Classical Piano Pieces for Autumn

This past week has been so wonderful – it has been pretty rainy here, and the temperatures have cooled down a bit. My family and I are just giddy with this weather! We have not experienced a true Autumn for four years now (in San Antonio the leaves don’t change colors, they don’t fall down until after the new year, and it doesn’t really get cool outside.) With temperatures in the low 60’s or high 50’s, us Texans are breaking out our sweats, drinking hot chocolate and leaving the windows open to enjoy the cool breeze. We are in heaven!

Autumn is my favorite time of year! I love it so much. In honor of this beautiful season that is upon us, I decided to do a little research and find some great classical piano pieces about Autumn. I found some really great pieces. These would make a great Autumn recital program, or is a wonderful list of beautiful pieces to play or listen to to get in the mood for chilly days. I hope you enjoy!

4 Sketches, Op.15 (Amy Beach) I. In Autumn

 

6 Études de concert, Op.35 (Cécile Chaminade) II. Automne. Lento (D♭ major)

 

In Autumn, H.162 (Frank Bridge)

 

10 Woodland Sketches, Op.51 (Edward MacDowell) IV. In Autumn

 

8 Characteristic Pieces, Op.36 (Moritz Moszkowski) En Automne

I love this one and just keep listening to it over and over! You can just hear the Autumn leaves falling and swirling through the air. Beautiful!

 

Feuilles mortes: Lent et mélancolique (Dead Leaves) (Claude Debussy)

 

3 Tone-Pictures, Op. 5 No. 3: The Night Winds (Charles Griffes)

I love Charles Griffes. I thought this was a nice one for Autumn.

 

Yellowed Leaves, Op.31 (Seven Bagatelles) (Nikolay Myaskovsky) sheet music

Now I believe the title “Yellowed Leaves” may be referring to yellowed pages, but I still love this set of pieces. I have never heard of Myaskovsky before and this was a fun little find!

 

Autumn Waltz (Stephen Foster) sheet music

 

The Seasons, Op.67 (Glazunov, Aleksandr), IV. L’Automne, transcription for piano solo 

sheet music

 

Ten Pieces from Cinderella, Op. 97 (Sergei Prokofiev), Autumn Fairy

I love these short fairy pieces! Each one is so beautiful and perfectly evokes the mood of each season.

(Autumn Fairy begins at 5:19 in the video)

 

Fluttering Leaves, Op. 147 No. 3 (Carl Kolling)

This is a piece I played in junior high school, and is a great little piece for intermediate students. The quick runs sound just like fluttering leaves. It actually is kind of a joke in my family: whenever I would practice this song, after each fast run on the last note of the phrase my family would bang cupboards or slam things in time with the music. One day my grandma was visiting and when my family slammed things in time with the music, my grandma got such a kick out of it that she was crying with laughter. Isn’t it wonderful when piano practice becomes a fun family memory? 😉


Other Piano Pieces About Autumn:

An Autumn Ride (Rawlings, Charles Arthur) sheet music
Autumn Sketches, Op.103 (Smith, Wilson) sheet music
Autumn Song, Op.88 (Sudds, William F.) sheet music
Autumn, Op.15 (Sherwood, William H.) sheet music
Autumn Leaflet (Geibel, Adam) sheet music
Trembling Leaves, Op.17 (Wehli, James M.) sheet music
When the Autumn Leaves are Falling, Op.495 (Grobe, Charles) sheet music
Autumn Leaves, Op.40 (Gimbel Junior, Charles) sheet music
Autumn (Saroni, Herrman S.) sheet music

Classical Christmas Piano Music



‘Tis the season for Christmas music!

Piano students in studios all over are getting out their favorite seasonal carols and songs to play. Over the next several weeks, piano teachers will hear rendition after rendition of “Jingle Bells,” “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” and “The Twelve Days of Christmas” (with all 12 verses!). I love this time of year, I love playing Christmas music, and I love that added excitement and motivation that comes to many students when they play these wonderful songs that are familiar to them and that they love.

I’ve been thinking though. As pianists we have such a rich and wonderful collection of great literature to play and perform. I love the traditional Christmas carols just as much as the next person (if not more!). But how cool would it be to hold a Christmas recital (with your more advanced students in your studio) consisting not of arrangement after arrangement of our favorite popular carols and Christmas songs of today, but of challenging, beautiful and virtuosic classical pieces that reference the Christmas season! I have been on the hunt for classical Christmas pieces lately and am so excited about all of the amazing pieces I have discovered! I hope you can use some of these in your studio or even just in your own playing this Christmas season. Merry Christmas! Now get practicing!


