I'll begin my first year at a music academy this autumn (Yay, gratz to me!), and I thought it'd be good if I started finding competitions in time for my second year.
So I did a search in the internet, and almost every competition had like 2-3 hours repertoire.
I knoooow, I'll ask my teacher, but it would be better if I had some own suggestions on pieces.
So this is what I've got:
Bach: P&F D-minor, E-flat major WTK II, Partita Bb major. - A bit more than 15 minutes
Mozart: Rondo A-minor, *sonata f-major kv 332 - Aprox. 25
Hayd: Sonata E-major no 46 - Bit less than 10 min
Beethoven: Sonatas: Waldstein, op 101. Aprox 50 min?
Chopin: Etudes: 10 no 4, *8, *12. 25 no 1, 7. Maybe 20 min?
*Scherzo no 2. Maybe 10min? *Fantasy: 14 min?
Schumann: Symphonic etudes 30 min (like 20 without repeats)
Liszt: Mephisto waltz 12 min
Debussy: L'isle joyeuse 8 min
Concerto: Beethoven no 3
*=Played for quite some years ago, or haven't learned yet.
So it's probably enough.. But it's kind of.. I mean, the most modern is Debussy...
And I have enough time mostly because of I've got quite much from only a few composers.
To you who've participated in competitions:
I need a broader repertoire, right? Any suggestions?
I only want to respond to this very unobjectionable list, because you provide such an intriguing moment of doubt at the end of your post.
Ultimately a pianist's repertoire has to define him in some way. People want to hear a musician because of their individual qualities; but those individual qualities are often tied up in either very specific kinds of music or very over-arching philosophies. So it works both ways.
All the pieces on your list are excellent pieces (although I'm not personally partial to Chopin's second scherzo). They certainly show a range of techniques, less so a range of style - if you take a true bird's eye view - and a range of possibilities for you to show this and that. But I truly believe that you, and pianists everywhere, should ask: what does it show about me personally? What does it show I can accomplish, that is different, that audiences (or judges) can invest in?
I think pianists in general need to push themselves much further, and strive to be distinguished in all ways. Even the visual element of repertoire, that is, looking at a dry list, is important. If a pianist plays all 32 Beethoven sonatas, that is on a basic level impressive and admirable. But is it enough to draw attention? Haven't dozens of pianists done that? It's been proven time and time again that it can be done.
When I look at this program, I think you must be a fine pianist. You obviously have good taste in music. But to be totally honest, it looks like it could have been put together the same way 20 years ago, 40 years ago, 60 years ago, 80 years ago. Entering a competition, I believe one should ask themselves: how can I distinguish myself from the others? What can I do, that they cannot?
Walter Ramsey