Hi. I dont think i would go with anything schumann or mendelssohn, maybe a little easy. The competition is 16 to 30 years so its pretty serious, all instruments too. I played Liszt 2nd concerto in it this year but didnt advance. Its not that i didnt play good, but you have to be insanely good. I was thinking Chopin 2 or Rach 1? Rach 2 is vastly overplayed. Thanks for the comments!!! SAM
Hey Keys?? Yes my friend us Yuli, are you Yuli??? You gotta tell me who you are. SAM
I don't care what you play. As long as it's difficult. Because that's what matters.
Thanks for all the input, im learning the ossia cadenza from the Rach 3 and its not that hard,
Don't tackle the Rach 3 now, trust me, you'll be happy you waited until later on in life.Check out Gershwin f minor, Mendelssohn g minor (classic), Mendelssohn D major,
Rachmaninoff probably preferred it because he could play it.
No real offence, but anyone who recommends Brahms' second to a 16-year old, under any circumstances, loses all my respect. Ditto with Rachmaninoff's third.
I was thinking about the Rach 3 (1st mvmt). Im also 16.
With Brahms, it's more a consideration of musical difficulty and maturity than anything else. I don't play this concerto, some pianists on this forum could say more.
Does nobody here like Mozart concertos? or am I just a few levels below everyone else?
If you can play La Campanella and Heroic Polonaise very well, then Rach 3 will not really be that much of a push technically, as there isn't much in it that's really unusual. The main challenge is its length and CONSISTENT level difficulty, but each section by itself is really pretty much manageable. Just allow yourself a good 2 years to put it together, and be patient (one of the common downfalls among people who play this piece is their impatience and expecting it to come as redily as a 5 minute etude).
I'm sorry stebroccm but I don't quite agree with this statement (not all of it anyways). I agree that Rach 3 isn't technically too challenging (probably at a grade ten technical level). But it takes a great deal of maturity to play it well. Musically, it contradicts almost everything that a pianist learns. For example, some of the "joyful" moments in the piece are actually meant to be cries of desperation etc. I've heard many rendetions of this concerto and very few were played well. In fact, at CMC national final in Calgary, I heard an adjudicator remark at a performance of the Rach 3:"It was an idiotic choice for *bleeps name* to play. It sounded like she didn't know what she was doing. Way too cautious and very poorly played"However, there may be the occasional child genius who just happens to understand the concerto fully.Anyways yeah...I wouldn't touch that concerto for about 3 or four years. (my teacher laughed in my face after i asked for it...that traumatized me...lol)I would do Chopin or Tchaik 2.
(although the Tchaik concerti can be played well by anyone who can play the notes).
and its only 17 min long.
If you are going to do Brahms, do his first concerto: it is ...... gorgeous.
Check out Gershwin f minor, Mendelssohn g minor (classic), Mendelssohn D major,