Thank you for the support! Which one is your favorite piece, or which one are you planning to play? Leave your comments about 🎤 and don't miss the second part of the compilation! (link in the description). Moreover, a compilation with most of the sheet music from this video is now available on amazon as softcover book and kindle: bit.ly/45Piezas (Spanish version) and bit.ly/45Pieces (English version).
That's a very nice collection, congratulations for that! I actually didn't know all the pieces. Btw there are quite a lot little piano pearls composed by eastern musicians as Khatchaturian, Prokofiev, Mussorgsky, Stravinsky and Janacek. I missed Scarlatti and Ravel and some others too.
@@paulmeisel339 Thank you very much! The compilation is biased to romanticism, but agree, there are real pearls and beautiful miniatures from these composers; I also would include Babajanian and Bortkiewicz. I'm looking forward to record some of them ☺
@@cernestable Thanks for the further suggestions. It's quite a good idea, not only to name all those pieces, but also record them yourself like a challenge and having fun at the same time!
I have been playing only intermediate and difficult pieces for my first year. FORGOT ALL MY PIECES TODAY. Thanks for giving a good list of pieces to learn quickly
@@theShcrunkly Before many years I did - more or less - the same, but when I wanted to play something for a little audience or only just a friend, I could only play the easy and short pieces. This way I learned, why some of my piano playing friends studied "only easy" piano tunes. To my students I suggest, to play far more than to practice; I got this tip already studying at the Musikhochschule from an older, very experienced Jazz piano student. In the first year of your piano journey you should play ONE easy piece ( one page or even less ) a week till the next lesson. You should be able to memorize it within one or two days, practicing not more than one hour ( or two hours max.) a day. After one year you can REALLY play about 50 little pieces, which is the foundation for the next higher challenges. There's no other way, don't waste your time!
I love your choice of pieces. All very beautiful pieces. And you play soooo nice man. I love how you play. 👏🫶 I am a also happy that I found some pieces I did not know before. Perfect for teaching my students. Keep up the good work
So many lovely pieces here within reach of an intermediate pianist, some of which I’m hearing for the first time! A whole lot to chose from to learn, so inspiring! Offhand, I’m thinking of learning The Poet Speaks by Schumann!❤❤❤
Thank you for comment! I liked the tarantella a bit slower than indicated in order to be clearer in articulations. But it's only a bit! The score says dotted crochet at 112 bpm, and I play it around 100 bpm, so a 10% slower ☺️
I might add: Anything from the "album for the young" by Schumann and "music for childs" by Prokofiev (op. 65) Helped me a lot :) And of course the inventions by Bach
I only included easy pieces by Granados, but he composed plenty of beautiful music. I might recommend the "valses poéticos", a little suite, and a bigger set of pieces called "Goyescas".
Me ha encantado tu recopilación, aun la sigo escuchando, nunca he tocado de Satie y me ha gustado mucho, así que pronto me verás tocando alguna. La de Rameau,me gustó como mudaste la voz del piano, para darle otro énfasis a la pieza. Yo soy incapaz de tener al día mi Repertorio, cuando pasa un tiempo ya se me olvida, tú tienes alguna técnica de práctica para no olvidarlas, las practicas de vez en cuando para no olvidar. Te felicito y gracias por formar parte de nuestro foro, pues así podemos disfrutar de tus grabaciones. Saludos.
Muchas gracias Carmen! Yo tampoco soy capaz de mantener al día el repertorio, creo que está sólo al alcance de los genios aprender y no olvidar al mismo tiempo, y por ello yo me centro más en aprender nuevas piezas que en mantener. Lo que sí es cierto, es que volver a aprender una pieza antigua resulta cada vez más sencillo (dependiendo también de la dificultad) y toma mucho menos tiempo, por lo menos la mitad que la primera vez. Aunque de primeras parece que no se recuerda nada, la mayoría de lo que se aprende queda oculto en algún recoveco del cerebro. Gracias de nuevo por escuchar y comentar! ☺️
@cernestable please change the first entry Tchaikovsky to "0:00" instead of 0:04. TH-cam will then recognize the list and automatically add chapters in the progress bar! Great!
