January
100-day Challenge
Keep working on your practice charts. You can still do this challenge.
Start at any time! Download this chart or make your own.
Students who have completed the 100-day practice chart
December Student Page
2018 Piano Explorer Composition Contest
2018 Theme: THE DESERT.
Deadline: March 9, 2018
There are many different types of deserts around the world. They range from hot and sandy to cold and arctic terrains. There are different creatures and plants that live in these habitats and interesting weather events from flash floods to sand storms. Do some research and use your imagination!
Be sure to write a few sentences to describe your composition and draw a picture too. Check the rules below carefully. Entries will be divided into two divisions: ages 10 and under and 11 and up. Results will be announced in the May/June issue.
The most important thing is to be creative and follow the contest theme!
Contest Rules
1. You or your teacher must subscribe to Piano Explorer. (If your teacher subscribes, he or she must have as many subscriptions as students who have entered.) Students must be 18 years or younger.
2. Only solo piano music will be considered for prizes.
3. Write your name, age, address, phone number, and teacher’s name on the back of the music.
4. All compositions must be written by students. Parents and teachers may help write down the notes.
5. Do not quote other pieces of music in your compositions. We cannot print such pieces due to copyright laws. You must also include the signed statement on the following page to participate. (PDF of required statement)
6. Keep a copy for yourself. We cannot return music.
7. All submissions must be postmarked or faxed by the deadline, March 9, 2018. We are not responsible for pieces that are delayed in the mail.
8. Last year’s first-prize winners may not enter this year.
9. Drawings are encouraged, but not required.
10. Fax or mail entries only. Please no emails!
11. Make sure to compose music specifically to the topic. Don’t just add a fitting title to a composition you already have.
12. You must include a description of the piece. This is NOT optional. If you want your piece considered for a prize, you must write a few sentences about how your music represents the topic.
Send your compositions to
Piano Explorer
Composition Contest
1838 Techny Court, Northbrook, IL 60062
Fax: 847-446-6263
Do not send via email.
(If outside the U.S., please check with us about exceptions to this rule – [email protected])
Winning Pieces will be printed in the magazine. Be sure to draw a picture to go with your music.
Composer of the month
Erik Satie
1866-1925
Gymnopédie No.1
Trois Morceaux en Forme de Poire
(Three Pieces in the Form of a Pear)
Trois Sarabandes
Parade
Gnossienne 1
French Music
Perotin’s Sederunt principes from 1199
Guillaume de Machaut’s song,
Douce dame jolie, from the 1300s
Lully Gavotte from the 1600s played on cello
Lully’s Marche pour la cérémonie des Turcs from the 1600s
Berlioz’s Symphonie Fantastique (1830)
Camille Saint-Saëns’ Carnival of the Animals (1886)
Gabriel Fauré – Apres un Reve, Cello and Piano (1878)
Ravel’s Jeux d’eau (1901)
performed by Martha Argerich
Debussy’s Reverie (late 1800s)
Pierre Boulez Piano Sonata No. 2 (1948)
Identifying French Music Game
Bizet’s Carmen Overture
Debussy’s Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun
Paul Dukas’s The Sorcerer’s Apprentice