Busoni – Elegy No. 4 – Turandots Frauengemach, Intermezzo

This neat piece is based on Greensleeves. I am in love with it! It combines a traditional Christmas tune with some great virtuosic techniques to make for an awesome classical Christmas recital piece for an advanced pianist.

Sheet music is found in this book of Busoni piano works
, or online in the Petrucci Music Library. Here is John Ogdon performing the piece.

Percy Grainger – Sussex Mummer’s Carol for solo piano
I was unfamiliar with this song before finding this arrangement, but what a gorgeous piece! The harmonies are lovely. This would be a unique and gorgeous piece for a student to perform at Christmastime.

Sheet music found here or in this book of classical piano Christmas music. Take a listen!

Max Reger – Silent Night
A nice classical arrangement of the traditional Christmas carol. Find the sheet music here or in this book of classical piano Christmas music
.

Busoni – Nuit de Noel (Christmas Night), BV 251
This fascinating piano sketch includes some quite modern harmonies, evoking a darker holiday mood. The darkness is broken with the sounds of Christmas bells throughout and the familiar Christmas carol O Sanctissima.
Sheet music may be found on jwpepper.com or in the Petrucci Music Library. Listen to this great piece!
Busoni – Sonatina In diem nativitatis Christi MCMXVII BV 274
Like his Nuit de Noel, Busoni’s 4th Sonatina is also quite modern in harmony and also evokes bells. Composed right before Christmas in 1917, it is a gorgeous work – but definitely not your typical holiday piece! This would be a unique and different choice for an advanced pianist’s holiday recital :)Sheet music can be found in the same book as the Elegy listed above
, or online here.

 
Franck – Christmas Carol from Anjou
Simple and lovely and light, this little piece is beautiful.
Sheet music found here.
Liszt – Weihenachtsbaum (Christmas Tree)
Who knew that Liszt wrote a twelve-movement piece entitled “Christmas Tree?” Not I! This is a fun little discovery. Movement 3, The Shepherds at the Manger, is a light and beautiful transcription of In dulce jubilo.

Movement 4 is a gorgeous and rousing version of Adeste Fidelis (O Come, All Ye Faithful). I am loving this!

Sheet music can be found here.

Rebikov – The Christmas Tree, Op. 21
A simple, gorgeous minor waltz.

Sheet music can be found here.

Schubert-Liszt – Ave Maria
Liszt’s transcription of Schubert’s Ave Maria is gorgeous and looks very challenging! This would be so amazing at a Christmas recital.In searching for the sheet music, I did find it in this Dover collection
of Schubert-Liszt transcriptions, however it does not look like the best edition. Anyone know a better edition?

This is so beautiful! Take a listen.

Bach/Myra Hess – Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring
This transcription of Bach’s Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring by Myra Hess is beyond beautiful. I remember hearing Leon Fleisher play this at a recital and it was absolutely breathtaking.

This piece is so fitting for this wonderful holiday season when we celebrate the birth of our Savior. It sets an amazing tone for a Christmas recital or worship service, or just for playing to bring the spirit of this holiday into your home! I think I could listen to this piece all day long. I think I need to buy this music ASAP. 🙂

 

Bach/Egon Petri – Sheep May Safely Graze
At the same recital mentioned above, Leon Fleisher also played this transcription of Bach’s Sheep May Safely Graze and I was in love. I played this piece at my senior recital in college. While not as synonymous with the Christmas season as Jesu, this piece to me is wonderful for the holidays. Like Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring it sets a warm and peaceful tone for the season.

Purchase sheet music on Amazon.com

Tchaikovsky – The Nutcracker
What is Christmastime without Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker? This music, traditional to the Christmas season, is fun to play (as a solo or a fun and challenging piano duet) and audiences at your Christmas recitals will love it!

The Nutcracker Suite Op. 71a (which includes 8 selections from the Nutcracker ballet), arranged for solo piano by Tchaikovsky, is available on Amazon.com
, as is the Langer arrangement for piano duet
. You can also get the complete ballet for solo piano
arranged by Sergey Taneyev and revised by the composer himself.


