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Author Topic: What is everyone learning at the moment?  (Read 19396 times)
shingo
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« Reply #200 on: October 27, 2007, 07:00:53 PM »

I am finishing Fantasie Impromptu, in the market for a new piece, not decided on which yet though. Could be Scriabin 8/12, Beethoven 31/2 or  Debussy Valse Impromptu I am spoiled for choice.
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marina
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« Reply #201 on: October 29, 2007, 10:41:57 AM »

Hi - working up to grade 8 AMEB
Mozart 1st movement k331
Bach Prelude and Fugue no 12 in F minor Bk 2
Ravel Menuet from Le Tombeau de Couperin
Schubert Moments Musicaux op 94 no 2 in A flat

can I manage these + technical work by next august - hope so.......
anyone else out there doing same exam in 2008?
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gyzzzmo
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« Reply #202 on: October 29, 2007, 01:43:39 PM »

Nocturne no8 (Chopin), Prelude in Gminor (Rach.) and learning my cat how to chew on the toymouse instead of chewing my fingers off :S
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lazlo
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« Reply #203 on: October 29, 2007, 10:36:56 PM »

Mozart k457
Chopin 10/12
Scriabin prélude 11/8
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sharon_f
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« Reply #204 on: October 29, 2007, 10:56:02 PM »

Bach Prelude and Fugue no 12 in F minor Bk 2

 Smiley Smiley Smiley
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alpacinator1
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« Reply #205 on: October 30, 2007, 12:06:07 AM »

Just finished the Beethoven Sonatina in G. Very easy, I need to be challenged more...

I also learned Bach's Prelude in C 939. Again, I need to be challenged more. I'm considering learning the Italian Concerto 1st movement.
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ultraviolet
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« Reply #206 on: October 30, 2007, 12:22:18 AM »

I'm learning the Concord Sonata.  So far I have only mastered the part in Thoreau when you put the board on the piano.  I think I've figured out where to put the board.
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opus57
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« Reply #207 on: December 19, 2007, 11:24:14 AM »

Well... I'm working on
Schubert Impromptu  Opus 90 No. 3 G flat major
Beethoven, Sonata Opus 2 No. 1 in f minor, 1st movement
Beethoven, Sonata Opus 13, c-minor, 3rd movement

Wooh, what a relief to tell somebody...  Smiley
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aewanko
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« Reply #208 on: December 20, 2007, 06:12:22 AM »

Chopin - Nocturne Opus 55 No 1, Nocturne Opus 9 No 2
Schumann - Kinderszenen (not really the whole book, though) Tongue
Beethoven - "Moonlight" Sonata (2nd movement, really)

and maybe soon enough, Mozart Rondo K 485 in D-Dur
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currently learning:
Scriabin: Prelude for the left hand alone, op. 9 no. 1
Debussy: Suite bergamasque, no. 3 (DON'T KILL ME!)
Rachmaninoff: B minor prelude, op. 32 no. 10
netzow
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« Reply #209 on: December 20, 2007, 09:47:01 PM »

Bach Prelude No. 15 WTC book I
Chopin Prelude No. 4
Debussy Ballade
Beethoven "Tempest" Mov. 3
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teresa_b
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« Reply #210 on: December 24, 2007, 12:02:17 AM »

Mozart  PC no 9, K271, entirety, to play in spring with chamber orchestra. 

Graceful Ghost Rag.  (Best rag I have ever heard  Cool)

Teresa
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monkeyyy
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« Reply #211 on: December 25, 2007, 11:10:38 AM »

Waldesrauschen
Chopin 10/8
Bach p&f in Bflat major (1)
Fantasiestucke op.12 schumann 1 t/m4

Chamber music
mozart sonata k.521
beethoven trio op.1 no.3,

hmm... maybe it's too much
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amelialw
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« Reply #212 on: December 25, 2007, 04:00:39 PM »

it really is'nt too much, trust me, compared to what i'm working on
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monkeyyy
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« Reply #213 on: December 25, 2007, 04:08:19 PM »

Cheesy I see. good luck!
But I like to see 'quick' progress, and the more you practise at the same time, the slower it goes..!
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amelialw
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« Reply #214 on: December 25, 2007, 04:17:36 PM »

hmm...that's not exactly true, in the end it all rounds down to whether you are doing proper practise or not.

you can practise a piece every 2 days but still learn it fast. I do that with many of my pieces and I still learn them fast as I said due to the practise.

my teacher said that for her B.A degree in Germany/U.S et she had to learn complete sets of pieces each semester, so right now she expects fast work from me and expects alot to be done every week.
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michael_langlois
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« Reply #215 on: December 25, 2007, 06:47:29 PM »

my teacher said that for her B.A degree in Germany/U.S et she had to learn complete sets of pieces each semester, so right now she expects fast work from me and expects alot to be done every week.

