I happened to be in an antique shop today. I went through and reviewed several copies of ETUDE magazine dated in the early 1940's.
For those who do not know this magazine, it always had about 20 pages of sheet music in the back, most of it for piano solo.
I noticed that the pieces were assigned a "grade" (level of difficulty).
The Grade 2 music was about right for what I would want to play. I was surprised that some of the Grade 3 music seemed very difficult. It seemed to border on "Advanced."
I am familiar with a number of the standard lesson books being published today, such as Thompson or Schaum or Bastien.
There's no way a "Grade 3" book in any of these series would prepare a person for the "Grade 3" difficulty level in ETUDE. In fact, today's books would be marginal in preparing for even what ETUDE calls "Grade 2."
Are any old timers out there who have tracked piano pedagogy for the last half century? Have the "grades" been made much easier?
Back before T.V. was widespread (e.g., the early 1040s), I suspect that a lot more sheet music was sold, and a lot more people played the piano.
Perhaps at this point the publishers are trying hard to keep people going, and the last thing they want to do is overwhelm them, or push them too hard?
Anyone else have any idea if the so-called "grades" have been watered down?
Thanks-- I will read any replies with interest --