Alexander Scriabin — Mysterium. This piece might be more accurately filed under “Impossible”. ... Giovanni Bottesini — Concerto for Double Bass No 2 in B Minor. ... Luciano Berio — Sequenzas. ... Conlon Nancarrow — Studies for Player Piano. ... Anton Bruckner — Symphony No.
It happens in both boys and girls, but the change is more evident in boys. Girls' voices only deepen by a couple of tones and the change is barely...
Read More »Jazz piano is harder for musicians who prefer explicit guidelines, and classical piano is harder for musicians who prefer freedom from rigid rules....
Read More »Even Russian piano virtuoso and legend Anton Rubinstein gave up on one of the uber-challenging pieces on our list. Classical music is a demanding vocation. Even amateur students put in hours and hours of practice in order to be able to play the genre’s most beautiful — and often demanding — works. For the beginning student, perhaps the most difficult part of learning is to acknowledge the inherent challenge of an art form where the technical stakes keep getting higher and higher. No matter what hurdle you have crossed, there is another waiting, and beyond that, another still. At the very end of the spectrum are those pieces that are universally acknowledged as the most challenging in the entire classical repertoire. Sometimes, that opinion changes over time, as musicians get used to new ways of playing. In other cases, difficult is as difficult was.
Even if you are a complete beginner, YouTube can teach you the notes on the piano, how to read bass and treble clefs, and more. You can't...
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Read More »Learning to play the piano as an adult can be intimidating. Many people limit themselves because they think they are too old or that it's too late...
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Read More »Many works are considered overly difficult – even unplayable – on their release, only to find a place in the usual orchestral repertoire once musicians and audiences got used to a new paradigm. That’s not the case with the Piano Concerto in F minor, Opus 16 by Adolf von Henselt. Henselt was himself a virtuoso pianist as well as a composer, and Liszt himself was said to have admired his hands and his divine legato. His fingers had an unusual elasticity that allowed him to achieve a technique most players cannot hope for no matter how much they practise. So challenging is Henselt’s only piano concerto that only three recordings of it exist, including one by Canadian virtuoso Marc-André Hamelin with the Scottish BBC Orchestra. The other two feature Raymond Lewenthal and Michael Ponti. As quoted in Harold C. Schoberg’s book Great Pianists, Anton Rubinstein himself struggled with the concerto and other Henselt pieces for days, and declared, “It was a waste of time, for they were based on an abnormal formation of the hand. In this respect, Henselt, like Paganini, was a freak.”
Study Every Day: Establish a daily routine where you study in one place a minimum of 4 -5 hours each day. There are different kinds and 'levels' of...
Read More »Debussy's 'Clair de lune' is written for solo piano – and it is actually quite straight-forward. If you can play piano up to about Grade 6 standard...
Read More »The copyright for the earliest version of Mickey Mouse will expire in 2024. What does this mean for the world's most famous mouse? In 2024, the...
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