4.
From now on can we at least have the snippets with their key signatures at the beginning of the staff??? It almost makes it impossible to recognise if you're trying to play them.
Well, it sure wasn't impossible for me to get it, for I got it instantly. And besides, if it's a pretty distinctive section, like this one, you shouldn't need a key signature to recognize it. Then again, I haven't had the need to play through them, for I can just look at them.
Stringoverstrung got the first one, it is Transcendental etude no.3 (Liszt). Furtwaengler got the second one - Chopin's second ballade, and you got other two.
Let's see
And prongated, please remember to tell us what that mystery piece is! And the recording!
Hehe you know, you're not that far off......it's Graham Hair's Wild Cherries and Honeycomb. It's the compulsory piece for the Scottish International Piano Comp. in 1998. It's been recorded by Michael Kieran Harvey if you're interested. No-one got it within the time span I specified, so no recording [well, maybe one day in the audition room ^^]A little more of the composer here: https://www.n-ism.org/People/graham.phpAnd the piece is actually part of his set of Transcendental Etudes, which is strangely named "Harmonice Mundi" in that website (and the score's available there too!)
True! Come on people, what is number two? Here is some help - it was composed as His first attempt to that kind of form. And He is very well known.
If you can find several pieces that have the dim--- molto as well as the alternating notes, then I guess they'd all be right. I'm actually curious to see other pieces that have that same passage. That one part though makes up about 30 seconds of the piece... people who know the piece know that part.
Oh come on, too easy. The end of the Liszt sonata.
Watch this one:
... or does anyone else thing some of these are getting a bit too obscure to identify, considering that different editions will put different articulation markings in etc... that may make it pretty much impossible to determine???
Yeh, it's the Debussy
For some reason I think No. 2 is part of the Bartok Mikrokosmos???
3 is the first movement of Janacek's piano sonata ('1 X 1905') and 5 is Godowsky's transcription of the Weber Perpetuum Mobile, which in turn is the last movement of one of Weber's sonatas.
Nr. 1 is Shostakovich 1st piano sonata. It's an insane piece!
however, it is not the Godowski transcription, but the original.
You're right it's not the Godowsky but it's not the original either. Did Weber himself arrange it? The original in the C-major sonata has the running stuff in the RH, as does Godowsky at the start.