Bach's preludes and fugues, as well as other fugues by composers like Scarlatti, Mendelssohn, Shostakovich, Kapustin, Czerny (yes, that Czerny, who wrote over 50 prelude-fugue pairs split across several opus numbers), Klengel (a very obscure German composer who wrote 120 brilliant canons and fugues), etc. I like compositions with lots of counterpoint. Right now I'm working on some easy to moderately easy pieces in that vein (a little fugue by Pachelbel, a canon from a Japanese method book, Bach's Invention in D minor).

Pallas The Klengel canons and fugues aren't on YouTube - the only recordings I'm aware of are on this website. As for the Czerny fugues, most of them only have automated recordings so they're not going to sound very good.

HeartKeys Rach 2 was the first piece on my wish list.

Pallas My list started out with a lot of lovely but seemingly unattainable grade 8-10 pieces. A couple of years ago I expanded the list with around a dozen or so pieces for each grade, starting at where I was at the time (around grade 2). That gave me a path (at least of paper) of how to get there and with music that I like and want to play.

I've only recently started keeping a list and rarely remember to add things there, so my list is short and a bit random!

Chopin, Waltz in A Minor, Op. 34, No. 2
Bach, Prelude & Fugue No. 8 in E Flat Minor, WTC I
Scriabin, Etude in C-sharp minor, Op. 2, No. 1
Bartok, Romanian Folk Dances
Bach, Partita 6 in E minor
Ginastera, Danzas argentinas, op. 2, Danza de la moza donosa (no. 2)
Couperin, Les Barricades Mystérieuses
Beethoven, Sonata no. 8 (Pathetique)

Short as it is, I see @Pallas and I have got some items in common (that partita 😍)! Just yesterday I was listening to the Shostakovich Preludes & Fugues and thinking I would like to play some of those one day, but I haven't figured out which yet. Guess I'll have to take a closer look at no. 7!

I also have no clue how attainable any of this will ever be. I should definitely do like @lilypad, and add some pieces that are more within reach. If I never get to any of these dream pieces, there's so many other lovely things to play.

    Great topic. I have a lot of pieces on my wish list and over the years I was able to learn many of the pieces that were formerly on my wish list. Some are not as hard as you might think. It's worth looking at your wish list from time to time and attempt to play some of it.

    Pallas Beethoven Moonlight Sonata

    The whole thing or just the first movement. The first and second movements are quite doable for an intermediate pianist. The third is a killer of course. 😉

    Pallas Liszt Hungarian Rhapsody

    Which one? I assume the famous one (no. 2).

    Pallas Pachelbel Canon in D

    Since the original is a string piece every piano version is an arrangement. Some arrangements are quite easy.

    Pallas Brahma's Intermezzo in A Major (OP. 118, No. 7)

    There is no such piece. I assume op. 118 no. 2 (which coincidentally I have played in a previous recital 😉)

    Pallas Chopin Ballade No. 1

    Me too! 🙂

    Pallas Grieg A minor concerto

    OK, a concerto is not exactly easy as far as repertoire goes but this one is widely considered to be one of the easiest romantic concertos.

    Pallas Schumann Kinderszenen

    Most of them are quite doable for intermediates.

    Pallas CPE Bach, La Caroline

    That's also not too hard.

    Pallas Ravel, Gaspard de la Nuit

    That's as hard as it gets. 😉

    HeartKeys Rach 2 is top of my mind!

    Great choice! Me too! Although it's so long I don't think I would ever have the patience even if I had the chops.

    rahalabytes Chopin, Waltz in A Minor, Op. 34, No. 2

    Quite approachable.

    rahalabytes Bartok, Romanian Folk Dances

    I played this. The difficulty depends on how fast you play the last movement. All the other ones are (relatively) easy.

    rahalabytes Couperin, Les Barricades Mystérieuses

    I was surprised at how easy this one is. Even though it sounds like there are many voices in reality you just keep alternating between the hands. Also, because there is a lot of repetition the piece is actually shorter than it looks.