Several different arrangements of The Nutcracker Suite Op. 71a as well as the complete ballet are all available online here and here.


Classical Piano Music for the Christmas Season
Alfred has available a neat collection of classical Christmas piano music, edited by Maurice Hinson. It includes several selections, including pieces by Liszt, Brahms, Mendelssohn, Schumann, Tchaikovsky and more. A few of the pieces that I have mentioned in this post are included in this collection! I am excited to add this book to my own music library! There are several places you can purchase this book online:
Purchase on Amazon.com
Purchase on jwpepper.com
Purchase on sheetmusicplus.com

Looking for more classical piano pieces for a Christmas or winter recital? Why not try some of these winter-related pieces!

Frank Bridge – Winter Pastoral (listen) (sheet music)
Chopin – Etude Op. 25 No. 11 (Winter Wind Etude) (Sheet music)
Debussy – Des pas sur la neige (Footprints in the Snow) from Preludes, Book 1
Debussy – Children’s Corner No. 4 The Snow is Dancing (listen) (Sheet music)
Dohnanyi – Winterreigen (Winter Round Dances) Op. 13 (listen to No. 10) (Sheet music)
Charles Griffes – A Winter Landscape
Liszt Transcendental Etude No. 12 Chasse-Neige (or “Snow Storm”) (listen) (sheet music)
Prokofiev – Winter Fairy from Cinderella

What are some of your favorite classical piano pieces related to the Christmas season?
 

What are your favorite Christmas pieces?

It’s mid-October, and do you know what that means? I am pulling out my Christmas music, as I’m sure many of you are as well! Hooray!! It’s my favorite time of the year. As musicians we are lucky because since we need to practice, we get to start getting excited for Christmas sooner than other people! 😉 I love it.

So, I have some friends on Facebook discussing Christmas repertoire, and so I thought, why don’t we all collaborate and share some of our favorite Christmas pieces, and then I will compile a big old list for everyone to enjoy. I always love finding new Christmas pieces, so I’m excited! Here we go!

If you have a holiday favorite, fill out this quick form. Be sure to let us know what style it is in, and if it is more advanced (for all of us teachers or advanced students to enjoy playing) or more for younger students.

Weekend Repertoire: Barber Excursion No. 3

At my weekly library excursion last weekend (we call it “Wafflelibraryfriday” at our house – each Friday we try to cook waffles and visit the library – fun tradition!) I decided to pick up a few classical CD’s to peruse. I am a lover of many types of music, but somehow I always come back to classical.

I picked up a CD of Barber’s Excursions, and apparently I was not familiar with Excursion No. 3, because it was a new, beautiful discovery for me! The gorgeous harmonies and beautiful flowing melody drew me in, and then I was pleasantly surprised by the fun, syncopated rhythms. I think I may need to add this to my “Repertoire Wish List!” Take a listen!

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Weekend Repertoire: La fille aux cheveux de lin

Today’s piece: La fille aux cheveux de lin (The Girl with the Flaxen Hair), by Debussy
Level: Early Advanced
Teaches: sound, color, impressionism, attention to rhythm, playing big, interesting chords
Listen: to this video of Michelangeli performing this piece (such a beautiful recording!); or, how about a gorgeous violin version?
Find the music: in this great collection of Debussy’s Preludes, Book 1
Debussy -- Preludes, Bk 1 (Alfred Masterwork Editions)

