I'm going to college this June and there's going to be an audition for college scholarship (any performaing arts course) on Feb. 26, 2005. the requirements for audition (for piano) say that i need to play 1st and 3rd movt. of a mozart/beethoven sonata or chopin/schumann piece or any of bach's 2-part invention. i don't like to play bach...
i can play mozart's sonata in D major K576, chopin's waltz in E minor (op. posthumous), waltz no2 op64... and i think i can cram (hopefully, and i cry to all the existing gods) the revolutionary etude within the time frame... hehehehe..
which one should i play?
?
Others may disagree with me, but I think that at this point, with a little less than two months until your audition, you should be mainly polishing (and, if you haven't already, memorizing) by now. Which rules out the Etude. You may think it will be fast and virtuoso and impressive, but trust me, if your judges do their job, they will see right through it.
I need some clarification on your audition. It looks as if you can play the first and last movements of a Mozart or Beethoven sonata, OR a Chopin or Schumann piece, OR a Bach two-part Invention. That's a pretty wide range of options if I understand it correctly. The Bach Invention will last about 2 minutes, whereas the Sonata might take up to 15!
If you really have a choice between these, I promise you will impress your judges with a solid interpretation and performance of Mozart. And by solid interpretation I mean keep pedal to an absolute minimum, because the composer did not intend for pedaling in his piano music.
So, maybe you could clear up the competition requirements a little bit for me?