Home
Piano Music
Piano Music Library
Audiovisual Study Tool
Search pieces
All composers
Top composers »
Bach
Beethoven
Brahms
Chopin
Debussy
Grieg
Haydn
Mendelssohn
Mozart
Liszt
Prokofiev
Rachmaninoff
Ravel
Schubert
Schumann
Scriabin
All composers »
All pieces
Recommended Pieces
PS Editions
Instructive Editions
Recordings
Recent additions
Free piano sheet music
News & Articles
PS Magazine
News flash
New albums
Livestreams
Article index
Piano Forum
Resources
Music dictionary
E-books
Manuscripts
Links
Mobile
About
About PS
Help & FAQ
Contact
Forum rules
Pricing
Log in
Sign up
Piano Forum
Home
Help
Search
Piano Forum
»
Piano Board
»
Miscellaneous
»
number/piece association
Print
Pages: [
1
]
Go Down
Topic: number/piece association
(Read 1465 times)
weissenberg2
PS Silver Member
Sr. Member
Posts: 579
number/piece association
on: June 30, 2009, 07:39:22 PM
sometimes when I see a number I think of a piece (based on its catalogue number). E.G. 101, 106, 109, 110, 111= the Beethoven sonatas, 32= the Rachmaninoff prelude etc...
anyone have these?
Logged
"A true friend is one who likes you despite your achievements." - Arnold Bennett
thalbergmad
PS Silver Member
Sr. Member
Posts: 16741
Re: number/piece association
Reply #1 on: June 30, 2009, 08:14:30 PM
Yeh, whenever i see 69, i always think of Thalberg's Trio.
Thal
Logged
Curator/Director
Concerto Preservation Society
kelly_kelly
PS Silver Member
Sr. Member
Posts: 831
Re: number/piece association
Reply #2 on: June 30, 2009, 08:18:00 PM
Oh, definitely. 10, 25 --> Chopin Etudes, 64--> Mendelssohn Violin Concerto, any opus number of Beethoven's sonatas
Logged
It all happens on Discworld, where greed and ignorance influence human behavior... and perfectly ordinary people occasionally act like raving idiots.
A world, in short, totally unlike our own.
Bob
PS Silver Member
Sr. Member
Posts: 16368
Re: number/piece association
Reply #3 on: June 30, 2009, 11:19:59 PM
You can turn numbers into consonants and form concrete words from them. I did that for some listening tests in music classes and worked very well. Kind of pain and some work to create, but reliable for getting lots of work numbers memorized. It was a bit slow to remember the numbers though since you have to translate them from words, to consonants, and then figure out the number again.
Logged
Favorite new teacher quote -- "You found the only possible wrong answer."
Sign-up to post reply
Print
Pages: [
1
]
Go Up
For more information about this topic, click search below!
Search on Piano Street
Piano Street Magazine:
The Complete Piano Works of 16 Composers
Piano Street’s digital sheet music library is constantly growing. With the additions made during the past months, we now offer the complete solo piano works by sixteen of the most famous Classical, Romantic and Impressionist composers in the web’s most pianist friendly user interface.
Read more
Jump to:
=> Miscellaneous