Hello! I'm new here. Maybe this question and the topic in general will annoy you, so I am apologizing in advance for that. I'm auditioning for some conservatories next year and I have two main issues. Since I don't have a teacher (can't afford one and I'm not studying in a musical high-school since 2015), I need some external advice.So far, my audition repertoire (already learned, but the 'real' struggle begins now) consists of:Haydn Sonata C minor, Hob.20Bach, Prelude and fugue No.5, WTC 2Chopin, Etude Op.10 No.11Stravinsky Etude Op.7 No.4Liszt Hungarian Rhapsody No.12Enescu Pavane from Suite Op.10My questions are:What do you think of it in terms of balance, of lenght, difficulty? I am aware the Liszt is almost absurd, but I adore it and it's kind of a motivation to study more. Is playing just one movement from a suite allowed? The whole Op.10 Suite by Enescu would be too lenghty and I really want to play his Pavane.. Or Sarabande. 🤔PS: I took this long break because I got discouraged then and took a Bachelor in philosophy and literature in the meantime. So please, don't discourage me because of my age if there is the slightest temptetation. I am stupidly fragile.
You are welcome, glad I could be of help!If your repertoire seems to difficult you can always adjust, right? And worst case scenario if you don't do well this year you can always try again next year. In either case this year will offer a valuable experience. Are you planning on auditioning in one or several schools?
My question would be what you and others here think is the better option between the two sonatas. I love them equally and can't discriminate between them. I also have Waldstein memorized since a while, but I heard it's too 'hot' of a pick for auditions, as almost everybody chooses it.
Yes, Op.7 is.. thick. Op.22 kind of reminds me of a late Beethoven sonata here and there. (maybe it's stupid to say that, but that's my honest impression ). Thank you so very much for the advice.