hello wonderful people, i'm just beginning to pick my abrsm grade 8 pieces.
here are my choices:
A2 Allegro, B8 Moment Musical in Db and C2 Arabesque no 2.
i would very much like to play kapustin's 8 concert etudes, no. 8(finale) as my 4th piece, but i am unsure of its difficulty as compared to the other 3 pieces i chose. i'm guessing its harder but is it a possible option? also, what are your opinions on my 4 pieces in general? any tips/advice? thank uuu
The compositions of Nikolai Kapustin are ideal for introducing audiences to contemporary music, to jazz idioms and to living composers. The exuberance of these concert etudes makes them particularly suitable as encore pieces.
Here is a disc to set the pulse racing. Nikolai Kapustin is a Russian composer who writes jazz piano music teeming with energetic spontaneity and bristling with the kind of creative immediacy one associates with improvisation (although the music is fully and meticulously written out). Kapustin is already known to the Hyperion catalogue through Steven Osbornes trail-blazing recording of the first two Piano Sonatas and the Preludes in Jazz Style, and Marc-Andre Hamelin is another pianist who has for years played his music in concert. Hamelins legendary technical prowess and his exceptional affinity with jazz fuse to create one of the most sparkling, infectiously foot-tapping piano discs you could wish to hear. In a recital spanning various traditional instrumental genres, Marc-Andre Hamelin includes two sets of studies. In terms of their stylistic breadth, formidable technical challenges and audacious invention, the Eight Concert etudes (1984) hold their own against the celebrated benchmarks in the genre, from Liszt and Lyapunov to Godowskys re-worked Chopin. The Five etudes in Different Intervals (1992) begins with a madcap study in minor seconds recalling the bouncy demeanor of Zez Confreys Kitten on the Keys (although here someone has dosed poor kitty with Grade A Catnip!), and ends with an octave study to end all octave studies. Throughout, Kapustins bottomless well of thematic resoursefulness works overtime. A disc to dazzle your friends with and play guess the composer!
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