok if you disagree with me. I can't force you to be right."
♪ ≠ $
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#1554488 - 11/09/10 06:06 PM
Re: The Piano World repertoire.
[Re: dolce sfogato]
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5000 Post Club Member
Registered: 09/22/06
Posts: 5322
Loc: St. Louis area
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did you notice that some of us added nothing, just kept very silent indeed? it is an impossible thread, just calling people to show off on paper, let them play it all, by heart and tomorrow evening in Carnegie Hall... No, I didn't notice. I thought everyone responded.
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Nothing primes the pump like the panic of impending performance.
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