I think I know that already.Does someone have any useful responses?
Unless you are going to be a professional, I think you should just learn pieces that are appealing to you.
How about some pieces in different periods, like:Baroque: Bach minuets, etcClassical: Mozart minuets, Beethoven minuets, Clementi SonatinasRomantic: Chopin Prelude #4, #7, #24 (c minor)20th Century: Bartok?.....
I was saying that if you are not going to study piano in college, and you just do it for fun, then you should play pieces that you like ie. if you hate Bach, there's no reason to learn any.
I made sure the list I wrote DID feature works from the Baroque, Classical, Romantic, Impressionist and 20th Century.Maybe we didn't understand your question.What would be your example of a 'useful response?'
Like you said at the end of the list, "Beginning to Intermediate", but that list is hardly that.I know that there are very few pieces that are beginner or intermediate, that's why I am seeking advice from experience folks like you all.
"In your opinion and expertise .... beginners to intermediate ...but that list is hardly that." So my opinion and expertise sucks. Thanks. Some people are hard to please Anyway, way to go Bernhard, putting the pieces into grades like that. It gets back to another thread where we were talking about the difficulty and inconsistancy (and indeed relevance)of grading pieces. In Australia, many of the pieces you assign grade 4, are grade 3, grade 5 are grade 4, grade 7 are grade 6 and so on. Perhaps I should have said, early advanced intstead of intermediate - I was talking in relation to what is expected from virtuosos. djbrak, I was concentrating on the "must know" and "standard" part. These pieces are all very well known. A lot of the easier stuff isn't as well known, but there is HEAPS of it!I also thought the list might be for personal use. Now it sounds like a list for teaching. Is this why you're interested?If you would like a list of 'really' easy classics - grade one only, I can help with that. Let me know if you're still interested.
Thank you for the list, and thanks Bernhard for the grade levels (even if they seem a little 'give or take a grade')
out of curiosity, what grades are alkan's concerto for solo piano, godowsky's chopin etudes and sorabji's Opus Clavicembalisticum?