@navindra "#p12945 A little girl once stood up in the room to say that she forgot she even existed while listening to the piece.
What an absolutely wonderful compliment!!! <3
@iternabe , indeed, those Clayderman (de Senneville) pieces are hugely popular in Japan! And they're lovely pieces (although I prefer them as solo piano rather than with canned strings as they're often performed)
@TC3 -- is that you? very nicely played!
Re @navindra 's canon, that's very lovely as well! Canon is always a people pleaser in my experience, and most people are used to hearing it in various arrangements, so they don't have a lot of expectations for how it "should" sound.
Another good one is Bach's "Jesu Joy of Man's Desiring" (that's the one right, in all triplets or thirds? I can go check). David Nevue has a particularly nice arrangement of that.
I feel like I'm supposed to like Ólafur Arnalds -- and really, I should, given my general taste in piano music and the pieces I play (Einaudi, Winston, Nevue, Ffrench etc.) But some how I've not found a piece by him that grabs me.
Having said that, Saman (thanks for the video, @Josephine ) sounds like something I would enjoy playing... Maybe I should pay more attention to his music...
I would also second pieces by Yann Tiersen, esp. Comptine... and La Valse... And those are both easier than the two Clayderman pieces posted above, IMO.
And of course, as @keff said, Einaudi is very accessible to the casual listener. People at PW always lumped him in with minimalism, but I don't think that's accurate. The melodic line in his music is always very clear, and I find that's an essential element for a piece to be a people pleaser.
And I will add one, Brian Crain. I have played "Wind" both as a solo piece and with a violinist, it was always very well received. Here's the solo version: