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Piano Street Magazine:
The Quiet Revolutionary of the Piano – Fauré’s Complete Piano Works Now on Piano Street

In the pantheon of French music, Gabriel Fauré (1845–1924) often seems a paradox—an innovator cloaked in restraint, a Romantic by birth who shaped the contours of modern French music with quiet insistence. Piano Street now provides sheet music for his complete piano works: a body of music that resists spectacle, even as it brims with invention and brilliance. Read more

Topic: show pieces  (Read 1563 times)

Offline mikal

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show pieces
on: November 28, 2014, 04:51:19 AM
I'm looking for a show piece of around 5min. I have recently got my ALCM. Prefer romantic pieces like Liszt, Chopin or Rachmaninoff. Something like grieg's piano concerto in a minor? Don't mind composers like ravel. Thanks

Offline gr8ape

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Re: show pieces
Reply #1 on: November 28, 2014, 05:43:36 PM
military polonaise

Offline chopinlover01

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Re: show pieces
Reply #2 on: December 02, 2014, 02:25:21 PM
Military Polonaise, 3rd movement of Beethovens Moonlight (It's very much a romantic piece, from a "classical" composer), Rachmaninoff Prelude in G minor, prelude in B minor, Moment Musicauex in B minor, Moment Musicauex in E minor (although that's only a minute and a half, it makes a great encore), Heroique Polonaise. Look at them and see what you think.

Offline visitor

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Re: show pieces
Reply #3 on: December 02, 2014, 03:18:27 PM
'dat nostalgia...
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Piano Street Magazine:
Toward the Flame: Boris Petrushansky’s Journey Through Scriabin’s Universe

Alexander Scriabin died in April 1915, at forty-three, of a fever that took him within a week — leaving his great mystical project unfinished. He left behind a piano language no one had spoken before, one that a century later still questions every interpreter who approaches it. Boris Petrushansky has spent a lifetime preparing his answer. In a new album and an extended conversation with Piano Street, he traces Scriabin’s path from the early Preludes to the final, shattering Op. 74. Read more
 

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