Yes, wonderful pieces for polyphonic writing, although more difficult imo than usually stated. I did include a prelude and fughetta, similar to two-part inventions, but in the second part of the compilation. Have a happy new year! ☺️🍾
Here are the following easy pieces should be included: JS Bach musette in d bwv 126 Beethoven: Fur Elise, sonatina g major Brahms: waltzes op 39 no 9 Chopin:Bourees G major Debussy: Elegie, prelude 6 Liszt:Wiegenlied,La cloche Mozart Minuet 1 in C Major, K 6 Mendelssohn Sostenuto MWV U 167 Prokofiev Music for Children op 65 no 3 Historiette Rachmaninoff: song without word Schubert Nine Ecossaises, no. 4 in G major Schumann Soldatenmarsch Scriabin Preludes G minor Op.11 No.22 Tchaikovsky Album pour enfants, Op. 39, No. 16
I am currently finishing the edition of a new book from this first part of the compilation, both in pdf and softcover versions, and purchase will have a very affordable price!
First of all - thank you for this video. I did discover some new pieces that could be fun to learn which I didn’t know but mostly, it could benefit my students because I’m always looking for new and interesting pieces for their repertoire. Secondly- I realize you love Chopin (I mean who doesn’t) but I feel like he dominates this list way too hard. At first when I watched the first few pieces I was like “ah nice some less known composers and pieces” but then later on it became mostly Chopin. Thirdly - the lack of Bach here is noticeable. I mean only two Bach pieces, one of which is a part of a full piece (something I really dislike people are doing). What do you have against Bach? I mean you don’t need to include the popular pieces, he has so many fantastic preludes, arias, fuege, canons etc that are less knowns and can be included in the beginner to intermediate Lever. And lastly - I’m going to assume this is purely beginner to intermediate and isn’t internally ranked from easiest to hardest because putting Mendelssohn’s “Lost Happy” before Chopins valse in A minor is just wrong.
Thank you for your comment. Yes, obviously I love Chopin 😅 and I think some of his mazurkas are the best way to start learning his pieces. But as I told in the description, this video is in fact a compilation of my records, and doesn't mean to be a learning. program, cause I know it is biased. Regarding Bach, I really like him, but I think that playing baroque music in the piano is quite more difficult than usually stated. Indeed, I was not sure about including the aria from Goldberg variations. I know that teachers usually advise their students for not doing some ornaments i.e. in order to do it easier, but overall, I think that to some extent, baroque technique and guidelines must be known in order to perform it adequately, and romanticism is much more internalized in the general people musical experience. About the difficulty rank, well, you know that this is tremendously subjective. Why I put the A minor valse at last? Because I have seen soooo many people struggling with the 3 octave arpeggio, both with tempo and with fingering. Additionally, the trills in the A Major section are usually done with different combinations of fingers, including 3-4. So that, I think as well as with Bach, that the difficulty of this piece is underestimated. Thank you again for your extensive comment, I partially agree with you despite the differences I stated, and of course alternative lists could be done.
@faiteh9700 Hola! Ya se encuentra el libro en versión de tapa blanda, con 45 de las piezas del video. Podéis verlo en amazon: bit.ly/45Piezas La versión Kindle está en revisión y debería estar disponible esta misma semana.
@mralegrias Hola! Ya se encuentra el libro en versión de tapa blanda, con 45 de las piezas del video. Podéis verlo en amazon: bit.ly/45Piezas La versión Kindle está en revisión y debería estar disponible esta misma semana.
Yes, I think that Gnossiennes no. 1 and no. 3 are very useful for beginners. Probably, the soft dynamics and the jumps in the left hand between the bass notes and the chords are the biggest difficult you will find on them, but these jumps are repeating a lot along these pieces. What to play, this is maybe the most interesting question that every pianist does to himself or to others ☺️. As a beginner, it is quite important to start identifying what are your strengths and limitations on the piano: are you good at jumps? at voicing, doing more than two voices? can I use trills and mordents? I cannot tell you exactly what pieces from 1 to 15 may be the more adequate for you, but overall I would recommend you for sure nos. 1, 3, 4, 5, 8, 11 and 13. No. 14 is very similar to the other gnossiennes (with more variations), but the first bars correspond to an odd intro which is a bit more difficult. Regarding the other pieces, I would remark that nos. 2 and 9 require a little bit of hand stretching if you don't have big hands (though easy pieces anyway), and nos. 6, 10, 12 and 15 are very good introductions to three-voice playing. On the other hand, no. 7 is not hard but requires facility for playing ornaments and finger-dependent sustain, or unlike, playing it with reduced or no ornaments. Hope this answer helps you, and best luck to you in your practice! ☺️
Hi! 45 of these piano pieces are now reedited and available on softcover sheet music book on amazon: bit.ly/45Pieces Kindle version is now under review and should be available within this week! ☺️
Il apparaît dans le livre Aventures avec piano, signé Jacoby Russell, mais il est vrai qu'il présente une ressemblance raisonnable avec les pièces de Kavalevsky ☺️
Es un piano digital, un Kawai CS-11, exporta las grabaciones a un pincho en formato WAV, aunque al principio del video hay un par de grabaciones hechas en un piano más antiguo, donde tuve que hacerlo mediante cables de audio por jack.
