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any recommendations? i want to listen to something that has the piano as the prominent instrument..if not the only one.

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Originally posted by trev33
any recommendations? i want to listen to something that has the piano as the prominent instrument..if not the only one.
Mozart, Piano quartets
Brahms: Piano Quintet
Schumann: Piano Quartet and piano quintet
Mozart: Piano concerto #24 in Cminor, #20 in Dminor
Beethoven: Piano concertos#4 and #5
That is if you want classical.

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Chopin: preludes and nocturnes.

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you can't go wrong with "Glenn Gould- Goldberg Variations"- 32 short piano peices by Bach.

you can google, "Glenn Gould Goldber Variations" and there is a vid of Glenn playing the 32 peices.

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Originally posted by trev33
any recommendations? i want to listen to something that has the piano as the prominent instrument..if not the only one.
Hermann Nitsch


Klaviersonate Für Arnulf Rainer

http://www.ubu.com/sound/nitsch.html

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Originally posted by trev33
any recommendations? i want to listen to something that has the piano as the prominent instrument..if not the only one.
Peter Erskine Trio. They did 4 albums in the 1990s. The pianist is John Taylor.

Gonzalo Rubalcaba.

Bobo Stenson Trio.

And, for something a little more adventurous/unpredictable, Paul Bley.

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Would I sound like, er, totally uncool if I recommend to the Trev-dude, uh, sumthin' like Richard Clayderman?

I mean, he's like, uh, so cool with those 70s valiant prince haircuts, and the white tux is so, like, uh, disco.

*burps*

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Originally posted by trev33
any recommendations? i want to listen to something that has the piano as the prominent instrument..if not the only one.
I heard some Piazzolla tangos featuring piano or a chamber group including a piano on youtube yesterday morning, and I couldn't stop listening until I was keeling over from hunger.

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Erik Satie
Claude Debussy
Maurice Ravel

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I've always felt it is an incredible emotional journey to go through all of the Beethoven Piano Sonatas, in order, from No. 1 to No. 32. Don't do it all in one day of course, because it takes about 11-12 hours.

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Originally posted by KazetNagorra
Erik Satie
Claude Debussy
Maurice Ravel
I like Debussy and Ravel; can't say I like Satie though. He's too banal for my tastes.

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I would love to read the reasoning behind calling Satie's work banal.

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Originally posted by Seitse
I would love to read the reasoning behind calling Satie's work banal.
I'm sure scherzo will deliver the goods.

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Originally posted by Seitse
I would love to read the reasoning behind calling Satie's work banal.
Well, when you've heard one, you've heard them all.