I started to wonder whether I could really remember up to 1000 pieces - significant ones, not just odd songs. Easy, I thought - symphonies, concertos, string quartets, sonatas etc. Obvious - start with symphonies - Haydn, then Mozart, so you get around 150 straight up, but then it starts to get harder. 200 is fairly easy, with a few of the usual suspects - Tchaikovsky, Mahler, Bruckner, Brahms, Schumann, Sibelius, Schubert and of course Beethoven.
Then switch to concertos, and Mozart provides 27 piano concertos, and quite a few others so 40 is fairly easy. Again, Beethoven, Brahms, Sibelius, Elgar, Dvorak, Tchaikovsky Schumann etc. push the figures up, though it's not so easy to get up to 100 of those, unless of course you throw in Vivaldi or Telemann.
String quartets - surely with Beethoven, Mozart, Haydn and Shostakovich plus a few more we can get 100 of those too.
So now we have perhaps 400 pieces we might know, or be aware of, to some extent.
Sonatas? Yet again Beethoven, Mozart, Haydn give us a tranche of sonatas - piano, violin and piano, cello and piano, so 100 sonatas is possible.
Getting to 500 is thus not too difficult, but 1000? Probably only feasible by adding in very obscure works, and/or Segerstam symphonies.
OK, we can add in operas and oratorios, and Mozart, Handel, Vivaldi, Haydn, Verdi, Wagner and Puccini should easily get us over 50.
That still seems to suggest that the core repertoire which most of us might claim to know is well under 1000 pieces. Clearly there are over 1000 pieces, but most of us only know a fraction of what's been written.
Then switch to concertos, and Mozart provides 27 piano concertos, and quite a few others so 40 is fairly easy. Again, Beethoven, Brahms, Sibelius, Elgar, Dvorak, Tchaikovsky Schumann etc. push the figures up, though it's not so easy to get up to 100 of those, unless of course you throw in Vivaldi or Telemann.
String quartets - surely with Beethoven, Mozart, Haydn and Shostakovich plus a few more we can get 100 of those too.
So now we have perhaps 400 pieces we might know, or be aware of, to some extent.
Sonatas? Yet again Beethoven, Mozart, Haydn give us a tranche of sonatas - piano, violin and piano, cello and piano, so 100 sonatas is possible.
Getting to 500 is thus not too difficult, but 1000? Probably only feasible by adding in very obscure works, and/or Segerstam symphonies.
OK, we can add in operas and oratorios, and Mozart, Handel, Vivaldi, Haydn, Verdi, Wagner and Puccini should easily get us over 50.
That still seems to suggest that the core repertoire which most of us might claim to know is well under 1000 pieces. Clearly there are over 1000 pieces, but most of us only know a fraction of what's been written.
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