En unos días sacaré la segunda parte (intermedio a díficil). Aunque todavía no he grabado ninguna de esas piezas, se encuentran otras también complicadas de Albéniz y Chopin.
THAT'S IT!!! I'VE HAD ENOUGH!!!! I'm going to the store and buying that Yamaha DGX670 to play these. Thanks for the inspiration! God bless. Did you hear the Good News? Jesus, the Son of God, loves you. He died for the forgiveness of sins. He was crucified on a cross and was resurrected. Jesus conquered death and has overcome the world. Follow Jesus, repent, and live forever with Him in Heaven! Want to know more? Check out the Gospels of Matthew, Luke, Mark, and John of the Holy Bible to learn more about His promise to you!
@@cernestable Они изогнуты наружу от природы? Редко такое бывает. Просто, зажим в руках, если такие 1 ые пальцы. Вам удобно, значит. Спасибо за исполнение. Успехов!
It's not strictly necessary, here I give you an extraordinary example of pianist Josep Colom playing Bach preludes with Chopin etudes, remarking the not so obvious relation between them: th-cam.com/video/8y9fGtNhzCQ/w-d-xo.html
@@cernestable ''Miodzio'' in Polish simply means - great, I like it; from the word miód - honey, miodzio - honey-like/like honey. Greetings from Gołdap, where I cordially invite you to visit.
it's a mater of taste the fact if others are prettier... nevertheless, this compilation ranges from easy to intermediate, though I'll do some day a compilation for beginners.
With a couple of exceptions an almost entirely unrepresentative 19th century repertoire; ok if identified as such, but otherwise completely flawed by the lack of breadth.
Well... it is identified in the description. This videos compiles my records, and are not intended to form a representative selection. Hence, both difficulty and style are obviously biased.
@@cernestable As a ‘Romantic’ list, your choice is great (though the JS Bach and Rameau pieces are clearly interlopers and not Romantic at all); it includes some really interesting pieces I did not know. Perhaps you should do a Baroque list, one for Classical, and one for Modern which would deal with my issue of shoehorning viewers into thinking that one period is more important than any other.
I'm glad you liked the romantic compilation. It could be an option. However, I am also not a fan of dividing by style, since the boundaries can become blurred. For example, I would classify Beethoven's early period as classical, while his style was clearly romantic later, yet having nothing to do with the romanticism of the second half of the 19th century. The baroque works recovered by the romantics are another example: Liszt's transcriptions of Bach's works, Bach's chaconne transcribed by Brahms for the left hand... Indeed, new biases might be introduced, i.e., in baroque music: historical vs. romantic interpretations. It's really difficult to make a compilation to everyone's taste. On the other hand, I am not trying to convey that one style of music is more important than another on a musical level. However, on a piano level, romanticism has more importance for me than previous styles, simply due to the fact that the piano, more or less similar to the one we know today, emerged as a response to the needs of romantic music, while previous music was composed for other types of keyboards with very different characteristics, and we have had to adapt them to perform them on very different keyboards for which that music was designed. Thank you for comment!
Bonito que distribuyas cultura pero ¿Estas lucrando con contenido de la música universal de dominio publico? Eso esta permitido? Nos puedes dar una explicacion justificada al respecto? Me gustaria saber....