This gorgeous piece is one that is close to my heart, as it is in my mind the first “real” difficult classical piano piece I learned. 
I began piano lessons while in the first grade, and took for about six and a half years from a wonderful woman in my neighborhood who taught me to love the piano. I loved piano lessons, but as I progressed quickly I soon outgrew her experience and training. I played through ALL of the levels of the Schaum and Eckstein method books while taking lessons from her, and then near the end of my time taking lessons from her she found me a book of piano classics. 
I am ever grateful for my Dad, who always listened to classical music at home and even played a little by ear on the piano. He had a “favorite song” that he encouraged me to learn on my own – Debussy’s La fille aux cheveux de lin. Really it was far above the level of the pieces I was learning at the time, but I was ready and loved the challenge. I learned it quickly and memorized it on my own. When I auditioned to study with my new teacher while I was in the seventh grade, I played this piece for her. I remember her smiling after I played it and saying something like, “How fitting – the girl with the flaxen hair is playing The Girl with the Flaxen Hair!
So, I count this piece as the piece I have known the longest. I absolutely love it and it means a lot to me! Its beautiful harmonies are gorgeous and so fun to play. 
When teaching this piece, it is so important to help our students learn how to produce a beautiful sound. Concepts such as tone and color can be introduced or developed using this piece. It is a great piece to use to teach impressionism. I think it is helpful to listen to versions of this piece played on different instruments (such as the violin version linked to above) and to have them listen specifically for tone colors and sound that they can strive to produce on the piano.
Aside from all of these important sound qualities of this piece, I think that RHYTHM is very important when learning this prelude. If we are not careful, it is easy to get lazy with the rhythms and not hold notes at the end of phrases long enough. In fact, I have the tendency to shortchange some of these rhythms myself, having learned it a bit incorrectly in certain places. I like to have my students learn this piece with the metronome, paying strict attention to the rhythms and counting out loud. Try it out – you may be surprised at some of the rhythms! After the rhythms are learned correctly and solidified, the student can then add in their rubato and expression on top of the framework of the correct rhythm.
I just love this piece! What piece is near and dear to your heart?

Weekend Repertoire: Album Leaf by Gliere

Today’s piece: Album Leaf, Op. 31, No. 11, from 12 Children’s Pieces, by Reinhold Gliere (who, by the way, taught Prokofiev at the Moscow Conservatory)
Level: Late intermediate
Teaches: Artistry, including beautiful phrasing, graded dynamics, sound production, playing with expression, rubato – you name it, this piece is very Romantic with a slightly modern twist!
Listen: I wish I could find a recording, but I can’t!
Find the music: I found it in this great Repertoire book by Lynn Freeman Olson. I have also seen it online here  and here.

So I found this great little piece while playing through some music I have. It is perfect for the late intermediate student to work on artistry. It is the subtle nuance, the slight change of color and sound, and the careful phrasing that will make this short little Romantic piece, or break it. If you can help your student to achieve a truly beautiful performance of this piece, the audience will be on the edge of their seats, enchanted by the beautiful harmonies and use of dynamics. I think the thing I love about this piece are the beautiful dissonant harmonies that resolve so subtly and beautifully. It makes me want to watch some old classic romance, like An Affair to Remember. sigh….

sweet deals on piano music at amazon.com

A few months ago as I was purchasing music for some students, I discovered that amazon.com had a great 4-for-3 deal on many items, including a lot of piano books (and if you know me, you know I love a great deal)! I’m not sure how long this promotion will be going on, but it is still going on and I thought I’d share it with you!

This is a great opportunity to build up your teaching library at a discounted rate, or to simply get some great deals to save your students some money. Or, if you need 3 books for students, you can buy those (still saving a little money for them because you don’t pay sales tax on amazon.com) and then get a free book to build up your own library. The way it works is that when you purchase 3 qualifying items, you get a 4th (of equal or lesser value) for free! Look for “Special Offers Available” on the product page (as seen below), then scroll down to make sure it qualifies for the 4-for-3 promotion.

I have gone through and found a whole bunch of method and repertoire books that qualify, but I know there are many, many more! 
Music for Little Mozarts

Music for Little Mozarts: Music Workbook One (Music for Little Mozarts)Music for Little Mozarts: Lesson Book 1Music for Little Mozarts: Recital 1Alfred's Music for Little Mozarts: Music Recital Book 2Music for Little Mozarts: Music Lesson Book 4Music for Little Mozarts: Flash CardsMusic for Little Mozarts: Recital BookMusic for Little Mozarts, Music Discovery Book 4: Singing, Listening, Music Appreciation, Movement and Rhythm Activities to Bring Out the Music in Every Young ChildMusic for Little Mozarts Sticker Book (Sticker Book)Music for Little Mozarts: Lesson Assignment BookMusic for Little Mozarts Coloring Book
Faber’s My First Piano Adventures
My First Piano Adventure, Lesson Book A with CDMy First Piano Adventure, Writing Book AMy First Piano Adventure, Writing Book BMy First Piano Adventure, Lesson Book B with CDMy First Piano Adventure, Lesson Book C
Faber’s Piano Adventures
Piano Adventures Lesson Book, PrimerPiano Adventures Lesson Book, Level 1Piano Adventures Theory Book, Level 1Piano Adventures Performance Book, Level 1Piano Adventures Lesson Book, Level 2APiano Adventures Performance Book, Level 2APiano Adventures Theory Book, Level 2APiano Adventures Lesson Book, Level 2BPiano Adventures Performance Book, Level 2BPiano Adventures Lesson Book, Level 3APiano Adventures Lesson Book, Level 4
Succeeding with the Masters
Succeeding with the Masters, Baroque Era, Volume OneSucceeding with the Masters, Classical Era, Volume OneThe Festival Collection, Book 4 (Succeeding with the Masters) Intermediate Repertoire for Piano Solo (Book & CD)The Festival Collection, Book 3
Bastien Piano Literature
GP9 - Bastien Piano Literature Vol 1: Music Through the Piano - Sheet MusicGP10 - Bastien Piano Literature Volume 2GP20 - Piano Literature for the Intermediate Grades - Music Through the Piano: Volume 3
Discovering Piano Literature (Alfred Masterworks Editions)
Discovering Piano Literature (Alfred Masterwork Editions)Discovering Piano Literature, Book 2 (Alfred Masterwork Editions)Discovering Piano Literature, Bk 3 (Alfred Masterwork Editions)

