WieWaldi
Thanks for the kind words. The jazz version was harder than my arrangement I played at the start of Christmas Medley near the top of the thread but I do not think that 'jazzing something up' necessarily makes a piece harder. It could be easier because the tempo is reduced and wrong notes hidden in some of the harmonies. I tend to take the attitude that all music is hard to play and all instruments hard to learn.

I don't have anything in my repertoire that would be suitable for this thread, but one day I'd like to be able to play this song, which is from a film that often gets shown during the festive season:

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Which prompts the question @Sam - have you ever played this? I suspect I'm not the first to ask you to play it, @Sam! 😀

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

    Almost missed this thread - here is a new one I recorded a few days ago:

      Performer: WieWaldi, Bavaria (near Germany), almost 3 years of active practicing
      Piece: Let It Snow (with a touch of Blues) by Jule Styne/arr. C.Fuchs
      Comment Policy: Critical Comments: Anything goes!

      Source of music: Sheet music linked in this YouTube Tutorial
      Instrument: Kawai CN-29 (Upright Piano sample)
      Recording method: Headphone-jack to PC (OBS-Studio)
      Additional info: I am a bit late to the party, but I started only after this thread was created by someone, who once said: "This recitals are killing me!". And I second this! I got the sheet music on 3rd of December and thought this should be feasible until Christmas. Big mistake! This arrangement was way above my level, so I decided to learn only the 1st half - the easier half. The 2nd half is something I will probably do next year, or the year after next year, or another year later.

        Sam Haha - cross post! Honestly, I missed you already. A recital without Sam? No way!
        Well played - this was a real jazzy arrangement. Loved the swing and verve you put into this lovely tune. The playing was very crisp, and you brought the piece to the point. Needless to say, this is one of my absolute favorite Christmas songs.
        Also loved the decoration of your music room and the video setup to capture everything!

        Oh, that was doubly delightful to listen to those two renditions of Let It Snow - clearly great players think alike, @Sam and @WieWaldi ! 😃 I enjoyed both versions very much.

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

        [

        Source of music: original
        Instrument: Kawai
        Recording method: Studio One
        Additional info: I posted this last Christmas on piano world but as I have only just joined pianotell seems like a good place to start. I wrote this years ago when I still had horses and chickens. As many of you from piano world probably know my house burned down three years ago a few days after Christmas so the song seemed worthy of revisting and recording.

          Peyton This was a very pensive one, and so lovely played. Both versions of it. I didn't know what happened to your house 3 years ago and it does not sound good. I have the impression, you got over it and now everything is all right again. (I hope I am not wrong about it.) Your singing is on spot as in every piece you share, and I adore your videos as they are always so well rounded in terms of composing, lyrics, interpretation, singing, recording and production. Just beautiful.

          Have a merry Christmas and welcome to PianoTell, Peyton!

            Performer: thepianoplayer416
            Piece: The Huron Carol. Original Huron text by Fr. Jean de Brebeuf (1642) based on an old French song. The English version was by JE Middleton (1899).
            Comment Policy: General Comments only: Polite, supportive, suggestions for improvement.

            Source of music: arrangement from Sheet Music Plus
            Instrument: Yamaha grand, P-125 & violin.
            Recording method: Canon EOS M-200
            Additional info: this is a hymn in church played around Christmas that originated in Canada. Specifically central Ontario where the Huron natives lived. In the 17th century France already colonized Quebec as "New France". Catholic missionaries were sent to places outside Quebec to convert the locals to Christianity.
            A traditional hymn is repetitive with 3 or more verses. When you hear pieces like these performed on the radio, it is usually in an arrangement with different instruments playing solo than several verses sounding roughly the same. Here 3 instruments were used to keep the piece from sounding too repetitive.

            The local church I attended this piece is in the hymn book but rarely sung. Every year the 2 pieces "O Come All Ye Faithful" & "Joy to the World" seems to be always on the list in the Christmas service.

              Performer: Summer
              Piece: Suite from the Polar Express
              Comment Policy: Critical Comments: Anything goes!

              Source of music: Musescore (Can be found here)
              Additional info: I'm a day late, oh well. I love this song, and this arrangement is genuinely one of the hardest things I've played on piano. Merry Christmas everyone!

                Summer- WOW! Very dramatic. Those runs, for that matter the whole piece, looks really hard. You played it fantasticly.

                  Peyton Thanks! I don't know how I managed those chromatic scales in this recording, I usually mess them up and this was my first recording attempt. I definitely made a few mistakes, but with the amount of octaves and awkward sections that was inevitable.

                  WieWaldi Thanks. yea, it was not good at all. I lost everything i owned including my cats and my grand piano. That's why the song holds special significance for me. The pictures in the video are of the home I lost and of course the song is about the home as well. We lost the house a few days after Christmas and it has taken three years to build our new home. We actually renovated my studio which was the barn and put on an addition. It's wonderful and I have a new piano, a yamaha digital grand that I love. It's not my acoustic grand but has some bells and whistles that work really well with my song writing.

                  Nightowl I love the song but... I could watch Ingrid Bergman all day long. 🙂

                  4 days later

                  Performer: pianocat
                  Piece: Auld Lang Syne
                  Comment Policy: All comments welcome

                  Source of music: Faber Piano Adventures Christmas Book 2
                  Instrument: Kawai K200
                  Recording method: cell phone with Zoom H1essential mic

                  Additional info:

                  I literally just started this piece today. I practiced/learned for roughly 90 mins, plus another 30-45 mins or so of trying to get a recording-worthy take, pausing to troubleshoot tricky passages along the way.

                  I just got the H1essential for Christmas, so I was eager to try it out. Today seemed like a fitting day to learn this piece. With more time, I would have tried to even out the dynamics and pedal, and make sure I was sticking to my legato fingering. But for recording it on a lark, it's pretty decent.

                    navindra unstickied the discussion .

                    Rob Thanks for sharing Ding Dong Merrily on High! It sounds really nice. It's amazing what you've done with VSTs!

                    • Rob likes this.

                    keff Light jazz version of We Wish You a Merry Christmas

                    Thanks for the nice playing of a lovely arrangement!

                    Rob Does anyone remember the Swingle Singers?
                    Just having a bit of fun here!

                    Very nice!

                    • Rob likes this.

                    rach3master Waltz of the Flowers

                    Wonderfully played! Thanks for sharing!