I had a teacher once who had to learn Rach 3 in a weekend...
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jlh
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« Reply #216 on: December 27, 2007, 05:55:03 AM »

hmm...that's not exactly true, in the end it all rounds down to whether you are doing proper practise or not.

Since what may seem proper for one pianist may not be effective at all for another pianist, I would probable substitute 'proper' practice with 'effective' practice.  Wink
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gerryjay
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« Reply #217 on: January 10, 2008, 10:24:22 PM »

I'm learning the Concord Sonata.  So far I have only mastered the part in Thoreau when you put the board on the piano.  I think I've figured out where to put the board.
i can play this part too and my interpretation rocks!!!
  Grin
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current repertory:
mozart: sonata k.332;
chopin: ballade opus 38;
brahms: rhapsodies opus 79;
debussy: children's corner suite.
gerryjay
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« Reply #218 on: January 10, 2008, 10:31:05 PM »

hmm...that's not exactly true, in the end it all rounds down to whether you are doing proper practise or not.

you can practise a piece every 2 days but still learn it fast. I do that with many of my pieces and I still learn them fast as I said due to the practise.

my teacher said that for her B.A degree in Germany/U.S et she had to learn complete sets of pieces each semester, so right now she expects fast work from me and expects alot to be done every week.

 it says nothing actually. everyone has its own pace of study, and in the end a different amount of pieces that are ready to be called a repertory. anyway the fast you can learn something or the number of pieces you play doesn't mean anything of importance because what really matter is how do you play what you play.
 there are legendary pianists with more than 1000 pieces and other with less than 200 in their repertory. so, does it matter at all?
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current repertory:
mozart: sonata k.332;
chopin: ballade opus 38;
brahms: rhapsodies opus 79;
debussy: children's corner suite.
ganymed
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« Reply #219 on: January 10, 2008, 11:51:57 PM »

i moved on from the bach inventinos to k330 !
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gerryjay
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« Reply #220 on: January 11, 2008, 12:32:37 AM »

 oops...i didn't answer previously...
 my repertory is:

 bach - prelude and fugue number 6 from wtc book 1
 mozart - sonata k 332
 brahms - rhapsody opus 79 n. 2
 
 then i have an issue. i was preparing debussy's children's corner, but perhaps i should leave it and change for a shorter debussy (prelude 10) and three cirandas by villa-lobos. that's not decided yet. let's wait...  Huh
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current repertory:
mozart: sonata k.332;
chopin: ballade opus 38;
brahms: rhapsodies opus 79;
debussy: children's corner suite.
swim4ever_22
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« Reply #221 on: January 11, 2008, 03:19:00 AM »

then i have an issue. i was preparing debussy's children's corner, but perhaps i should leave it and change for a shorter debussy (prelude 10) and three cirandas by villa-lobos. that's not decided yet. let's wait...  Huh

My personal choice would be children's corner. Right now I'm working on:

Sonatina No. 5 -- Beethoven
Sonatina Op. 36 No. 1 -- Clementi
2 Minuets from the Notebook for Anna Magdalena -- Bach
No. 1 from Album for the Young -- Schumann


Very basic repertoire. I know.
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gerryjay
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« Reply #222 on: January 11, 2008, 04:59:58 AM »

My personal choice would be children's corner. Right now I'm working on:
hey swim!
 thanks for the comment. it's a beautiful work, isn't it? the question is that maybe another composer is needed for my repertory hence the possible change.
 about your repertory, it's the classic and cool selection. enjoy it!
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current repertory:
mozart: sonata k.332;
chopin: ballade opus 38;
brahms: rhapsodies opus 79;
debussy: children's corner suite.
swim4ever_22
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« Reply #223 on: January 11, 2008, 04:32:39 PM »

hey swim!
 thanks for the comment. it's a beautiful work, isn't it? the question is that maybe another composer is needed for my repertory hence the possible change.
 about your repertory, it's the classic and cool selection. enjoy it!