Weekend Repertoire: Teaching Fugues

For this week’s Weekend Repertoire feature I’d like to discuss teaching (and learning!) fugues! Fugues can be some of the most beautiful and rewarding pieces to learn as a pianist, but are also some of the most challenging to learn and to perform well. A pianist who is able to learn a fugue well is a pianist who is a careful and efficient practicer and a musician who has trained their ears well to listen to the sounds and dynamics coming out of the piano. One must possess good independence of hands and fingers to play a fugue well. All of these more advanced skills are difficult to learn, but are so important to the development of a fine pianist. I’d like to share a few tips on how to teach (and to learn!) fugues; hopefully some of them will come in handy, and hopefully others will have tips of their own to share!

First of all, what are some good, easier fugues to start out with? Although not necessarily fugues, the Bach Two-Part Inventions and Three-Part Inventions are excellent to start with! Because many fugues have four or five parts, it is great to begin with only two parts to keep track of. I started learning inventions in junior high – I’d say they are probably late-intermediate (depending on the invention!). Some collections of Bach’s Inventions:

J.S. Bach - Two-Part Inventions (Hal Leonard Piano Library)Bach 2 & 3 Part InventionsBach: Two- and Three-Part Inventions for the Piano, Vol. 16 (Schirmer's Library of Musical Classics)Two-Part Inventions (Alfred Masterwork Edition)J.S.Bach - Inventions and Sinfonias: Two- and Three-Part Inventions (Alfred Masterwork Edition)

Listen: Bach’s Two-Part Invention No. 1, performed by Glenn Gould

Bach’s Well-Tempered Clavier is an excellent collection of preludes and fugues that every pianist should be familiar with. I would say that a good one to begin with would be either Fugue No. 2 in C minor (Book 1) or Fugue No. 21 in B-flat Major (Book 1). Of course there are many other fugues out there by Bach and other composers.

The Well-Tempered Clavier: Books I and II, CompleteThe Well-Tempered Clavier, Complete: Schirmer Library of Musical Classics, Volume 2057 (Schirmer's Library of Musical Classics)J. S. Bach: The Well-Tempered Clavier, Vol. 1THE Well-tempered Clavier - Revised Edition Part I, BWV 846-869 (Henle Music Folios)

Tips for Learning a Fugue

  • Analyze – find the theme and mark it whenever it appears in any voice with a colored pencil or highlighter. You may also want to mark any thematic material that is similar to the theme, but not the theme exactly. Since there are so many different voices going on at once, it is imperative that you know which voice to bring out at any time. You want to be able to hear the theme whenever it appears, not just the top voice in the right hand.
  • Listen to recordings – I always find this helpful when just starting out learning a fugue. I like to listen to a good recording while following along in the music and marking different voices and statements of the theme.
  • Write in the fingerings! – I like to go through the piece and decide from the very beginning which fingerings to use. There will be so much going on during the piece that you want to have solid fingerings right from the beginning. This will help you to learn the fugue so much faster and more efficiently. Always use the same fingerings, each time you practice!
  • Start learning the fugue! – Oh yes, did I mention that it is good to have all of these things done and written in before you actually start to practice the piece? With a fugue especially, it’s good to have a solid plan before getting started.
  • Learn in very small sections – this will help you to learn correct notes, fingerings, rhythms, and phrasing as you go. A fugue can be a little daunting to learn, but if you take it in very small bites it is very doable!
Analyzing a Fugue

So, for the purpose of this post, I made a copy of Bach’s Fugue No. 2 in C minor from the Well-Tempered Clavier (Book 1) and pretended like I was about to learn it (I actually learned it years ago…). Here is what I might do if I were to start learning this today. Here are the first two pages for your enjoyment 🙂 Oh and my analysis is, of course, very technical (not!) – but I basically just wanted to give you some ideas.