No sé si me hablas de los videos o del libro de partituras... y tampoco creo que este sea el sito ni yo la persona para explicarte esto, pero ya que estoy te contesto. Tanto las interpretaciones como las ediciones de las partituras pueden tener derechos de autor distintos a los de la composición. Que una pieza no tenga derechos de autor no conlleva que mi interpretación no los tenga. De hecho, sólo las grabaciones de más de 100 años se liberan de los derechos de autor. Del mismo modo, que hayan pasado al dominio público los derechos de autor de un compositor, no quiere decir que cualquier edición que se haga de sus partituras vaya a estar libre de derechos de autor, porque existe un trabajo de edición, impresión y distribución; creo que nadie pretenderá que le llegue un libro gratis a casa por el hecho de no tener derechos de autor.
Thank you for the support! Which one is your favorite piece, or which one are you planning to play? Leave your comments about 🎤 and don't miss the second part of the compilation! (link in the description). Moreover, a compilation with most of the sheet music from this video is now available on amazon as softcover book and kindle: bit.ly/45Piezas (Spanish version) and bit.ly/45Pieces (English version).
12:13?? 12:31??
That's a very nice collection, congratulations for that! I actually didn't know all the pieces.
Btw there are quite a lot little piano pearls composed by eastern musicians as Khatchaturian, Prokofiev, Mussorgsky, Stravinsky and Janacek. I missed Scarlatti and Ravel and some others too.
@@paulmeisel339 Thank you very much! The compilation is biased to romanticism, but agree, there are real pearls and beautiful miniatures from these composers; I also would include Babajanian and Bortkiewicz. I'm looking forward to record some of them ☺
@@cernestable Thanks for the further suggestions. It's quite a good idea, not only to name all those pieces, but also record them yourself like a challenge and having fun at the same time!
7:00 .😅.@@paulmeisel339
Great video!! I love that you did not just include the most popular pieces! I am definitely going to discover and learn some gems ❤❤
Glad you like it! Thanks for watching and for the comment!☺️
Thank you SO much fot this wonderful video!! You've givrn rne some great ideas for my students!! Beautifully played.Brilliant video..pleasemke more!!!
Thank you so much for your kind comment! I'm planning to do a similar one only with pieces for beginners ☺
I have been playing only intermediate and difficult pieces for my first year. FORGOT ALL MY PIECES TODAY. Thanks for giving a good list of pieces to learn quickly
Glad you enjoyed it! Thank you for listening and comment!☺️
@@theShcrunkly Before many years I did - more or less - the same, but when I wanted to play something for a little audience or only just a friend, I could only play the easy and short pieces. This way I learned, why some of my piano playing friends studied "only easy" piano tunes.
To my students I suggest, to play far more than to practice; I got this tip already studying at the Musikhochschule from an older, very experienced Jazz piano student.
In the first year of your piano journey you should play ONE easy piece ( one page or even less ) a week till the next lesson. You should be able to memorize it within one or two days, practicing not more than one hour ( or two hours max.) a day. After one year you can REALLY play about 50 little pieces, which is the foundation for the next higher challenges.
There's no other way, don't waste your time!
I love your choice of pieces. All very beautiful pieces. And you play soooo nice man. I love how you play. 👏🫶 I am a also happy that I found some pieces I did not know before. Perfect for teaching my students. Keep up the good work
Thank you very much for your kind comment!😄 Glad you find some pieces!
So many lovely pieces here within reach of an intermediate pianist, some of which I’m hearing for the first time! A whole lot to chose from to learn, so inspiring! Offhand, I’m thinking of learning The Poet Speaks by Schumann!❤❤❤
I'm very glad you liked it and found it inspiring. Thank you very much for commenting, and good luck with Schumann!☺️
I like the reverse lighting on the 2nd Rameau! Very cool effect to make it look like a harpsichord.
Thank you! I enjoyed that recording, looking forward to do a similar one!
Thanks for all the work you put into this, it's a good resource. One minor quibble - the Chaminade was played around half speed.
Thank you for comment! I liked the tarantella a bit slower than indicated in order to be clearer in articulations. But it's only a bit! The score says dotted crochet at 112 bpm, and I play it around 100 bpm, so a 10% slower ☺️
Excelente.
Me encantó la selección de piezas.
Muchas gracias!
@@cernestable
Me gusta tocar al piano.
Por ahora ensayando un Nocturno de Chopin ( do sostenido menor).
el nº 20, póstumo? Nocturno + Chopin + Do sostenido menor (mi tonalidad favorita) = disfrute asegurado 😄
@@cernestable
Ese es.
