user011235 Posted Saturday at 07:39 PM Posted Saturday at 07:39 PM (edited) A little piano sonata originally composed in 2018. I tried touching it up a bit... I'm still not happy with it (for example I left out any dynamics except in the beginning and ending measures), and i'm publishing it still in its rough form. Here's why: I think this piece illustrates one of the main problems I face when composing, which I've mentioned before but basically is: too many ideas for multiple ways i could do things, + lack of knowledge that would guide me to choose one of those options over another. I often feel like I have no guiding forces governing the choices I make when composing, and so I end up with pieces that don't have that cohesive deliberateness indicative of someone who really knows what they're doing. Any feedback is welcome, on this piece specifically or on how I could solve this greater issue with my composing. That being said, please enjoy 😅 I'm still quite fond of this sonata, it's got a decidedly galant sound but with my own idiosyncrasies thrown in. Edited Saturday at 07:43 PM by user011235 MP3 Play / pause JavaScript is required. 0:00 0:00 volume > next menu Piano Sonata No. 1 in Eb Major > next PDF Piano Sonata No. 1 in Eb Major 2 Quote
Luis Hernández Posted Sunday at 08:47 AM Posted Sunday at 08:47 AM It sounds very good and I identify it in that early classicism style. I think it has good themes and a quite spectacular development. The only thing I have to object is that the union of the sound of the virtual piano and the speed of the piece makes (for me) that the musicality is lost a little. Greetings. 1 Quote
user011235 Posted Sunday at 11:04 PM Author Posted Sunday at 11:04 PM @Luis Hernández Thanks! Yeah the virtual piano is terrible lol. The speed though, do you mean you think it's a little fast? Quote
Luis Hernández Posted Monday at 09:14 AM Posted Monday at 09:14 AM Yes. For my taste it is a bit fast. But it's a personal thing. I think the phrasing is lost a bit and the repeated notes, for example, sound totally percussive. 1 Quote
FILMSCORE Posted Monday at 09:36 AM Posted Monday at 09:36 AM On 5/3/2025 at 8:39 PM, user011235 said: That being said, please enjoy 😅 I'm still quite fond of this sonata, it's got a decidedly galant sound but with my own idiosyncrasies thrown in. Yes its Good.....................What TEMPO-BPM.......... is that ? Quote
Luis Hernández Posted Monday at 04:04 PM Posted Monday at 04:04 PM 6 hours ago, FILMSCORE said: Yes its Good.....................What TEMPO-BPM.......... is that ? 1 1 Quote
FILMSCORE Posted Monday at 07:58 PM Posted Monday at 07:58 PM Thankyou Luis I didnt realize that there was a NAME for playing that fast...........so it can be done in Real-Time. Quote
user011235 Posted Monday at 08:11 PM Author Posted Monday at 08:11 PM 10 hours ago, Luis Hernández said: Yes. For my taste it is a bit fast. But it's a personal thing. I think the phrasing is lost a bit and the repeated notes, for example, sound totally percussive. I totally hear you, i think it's the midi piano creating most of those problems. But a performer could take it a few bpm slower, i wouldn't mind Quote
bkho Posted Monday at 08:15 PM Posted Monday at 08:15 PM Really nice! I would just suggest more dynamic markings but otherwise if someone told me this was a lost piece by Mozart found in some dusty music library in Vienna, I'd believe them. Quote
user011235 Posted Monday at 08:56 PM Author Posted Monday at 08:56 PM @bkho Ohh haha thank you, i've got a lot to learn before i'm near someone like mozart, but i appreciate the compliment nonetheless. Totally with you about the dynamics, they went through like four different iterations before i decided to cop out and leave them "up to interperetation". Maybe i'll try again Quote
FILMSCORE Posted Monday at 09:35 PM Posted Monday at 09:35 PM (edited) On 5/3/2025 at 8:39 PM, user011235 said: too many ideas for multiple ways i could do things Thats a Good Thing.................. Edited yesterday at 03:36 PM by FILMSCORE Quote
Henry Ng Tsz Kiu Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago Hi @user011235! I like the classical style sonatina, very Mozartean. I love the energy in it. For it I would probably stay long in a single key in the development section like you did here, as the music lingers in Bb minor b.21-47, almost the same length as the repeated exposition! I would probably keep modulating for more harmonic moving forward. The 12th interval in the LH of b.31 would be too big for pianist to be played together. I would also prevent the augmented seconds such as in b.35, since it sounds a bit weird under a classical style sonantina personally haha. The retransition in b.54 is quite short for me as well for a dominant preparation back to Eb major tonic! Despite being nitpicky I like this. Thx for sharing! Henry Quote
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