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Piano Recital Material - Avoiding the Beethoven Hyperstandards

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    Piano Recital Material - Avoiding the Beethoven Hyperstandards

    I attend a lot of children's piano recitals throughout the year, & of course Beethoven is quite often played. These piano students are beginners to early-intermediates, so the Beethoven pieces one hears are of course what I call the hyperstandards: Fur Elise, Moonlight 1st mov't, Pathetique Adagio, simplified arrangements of the big themes from piano concertos & symphonies, &c.

    I'm growing pretty weary of these hyperstandards, so I started thinking about other Beethoven piano pieces that I'd like to hear these kids try--something a little fresher to the ear.

    How about the beautiful, passionate & relatively easy Minore (Un pochettino piu sostenuto) from Piano Sonata No. 4, Op. 7? It's fairly brief, it's highly learnable for beginners or early-intermediates, it's certainly fresh (I've never heard it played apart from full performances of the sonata) & it's passionate in that Beethovenian manner that everyone loves.

    What other pieces would make suitably fresh recital numbers for lower-level students?

    #2
    The Rondo in C. I don't recall the Opus n. (or WoO n.)
    "Wer ein holdes Weib errungen..."

    "My religion is the one in which Haydn is pope." - by me .

    "Set a course, take it slow, make it happen."

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      #3
      Some of the bagatelles, particularly Op. 33 and Op. 119 would be good. The WoO 84 waltz might be a nice option as well.

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        #4
        The Six Ecossaises (Scottish Dances), WoO.83 played down the pub always gets me a round of applause and a free pint! Or maybe the second minuet of six, WoO.10, "Grandmother's Waltz".

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          #5
          Originally posted by Rutradelusasa:
          The Rondo in C. I don't recall the Opus n. (or WoO n.)

          I believe it is opus 51. There is also a rondo in G that is very good.

          And there are some themes and variations that might be appropriate, too.

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            #6
            And let's not forget the sonatina's in G and F major *allthough they may be spurious* and the sonatina's op.49.

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              #7
              And how about the Menuet in G (WoO 10, No. 2) which I remember learning as a youngster and also the Country Dance WoO 11, No. 2 is a nice piece.

              ------------------
              'Truth and beauty joined'
              'Truth and beauty joined'

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                #8
                To me the most beautiful piano piece for beginners is the haunting 2nd movement from sonata op. 79 . It conveys such a beautiful melancholie!

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