Hi,I am making a video where I rank difficulty of etudes with 8 levels of difficulty and play excerpts from them. Right now the piece I have chosen at no. 7 is Feux Follets. I am trying to choose one for no. 8 that is harder than Feux Follets, preferably not a Liszt or Chopin etude since I already have a lot of those. Does anyone have any suggestions? I also don't have big hands.Thanks!
Perhaps on of Godowsky's Chopin etude arrangements?
Here are a few candidates:Brahms Paganini Variations:Hamelin Triple Etude:Rachmaninoff Etude Op. 39 No. 6 "Little Red Riding Hood."Moskovsky Etudes Op. 72Alkan Le Festin D'EsopeLigeti Devil's StaircaseThis out to get you started in your quest to find a trickier etude than feux follets!
Excellent suggetions from lelle and nightwindsonata! The 65 or so Chopin/Godowsky studies, of which 54 were published, are essentials, to my mind.Marc-André Hamelin's Triple Étude after Chopin is now the first of his set of 12 Studies in the Minor Keys, he having substituted it for his earlier study in the same key (A minor) Le vol du bourdon (The flight of the bumble-bee, after Rimsky-Korsakov); it combines Chopin's three études in A minor (Opp. 10/2 and 25/4 & 25/11). In response to it I was promted to revive (and revise, from memory) my own study initially entitled Les trois Chopins that likewise treated all three Chopin A minor études; it dated from 1977 but, on discovery that Godowsky had written one such which had not been published, I considered the possibility that it might one day be published and therefore decided to introduce it to the waste-bin (there were no small-scale paper shredderes in those days). The new version is entitled Étude en forme de Chopin and is apprioriately dedicated to Marc-André; as well as combining material from those three Chopin études, it quotes from many other Chopin études during its course. Copies may be obtained by writing to sorabji.archive@gmail.com and its first page may be viewed, both in ms. and typeset edition, towards the end of the page https://www.sorabji-archive.co.uk/hinton/scores.php .
I get redirected to a site called affiliatecavern dot com when I click your link, just so you know.
Someone should write an arrangement of Feux Follet for the left hand..
My computer just blocked the site.
Czerny's Grand Etude op. 364 is absolutely insane and I hate it that no one has performed it yet. I will try to be the first one to do.I mean, how can one know about Mereaux and Alkan and not know this work. It would sound pretty good if played properly in my opinion.
The midi doesn't help but I feel that Czerny Etude is pretty stupid to be honest. Difficult, yes, but musically it's not much to write home about :/
the faster Chopin etudes in my opinion, which are already musically conservative. The only musically impressive etudes in the romantic era are Liszt's transcendental etudes.
It's not much worse than the faster Chopin etudes in my opinion, which are already musically conservative. The only musically impressive etudes in the romantic era are Liszt's transcendental etudes....Hardly any serious performer records/plays Czerny, and those that do don't do it as well as the greats (Cortot, Horowitz, Cziffra, Gould, etc.) so obviously this isn't gonna raise Czerny's (or any other "obscure" classical composer) reputation as an artist.
Chopin's and Alkan's are "conservative" and "not musically impressive" contributions to the piano étude during the Romantic era? Really?...
The Liapunov set is great! Also Henselt's are worthy of examination. Libetta has given some great performances of Czerny, eg