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Fifty Pieces for Piano Students
Classical/Piece • Alternative Title: Fifty Pieces for Piano Students. Book I 'Twenty Little Pieces for Beginners in Pianoplaying'
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Book I (manuscript)
Title by uploader: Fifty Pieces for Piano Students (Book I)
Instrumentation |
Piano |
Scored for |
Solo |
Type of score |
For a single performer |
Movement(s) |
1 to 20 from 50 |
Publisher |
Frank Ezra Levy |
Difficulty |
Medium |
Source |
Universitätsbibliothek Basel |
Book I
Title by uploader: Fifty Pieces for Piano Students (Book I)
Instrumentation |
Piano |
Scored for |
Solo |
Type of score |
For a single performer |
Movement(s) |
1 to 20 from 50 |
Difficulty |
Medium |
Not many people know today that the composer Ernst Levy was primarily perceived as a highly-gifted pianist in his lifetime (after all he studied with Hans Huber in Basel). After immigrating to the United States, therefore, of course, many teaching posts were waiting for him, leaving Levy with ambivalent feelings: On the one hand, each class was a welcome and much-needed source of income, on the other hand, a duty which he, especially with beginners, only reluctantly fulfilled. Between 1951-1953, while working at the University of Chicago, he composed 50 small pieces for beginners. This is a bit surprising when you know that at this time Levy gave only rarely lessons. Even if the precise reason for the creation of these works is not known, the underlying motivation for Levy is obvious: it is nothing less than Bartok's ‚Microcosm’. Bartok’s cycle is rightly considered a brilliant milestone in the piano schools of the 20th century – one cannot be but amazed to see that Levy's Fifty Pieces for Piano Students keep the level easily, in some aspects even surpass Bartok! MusicaNeo is proud to make this long-lost, but definitely epochal collection now available to the public. We believe that piano teachers and amateur players around the world will benefit from Levy's works, and now have a phenomenal addition to the pieces for beginners already known.
Book II (manuscript)
Title by uploader: Fifty Pieces for Piano Students (Book II)
Instrumentation |
Piano |
Scored for |
Solo |
Type of score |
For a single performer |
Movement(s) |
21 to 30 from 50 |
Publisher |
Frank Ezra Levy |
Difficulty |
Medium |
Source |
Universitätsbibliothek Basel |
Book II
Title by uploader: Fifty Pieces for Piano Students (Book II)
Instrumentation |
Piano |
Scored for |
Solo |
Type of score |
For a single performer |
Movement(s) |
21 to 30 from 50 |
Difficulty |
Medium |
Book III (manuscript)
Title by uploader: Fifty Pieces for Piano Students (Book III)
Instrumentation |
Piano |
Scored for |
Solo |
Type of score |
For a single performer |
Movement(s) |
31 to 40 from 50 |
Publisher |
Frank Ezra Levy |
Difficulty |
Medium |
Source |
Universitätsbibliothek Basel |
Book III
Title by uploader: Fifty Pieces for Piano Students (Book III)
Instrumentation |
Piano |
Scored for |
Solo |
Type of score |
For a single performer |
Movement(s) |
31 to 40 from 50 |
Difficulty |
Medium |
Book IV (manuscript)
Title by uploader: Fifty Pieces for Piano Students (Book IV)
Instrumentation |
Piano |
Scored for |
Solo |
Type of score |
For a single performer |
Movement(s) |
41 to 50 from 50 |
Publisher |
Frank Ezra Levy |
Difficulty |
Medium |
Source |
Universitätsbibliothek Basel |
Book IV
Title by uploader: Fifty Pieces for Piano Students (Book IV)
Instrumentation |
Piano |
Scored for |
Solo |
Type of score |
For a single performer |
Movement(s) |
41 to 50 from 50 |
Difficulty |
Medium |
Viola Kramer 06 Oct 2015 12:56
Frage: Warum wird auf Taktangaben verzichtet? Und auch die Änderungen der Taktarten wird nicht angegeben. Ich verstehe es nicht...
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