Un hermoso nocturno.
😇
I might add:
Anything from the "album for the young" by Schumann and "music for childs" by Prokofiev (op. 65)
Helped me a lot :)
And of course the inventions by Bach
Yes, Schumann's Op. 68 is very useful for easy to intermediate stages. On the other hand, I never played Prokofiev, I will review it. Thx☺️
I'll check out the pieces of granados in return ;) never heared of him
I only included easy pieces by Granados, but he composed plenty of beautiful music. I might recommend the "valses poéticos", a little suite, and a bigger set of pieces called "Goyescas".
Great resources, thanks!
Thank you for listening!
Me ha encantado tu recopilación, aun la sigo escuchando, nunca he tocado de Satie y me ha gustado mucho, así que pronto me verás tocando alguna. La de Rameau,me gustó como mudaste la voz del piano, para darle otro énfasis a la pieza. Yo soy incapaz de tener al día mi Repertorio, cuando pasa un tiempo ya se me olvida, tú tienes alguna técnica de práctica para no olvidarlas, las practicas de vez en cuando para no olvidar. Te felicito y gracias por formar parte de nuestro foro, pues así podemos disfrutar de tus grabaciones. Saludos.
Muchas gracias Carmen! Yo tampoco soy capaz de mantener al día el repertorio, creo que está sólo al alcance de los genios aprender y no olvidar al mismo tiempo, y por ello yo me centro más en aprender nuevas piezas que en mantener. Lo que sí es cierto, es que volver a aprender una pieza antigua resulta cada vez más sencillo (dependiendo también de la dificultad) y toma mucho menos tiempo, por lo menos la mitad que la primera vez. Aunque de primeras parece que no se recuerda nada, la mayoría de lo que se aprende queda oculto en algún recoveco del cerebro. Gracias de nuevo por escuchar y comentar! ☺️
Really great selection of pieces!!! 👏🏻
Thank you!☺
Спасибо. Отличный формат
спасибо за комментарий!
Very nice collection
Thank you!☺️
Felicidades por tu recopilación. ❤
Muchas gracias 😁
Me ha encantado! Para cuando la segunda parte 😁😁😁
Gracias! La subiré en unos pocos días!
Absolutely beautiful piano pieces, a great selection ❤
Thank you! ☺️
@cernestable please change the first entry Tchaikovsky to "0:00" instead of 0:04.
TH-cam will then recognize the list and automatically add chapters in the progress bar! Great!
Thank you for the info! I have already change it!😄
Qué buena compilación! Muchas gracias!
Gracias a ti por escuchar y comentar! ☺️
I don't recall any Bach inventions appearing in this video. Great intros to polyphonic writing, and good for developing technique.
Yes, wonderful pieces for polyphonic writing, although more difficult imo than usually stated. I did include a prelude and fughetta, similar to two-part inventions, but in the second part of the compilation. Have a happy new year! ☺️🍾
Here are the following easy pieces should be included:
JS Bach musette in d bwv 126
Beethoven: Fur Elise, sonatina g major
Brahms: waltzes op 39 no 9
Chopin:Bourees G major
Debussy: Elegie, prelude 6
Liszt:Wiegenlied,La cloche
Mozart Minuet 1 in C Major, K 6
Mendelssohn Sostenuto MWV U 167
Prokofiev Music for Children op 65 no 3 Historiette
Rachmaninoff: song without word
Schubert Nine Ecossaises, no. 4 in G major
Schumann Soldatenmarsch
Scriabin Preludes G minor Op.11 No.22
Tchaikovsky Album pour enfants, Op. 39, No. 16
Well, maybe in the future, in other videos. This video compiles my TH-cam records, and I haven't recorded these pieces yet. Thanks for comment!
A big thank you! And God bless!
Thank you!☺️
Excelente sugestiones! Gracias.
Muchas gracias!☺️
It would be wonderful if you uploaded all the sheets of those pieces into a google disk, so we could download them all at once!
I am currently finishing the edition of a new book from this first part of the compilation, both in pdf and softcover versions, and purchase will have a very affordable price!
First of all - thank you for this video. I did discover some new pieces that could be fun to learn which I didn’t know but mostly, it could benefit my students because I’m always looking for new and interesting pieces for their repertoire.
Secondly- I realize you love Chopin (I mean who doesn’t) but I feel like he dominates this list way too hard.
At first when I watched the first few pieces I was like “ah nice some less known composers and pieces” but then later on it became mostly Chopin.
Thirdly - the lack of Bach here is noticeable. I mean only two Bach pieces, one of which is a part of a full piece (something I really dislike people are doing). What do you have against Bach? I mean you don’t need to include the popular pieces, he has so many fantastic preludes, arias, fuege, canons etc that are less knowns and can be included in the beginner to intermediate
Lever.
And lastly - I’m going to assume this is purely beginner to intermediate and isn’t internally ranked from easiest to hardest because putting Mendelssohn’s “Lost Happy” before Chopins valse in A minor is just wrong.
Thank you for your comment. Yes, obviously I love Chopin 😅 and I think some of his mazurkas are the best way to start learning his pieces. But as I told in the description, this video is in fact a compilation of my records, and doesn't mean to be a learning. program, cause I know it is biased.
Regarding Bach, I really like him, but I think that playing baroque music in the piano is quite more difficult than usually stated. Indeed, I was not sure about including the aria from Goldberg variations. I know that teachers usually advise their students for not doing some ornaments i.e. in order to do it easier, but overall, I think that to some extent, baroque technique and guidelines must be known in order to perform it adequately, and romanticism is much more internalized in the general people musical experience.
About the difficulty rank, well, you know that this is tremendously subjective. Why I put the A minor valse at last? Because I have seen soooo many people struggling with the 3 octave arpeggio, both with tempo and with fingering. Additionally, the trills in the A Major section are usually done with different combinations of fingers, including 3-4. So that, I think as well as with Bach, that the difficulty of this piece is underestimated.
Thank you again for your extensive comment, I partially agree with you despite the differences I stated, and of course alternative lists could be done.
Part 2!!! Please 😊
I will post it in a few days! ☺
Oh WOW, what’s up with No. 17?! Is that how the composer “wrote the score”?! Seems like a brave new world to me!
The score is not in the public domain...🤷♂
Loved watching this!
Thank you! ☺️
¡Bravo! Fantástico el trabajo de recopilación y un gusto exquisito interpretando.
Muchas gracias!! ☺️
Beautiful thanks a lot. Very inspiring
Thank you for listening and comment! ☺️
Респект за Шопена!
Шуберт? Не, не слышали...
Но вообще очень крутая подборка!
Спасибо! Шуберт будет во второй части
Hola, deberías hacer un libro en pdf con esta recopilación. Sería genial, yo lo compraría
Gracias por comentar! De hecho, estoy en ello, espero que esté disponible en unos pocos días! 😄
@@cernestable lo esperoo 😄
@faiteh9700 Hola! Ya se encuentra el libro en versión de tapa blanda, con 45 de las piezas del video. Podéis verlo en amazon: bit.ly/45Piezas
La versión Kindle está en revisión y debería estar disponible esta misma semana.
@mralegrias Hola! Ya se encuentra el libro en versión de tapa blanda, con 45 de las piezas del video. Podéis verlo en amazon: bit.ly/45Piezas
La versión Kindle está en revisión y debería estar disponible esta misma semana.
Excelent selection!
Thank you!☺️
good performance ❤
Thank you!☺️
i was playing 17:15 when i was in 3rd grade❤
It reminds me of my childhood, as it was the opening theme of a very famous cartoon series in Spain 😄
Gnossiennes are begginer pieces? i play the piano for 8 months till now, is good to try the pieces number 1 to 15 for example?
Yes, I think that Gnossiennes no. 1 and no. 3 are very useful for beginners. Probably, the soft dynamics and the jumps in the left hand between the bass notes and the chords are the biggest difficult you will find on them, but these jumps are repeating a lot along these pieces.