If you're looking for a different composer, you might want to try some of Tchaikovsky's works, such as the Seasons. If you want to hang on to Impressionism, maybe Satie's Gnosseines? There are a number of works that you could try around the level of Debussy's Children's Corner.
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franz-liszt
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« Reply #224 on: January 12, 2008, 12:04:56 AM »

I'm learning Chopin Scherzo 2&3 and Haydn Sonata No. 27.
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gerryjay
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« Reply #225 on: January 12, 2008, 01:19:17 AM »


If you're looking for a different composer, you might want to try some of Tchaikovsky's works, such as the Seasons. If you want to hang on to Impressionism, maybe Satie's Gnosseines? There are a number of works that you could try around the level of Debussy's Children's Corner.
hey swim!
 thanks again for the suggestions. the satie i have already done number 1 and 4: great music, i love to play it. the tchaikovsky is a plan for the future cause i want to play this complete set (i played number 10).
 anyway, i think that it is decided by now: the change was made mainly because i need beside the bach-classical-19th-20th works a latino-american also, hence the villa-lobos. btw i'm listening to the prelude by debussy right now and i love it, do you? notice that the children's is not forgotten: in the near future i will return to it to complete the set.
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current repertory:
mozart: sonata k.332;
chopin: ballade opus 38;
brahms: rhapsodies opus 79;
debussy: children's corner suite.
gerryjay
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« Reply #226 on: January 12, 2008, 01:21:09 AM »

I'm learning Chopin Scherzo 2&3 and Haydn Sonata No. 27.
hey franz!
 both scherzi at a time? holly cow!  Shocked
 good luck!
 
 
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current repertory:
mozart: sonata k.332;
chopin: ballade opus 38;
brahms: rhapsodies opus 79;
debussy: children's corner suite.
mjin1
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« Reply #227 on: January 12, 2008, 05:06:52 AM »

eh.. it's been a rough ride but..

I'm learning the friska of hungarian rhapsody no.2..

I'm almost finished with it.. I have a couple of pages left, and I'm already working on the prestissimo.

It's got some difficult parts in it, but I have the speed for it. I've spent an enormous amount of time and patience on it so far.. about three months with the correct fingering.

It's mildly frustrating because my piano hasn't been regulated in like 20 years, so alot of the really flashy virtuoso parts that I infact have the speed for, I can't ..really do consistently on this piano.. apparently, the tuner says it can't play pianissimo very well at all and can't do repeating notes very well either. .. Both of those play a hefty role in this song, however I'm doing my best. I'll probably be done with it in a month or two.

Already started the 6th paganini etude, so I'll probably end up finishing that.. Though, after rhapsody my teacher wants me to start a bach partita, so i'll probably do that too.
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pianochick93
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« Reply #228 on: January 12, 2008, 07:26:48 AM »

I am currently focusing on Pavane Pour Une Infante Defunte by Ravel (My friends think it is horribly boring and sappy, I say that if they can't appreciate more styles than just the 'fun' fast stuff, then they should go jump in a deep hole...) and Prelude opus 3:2 by Rachmaninoff (That one counts as fun...according to them)
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cherub_rocker1979
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« Reply #229 on: January 12, 2008, 11:10:40 AM »

Beethoven - Sonata in F minor, op. 2 no. 1 (for my fortepiano lessons)
Schumann - Fantasy, op. 17
Ravel - Sonatine
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point of grace
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« Reply #230 on: January 12, 2008, 09:59:34 PM »

i´m on vacations!  Cool

 
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shadow88
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« Reply #231 on: January 12, 2008, 10:03:03 PM »

Your pieces are amazing. I have a concert tomorrow. I play
Chopin: Fantasie Impromptu
Chopin: Nocturne d-flat
Liszt: La Chasse
Liszt: Liebestraum
Ravel: Pavane pour une infante defunte
Debussy: Golliwoggs Cake walk
After that i will learn the Hungarian Rhapsody 2 i think..
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My current pieces:
- Clementi - Gradus ad Parnassum - No. 9
- Liszt - un Sospiro
- Mendelssohn - Rondo Capriccioso op. 14
damien
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« Reply #232 on: January 16, 2008, 04:55:30 AM »

Nocturnes opus 55 2 and 32 2 chopin
posthumous waltz Br.21 chopin
schubert impromptu op90 2
bunch of mazurkas by chopin
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