Alant Posted Thursday at 07:56 PM Posted Thursday at 07:56 PM Any and all feedback is greatly appreciated. Please note that some of the grace notes are written like they are due to a better playback performance. Any advice on what the genre is? When it was just the first piece it was a Bagatelle, but now I’m not sure MP3 Play / pause JavaScript is required. 0:00 0:00 volume > next menu 87053bd8f2cb48d184ee054407d37bb8 > next PDF D major third draft 2 3 Quote
J. Lee Graham Posted Friday at 10:16 AM Posted Friday at 10:16 AM This is bright and fresh throughout, and plenty imaginative. If you ask me, this feels like a Sonatina. In the first movement, you give the oom-pa-pa a break just in time before it get gets monotonous - even Viennese waltzes break this rhythmic figure occasionally. I'm guessing that staying close to the tonic key is part of your style, but I think both movements could use more modulation to other keys in the course of the piece to freshen to tonal palate. Also, the first chord in the left hand of the very last measure is strange to me...consider making it an octave D instead of A. It will solidify the finality of the ending. Good job! 1 Quote
Luis Hernández Posted Friday at 07:50 PM Posted Friday at 07:50 PM I also find it to be a very imaginative piece that maintains a great deal of expressive coherence in terms of motifs and developments. 1 Quote
Henry Ng Tsz Kiu Posted yesterday at 03:06 AM Posted yesterday at 03:06 AM Hi @Alant, The chord progression sounds familiar but this one is quite interesting to listen to when you use different variation techniques. Just beware of some playability issues: the left hand passage in b.136-137 is barely playable and the constant 32nd notes at the end for the right hand would be quite difficult and exhausting to play. Thx for sharing. Henry 1 Quote
Alant Posted 2 hours ago Author Posted 2 hours ago On 1/16/2026 at 4:16 AM, J. Lee Graham said: This is bright and fresh throughout, and plenty imaginative. If you ask me, this feels like a Sonatina. In the first movement, you give the oom-pa-pa a break just in time before it get gets monotonous - even Viennese waltzes break this rhythmic figure occasionally. I'm guessing that staying close to the tonic key is part of your style, but I think both movements could use more modulation to other keys in the course of the piece to freshen to tonal palate. Also, the first chord in the left hand of the very last measure is strange to me...consider making it an octave D instead of A. It will solidify the finality of the ending. Good job! I don’t have an aversion to modulations I just don’t have much experience with them. Were there any parts you thought could use it specifically? I was thinking maybe around 1:00 and 2:45 (measures 41 and 126) Quote
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