yes of course! Thank you very much! But do you really think that Nocturne op 27 no 1 is harder than fantasie impromptu and italian concerto harder than the etude op 10 no 3? And is Moonlight really harder than nocturne op 48 no 1 and Etude op 10 no 3? Thanks!
Yes of course I would say that it is the beginning of serious advanced music, musically and technically. It is not a Chopin ballade or scherzo in other words.
I would say that would be quite accurate. The beginning of serious advanced music. Although many kids play it before they reach the level of beginning serious advanced music. It is a tempting challenge for kids who are nearing that level.
They're all at incredibly similar levels, so it's difficult to determine which is more difficult.
From least to most difficult, in my opinion: Chopin op. 27 no.1, Bach Italian Concerto, Chopin Op. 25 no.1, Schubert Op.90 no. 2, Beethoven Moonlight Sonata, Chopin Fantasie Impromptu, Opus 10. no. 3, Ballade no. 3, Chopin op. 48 no. 1. The other pieces I haven't tried yet.
Oh the Chopin nocturne opus 48 no. 1 is immensely difficult, in my opinion. Besides having bunches of chords having to go as fast as allegro sixteenth notes, the dynamics called for -- a steady rise in volume over two pages -- makes it even more difficult to articulate. And there's the emotional depth of the piece to contend with, too. I've written about it in some of my other postings.
While it's a nice nocturne, I really don't think it has the depth of the 3rd ballade. It even has a beautiful story. Theme 1 meets theme 2, they fall in love (theme 3) but theme 2 turns to the darkside. Then theme 1 triumphs and theme 1 and theme 2 end up loving each other (the coda)
Well, I have to admit that the ballade 3 is more difficult to sight-read than opus 48 no. 1. We are talking about the same piece, aren't we -- it starts out in Ab major and is in 6/8 time; how many dotted quarters per minute? If 100 or more, than yes, I can see it might be as hard as opus 48 no. 1, but 100 dotted quarters per minute in 6/8 time with sixteenth notes regularly appearing would typically be considered an allegro or vivace or even a presto tempo rather than an allegretto. Meanwhile, I'd venture to say opus 48 no. 1 is way harder than opus 25 no. 10.