      Solfeggio in C minor by CPE Bach. The teacher did a demo of the first line in class but not the whole piece. Eventually would like to get to the end of it.

      BartK The whole thing or just the first movement. The first and second movements are quite doable for an intermediate pianist. The third is a killer of course. 😉

      Moonlight Sonata is on my wish list, but only the first movement because I don't like the other parts. I don't understand why it's linked to the other two movements, they don't seem to sit well together, but maybe if I ever become an advanced player I will have a different view.

      This piece is in my Easy Classics book but I'm trying to finish A's book 2 before I attempt it.

      I've already played a section of Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody as it features quite early in book 2 - I don't love it but it was not too tricky to learn. The whole thing would be completely beyond me at this stage but it's enjoyable to play the part that is instantly recognisable.

      Luckily for me I really don't like anything by Rach - all those notes played at speed just sound like noise pollution to my ears. You could not pay me enough to listen to that kind of stuff, let alone attempt to play it, but I can see why advanced players might enjoy the challenge of conquering such pieces.

      "Don't let's ask for the moon, we have the stars." (Final line from Now,Voyager, 1942)

      There are currently 76 pieces on my wish list – probably a modest number, because I’m a boring pragmatist, so I put there mostly pieces I hope to be able to play sometime in the future. But there are some pieces that are - and will always be - just a dream.
      Some of the pieces I hope to play are:

      or:

      or this arrangement of Canon in D:

      and one of the latter (pieces I know I will never play, but love to listen to and dream about playing):

      One more thing, I wish I could play like the guy from the next video – I find his joyful, happy-go-lucky way of playing infectious!:

      Pallas Everything ever written by Einaudi

      I missed this earlier but since I have a book of Einaudi pieces that I have sight read through and have learned some of them properly here is what I think.

      You need to reach a certain level to be able to play them (maybe RCM 7-8) but I think all of them are a similar level of difficulty so once you can play one you can play any of them. They aren't very demanding and the same patterns repeat all the time so the length of actual music to learn is much less than what appears on the page. Playing that kind of music in general is about knowing your patterns (mostly arpeggios and broken chords). There are some syncopated rhythms like all contemporary music but Einaudi is generally much simpler rhythmically than a lot of other music in that style.

      Building on @BartK ’s comments, and focusing on contemporary composers…

      Einaudi is often easier than a lot of Ffrench. Easier than Sakamoto too. But often Einaudi pieces are crowd pleasers, which can make playing them more gratifying.

      Pallas I just like looking at the scores and listening to the pieces, though. It makes me happy.

      I love listening and reading along with the score. I end up both hearing differently and seeing/reading differently then when I’m either just listening or just reading.

      Let me know if you want a recommendation for an Einaudi book, I have several. 🙂

      Oh and there are a few “easy” books, at least one is just a collection of his easier pieces, and one is actually rearranged versions to make some of the harder pieces more accessible. I bought that one for sightreading practice. Because they’re from his official music publisher, they’re better than the generic “easy piano” versions you often see of contemporary pieces.

      I don't really have a strong wish list, other than being able to play music that amuses or stirs me. But if I had a pie in the sky wish, then I would have liked to be an entertainer... play well enough to make people laugh and feel happy. Like Victor Borge or Chico Marx:

        Sophia OMG, that's genius! 😆 Although he's clowning around he still manages to hit all the right keys, at speed - impressive. The use of the apple blew my mind.

        "Don't let's ask for the moon, we have the stars." (Final line from Now,Voyager, 1942)

        9 days later

        Hi Pallas

        Seeing your original list reminded me of the following:

        [

        It's one of my favourite Stevie Wonder songs, and Peter Martin is a great Jazz pianist.
        And with the aid of some trick videoing you get 2 Peter Martins!

        Cheers

        Simon
        All round average Jazz, Blues & Rock player.
        Currently working towards ABRSM grade 8.