What to play, this is maybe the most interesting question that every pianist does to himself or to others ☺️. As a beginner, it is quite important to start identifying what are your strengths and limitations on the piano: are you good at jumps? at voicing, doing more than two voices? can I use trills and mordents? I cannot tell you exactly what pieces from 1 to 15 may be the more adequate for you, but overall I would recommend you for sure nos. 1, 3, 4, 5, 8, 11 and 13. No. 14 is very similar to the other gnossiennes (with more variations), but the first bars correspond to an odd intro which is a bit more difficult. Regarding the other pieces, I would remark that nos. 2 and 9 require a little bit of hand stretching if you don't have big hands (though easy pieces anyway), and nos. 6, 10, 12 and 15 are very good introductions to three-voice playing. On the other hand, no. 7 is not hard but requires facility for playing ornaments and finger-dependent sustain, or unlike, playing it with reduced or no ornaments.
Hope this answer helps you, and best luck to you in your practice! ☺️
Excelente, my friend where can i get the scores, thanks
Thank you! ☺️ Most of the scores are available on IMSLP (try googling IMSLP + composer + Op. or title and you probably get it on the first result).
Hi! 45 of these piano pieces are now reedited and available on softcover sheet music book on amazon: bit.ly/45Pieces
Kindle version is now under review and should be available within this week! ☺️
Preciosa música
Gracias por comentar!
La pièce de la minute 10:20 serait-elle une composition de Dimitri Kabalevsky ?
Il apparaît dans le livre Aventures avec piano, signé Jacoby Russell, mais il est vrai qu'il présente une ressemblance raisonnable avec les pièces de Kavalevsky ☺️
Como grabas el sonido del piano?
Es un piano digital, un Kawai CS-11, exporta las grabaciones a un pincho en formato WAV, aunque al principio del video hay un par de grabaciones hechas en un piano más antiguo, donde tuve que hacerlo mediante cables de audio por jack.
What is the piece in the thumbnail? It reminds me of the one of the themes in Liszt Sonata in B minor.
It's the Arietta by Grieg, the first of his lyric pieces.
Valsa em lá menor eu tiraria... mas para quem quer enganar que sabe chopin kkkk vale apena kkkkkkk
i want to know name of piano vst.
Most of the pieces are recorded in a Kawai CS-11 with the SK Concert Grand sampling, with little reverb added on.
Chopin, is NOT easy or intermediate. It's freaking hard. lol
Yes 😅 Only few pieces by him included as intermediate
Take it one or two noted at a time. Chopin A minor waltz will be familiar to you and with patience and practice you'll learn it. 🩷🎵🎹🥂🩷
Unfortunately, they're about as easy as Chopin gets, lol.
Please someone create a spotify playlist of this list
Well, I have to strongly recommend my recs on TH-cam 😅
Algunas las veo muy complicadas. Ando en tercero de grado elemental
Sí, estando en tercero de elemental es posible que la segunda mitad del video sean piezas demasiado complicadas. Gracias por comentar! ☺️
Where is the book/pdf?
Still working on it as hard as possible! Pdf version will be available next week for sure, the book will take a few days more.
@cernestable ah I have an audition on Saturday and having all these pieces in one place would have been useful. I don't have an ipad
@@nezkeys79 I'm sorry, currently working to get it completed as soon as possible.
Know it's maybe too late 😅 but the softcover book is now available on amazon, with 45 pieces from the video: bit.ly/45Pieces
@cernestable yeah too late. I just played by ear some pieces from memory. It may still come in handy though since I was offered the role 😅
ahora pizas más complejas (tipo asturias-albeniz o el estudio revolucionario de chopin)
En unos días sacaré la segunda parte (intermedio a díficil). Aunque todavía no he grabado ninguna de esas piezas, se encuentran otras también complicadas de Albéniz y Chopin.
THAT'S IT!!! I'VE HAD ENOUGH!!!! I'm going to the store and buying that Yamaha DGX670 to play these. Thanks for the inspiration! God bless.
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Thank you!
What piano did you use for these videos?
As seen on the last video no 50?
Gr
Peter
Hi Peter. Yes, it is the one seen in the recording no. 50, I am in the upper part of the screen. It's a Kawai CS-11.
@ wow it sounds really good. Nice !
22
Very particular and funny piece!
Thomas Eric Walker Paul Thompson Charles
Charles Ernest indeed 🙃
Первые пальцы неправильно поставлены.
Естественное положение в руке.
Вы говорите в целом? Моя позиция очень расслабленная, без напряжения. Мой первый палец естественным образом выворачивается наружу.
@@cernestable Они изогнуты наружу от природы?
Редко такое бывает.
Просто, зажим в руках, если такие 1 ые пальцы.
Вам удобно, значит.
Спасибо за исполнение.
Успехов!
спасибо за комментарий!
r u serious? Bach’s c major prelude and fugue is on of the hardest WTK
Well, the fugue is quite hard, but the prelude is one of the easier from WTK, and playable for most of people. Thus, I only included the prelude.
Where did you read "fugue" at the video?
The WTK isn't played separately by professional musicians, the prelude implies fugue automatically.
I agree about the fugue in C major but prelude is quite managable. I learned it when I was doing grade 2.
It's not strictly necessary, here I give you an extraordinary example of pianist Josep Colom playing Bach preludes with Chopin etudes, remarking the not so obvious relation between them: th-cam.com/video/8y9fGtNhzCQ/w-d-xo.html
At least put the complete songs, even if you put 50 and not 99
Gonna do a 45-pieces from this video (full pieces) in a few days.
miodzio
🤔?
@@cernestable ''Miodzio'' in Polish simply means - great, I like it;
from the word miód - honey, miodzio - honey-like/like honey.
Greetings from Gołdap, where I cordially invite you to visit.
oh ok 😄 thank you! It seems a very nice place! I take note in case I visit that area ☺️
The last piece from “Dolly” - WAY TOO FAST. Loses all of its charm at this tempo!
Thank you for giving your point of view. I disagree, can't say much more...☺️
There are many prettier sounding ones that are easier to play than most of these.
it's a mater of taste the fact if others are prettier... nevertheless, this compilation ranges from easy to intermediate, though I'll do some day a compilation for beginners.
Not my kind of classical. Except a few. Sorry.
Thanks for comment. What kind of classical do you like?
With a couple of exceptions an almost entirely unrepresentative 19th century repertoire; ok if identified as such, but otherwise completely flawed by the lack of breadth.
Well... it is identified in the description. This videos compiles my records, and are not intended to form a representative selection. Hence, both difficulty and style are obviously biased.
@@cernestable
As a ‘Romantic’ list, your choice is great (though the JS Bach and Rameau pieces are clearly interlopers and not Romantic at all); it includes some really interesting pieces I did not know.
Perhaps you should do a Baroque list, one for Classical, and one for Modern which would deal with my issue of shoehorning viewers into thinking that one period is more important than any other.
I'm glad you liked the romantic compilation. It could be an option. However, I am also not a fan of dividing by style, since the boundaries can become blurred. For example, I would classify Beethoven's early period as classical, while his style was clearly romantic later, yet having nothing to do with the romanticism of the second half of the 19th century. The baroque works recovered by the romantics are another example: Liszt's transcriptions of Bach's works, Bach's chaconne transcribed by Brahms for the left hand... Indeed, new biases might be introduced, i.e., in baroque music: historical vs. romantic interpretations. It's really difficult to make a compilation to everyone's taste.
On the other hand, I am not trying to convey that one style of music is more important than another on a musical level. However, on a piano level, romanticism has more importance for me than previous styles, simply due to the fact that the piano, more or less similar to the one we know today, emerged as a response to the needs of romantic music, while previous music was composed for other types of keyboards with very different characteristics, and we have had to adapt them to perform them on very different keyboards for which that music was designed.
Thank you for comment!
If you don't like it then go compile your own list and then spend hours making a video so some douchebag can criticize it.
Bonito que distribuyas cultura pero ¿Estas lucrando con contenido de la música universal de dominio publico? Eso esta permitido? Nos puedes dar una explicacion justificada al respecto?
Me gustaria saber....
No sé si me hablas de los videos o del libro de partituras... y tampoco creo que este sea el sito ni yo la persona para explicarte esto, pero ya que estoy te contesto. Tanto las interpretaciones como las ediciones de las partituras pueden tener derechos de autor distintos a los de la composición. Que una pieza no tenga derechos de autor no conlleva que mi interpretación no los tenga. De hecho, sólo las grabaciones de más de 100 años se liberan de los derechos de autor. Del mismo modo, que hayan pasado al dominio público los derechos de autor de un compositor, no quiere decir que cualquier edición que se haga de sus partituras vaya a estar libre de derechos de autor, porque existe un trabajo de edición, impresión y distribución; creo que nadie pretenderá que le llegue un libro gratis a casa por el hecho de no tener derechos de autor.