As an informal study and recital piece for a music school concert.
However, the final piece would be the fugue, which I was told would be too much for me. My fugue repertoire is pretty limited -->
Goldberg var 4 (if that counts, it's a 4 voice piece so it's at least related I think) and I tried BWV 891 but put it down shortly before reaching page 2.
I really like op 10/2 and op 2/2 so far, so I might play one of them. Or maybe some smaller pieces of course.
Any other suggestions will still be appreciated!
you could do the rondo in g major op 51 no 2, it's a slow extended form work so about 8-10 minutes of music there. it is incredibly lovely.
again you listed rep above you worked on but that tells me nothing, rather how you play a piece realy dictates what level of rep can be reccommended.
still it is very nice.
Musicology:
2 Rondos, Op.51
Key: G
Year: 1796-1802
Genre: Other Keyboard
Pr. Instrument: Piano
No.1 in C
No.2 in G
The first of the two Rondos, Op. 51, was published in 1797 by Artaria in Vienna and the second in 1802, also by Artaria in Vienna, but with a dedication to Countess Henriette Lichnowsky, sister of Prince Karl Lichnowsky, one of Beethoven's most important patrons. The first of the set is cast in C major, the second in G major
Marked Andante cantabile e grazioso and in 2/4 meter, the Rondo in G major is a combination of Mozartean grace and ornamentation and Beethoven's sense of concentration. Cast in ternary rondo form, or ABACABA, this piece is also infused with characteristics of sonata form. For instance, the B section is on the dominant, but moves back to the tonic for the return of A. More telling is the central section, which is set in E major, far removed from the tonic on the "sharp side," creating precisely the kind of tension typical of sonata-form movements. Contrast is increased by the 6/8 meter of section C. As in sonata-form movements, when B returns, it is in the tonic, not the dominant. The A section is itself ternary in construction. The first part is characterized by thirty-second-note flourishes that descend to connect the tones of the melody, while similar flourishes ascend in the central segment as the tune moves from right hand to left. The return of the first part of the theme is extended through repetition of the falling flourishes; Beethoven uses this extension each time it appears to modulate to the ensuing key