First, I have highlighted the themeevery time it occurs in its full form, in yellow. I want to bring that out so you can hear it in each voice.

Next, I bracketed or highlighted other thematic material in blue. Sorry it’s a little hard to see – there is some on the last line of page 1, some on line 2 of page 2, and other random bits of it scattered throughout. These are sections that are very close to the theme, but that vary a bit.

Then I discovered this little secondary theme made up of eighth notes in a pattern of three notes slurred and one note staccato (know that this articulation will vary a LOT depending on your edition or on the pianist who made the recording you listen to!), and marked it with a purple star whenever that occurred. Although secondary to the main theme, this stuff is also important and should come out a bit, especially if there is no theme going on as well.

And lastly, there is a bunch of other stuff going on, such as long sections of sixteenth note material, which I marked with a brown bracket. At a lot of these sections, I would probably bring these sixteenth note phrases out with some graded dynamics and nice phrasing of some sort.

Anyway, you get the general idea! I would listen to several recordings of this to hear different interpretations, because they will vary so much depending on the pianist.

What fugue-learning-tips-o-awesomeness do you have to add to the list? 🙂

Weekend Repertoire: Schumann’s Arabeske

As my son went up to bed tonight (at the time of writing this post…yes I write a lot of these in advance – as a mama you’ve got to take the time when it’s available!), he called down the stairs, “Mommy, play me some music!” Which really warmed my heart because he doesn’t often say things like that. He usually tries to pull me away from the piano instead of requesting it. I played through a few pieces, and then picked up Schumann’s Arabeske, a piece I have loved ever since hearing it for the very first time, and one that I performed at my sophomore recital in college. As I played the familiar notes it was almost like seeing an old friend after many years. There really is something so beautiful and transcendent about this piece, the harmonies and the colors that simply rekindles my love of music and the piano.

If you are not familiar with this amazing piece, please take a few minutes and watch this amazing video of Horowitz’s performance of it in Carnegie Hall. Pay close attention at 5:58 – this little “benediction” is just heavenly. Who else is just amazingly grateful for music after hearing this piece?

Weekend Repertoire: Ravel’s Prelude

I am excited to re-introduce my Weekend Repertoire feature here on the Teaching Studio! As pianists and teachers, shouldn’t we always be discovering and re-discovering repertoire to teach our students and to broaden our knowledge of the piano works of great composers?

Today’s piece: Prelude by Ravel, written in 1913
Level: Early Advanced
Teaches: expression, advanced phrasing techniques, crossing of hands
Listen: there are three recordings of this piece available to download or listen to at pianosociety.com

This week’s piece I discovered just yesterday while sight reading through some wonderful pieces by Ravel. In fact, I would highly recommend this great collection of Ravel’s piano pieces (which includes the Prelude as well as eleven other piano masterpieces). According to Hinson, they “represent some of Ravel’s finest contributions to the pianist’s art.” I had never heard this short, simple prelude before but I immediately loved its simplicity, its beautiful haunting harmonies, and the interplay between the right and left hand lines.

Preview of music from everynote.com

Although very simple and relatively easy to learn, this 27-measure piece requires much use of expression, as well as great attention to detail in shaping the phrases and bringing out the melody, particularly when the hands cross over one another.

According to the notes by Hinson in my book, this piece was composed in 1913 as a sight-reading piece for the Paris Conservatory to use in their piano competitions. Hinson says this about the piece, “The Prelude involves some interlocking of the hands and contains a few unexpected harmonies. Its gentle lyricism, relaxed tempo and interesting inner voices affirm Ravel’s gifts as a superb miniaturist.”

In my studio I put a lot of emphasis on musicality and artistry, and I am so excited to use this piece with some of my more advanced students to teach advanced phrasing and expression. I hope you enjoy discovering this wonderful little piece!

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