Advice from pianists needed

<p>Im a first time poster, and I need some help on choosing a Haydn, Beethoven, or Mozart Sonata. Any one from those three composers would suffice, and Im open to any suggestions. </p>

<p>I would say my ability is somewhat advanced. I have been playing for about six years. Some songs under my fingers are: </p>

<p>Chopin Waltz in C# Minor Op. 64 No.2 , Mozart Fantasy in D Minor K.379 ,Debussy Clair de Lune ,Barcarolle Tchaikovsky ,Chopin Nocturne in C# minor(posthumous), Schubert Impromptu in Aflat(op. 142 no.2) , and Beethovens Moonlight Sonata- first and second movements.</p>

<p>omg, all of those songs are really good....i can see why you can't pick one... um...(omg, this is soo hard). Tchaikovsky is pretty good though I would go with either Chopin or Schubert (only because i can play them)...hey--have u ever played Schubert's serenade? that song's awesome.</p>

<p>hi paris. the songs i listed are ones I can play, to get an idea of my level of playing, but I need suggestions for a sonata. thanks for responding</p>

<p>paris23, are you reffering to schubert's lied "standchen"? its a great song, do you play the original schubert or the liszt version?</p>

<p>Chopin rocks... he was always my favorite.
I liked the moonlight sonata too. It isn't a super hard piece to PLAY, but it is hard to make it sound like music, if you know what I mean</p>

<p>Yes. I agree, Chopin is my favorite as well, and the Moonlight Sonata was not a hard piece technically as much as it was musically, but alas, I need another sonata (beethoven, mozart, or haydn), and I dont know where to start.</p>

<p>to tetrahedr0n: I've never heard of "standchen"... I played Schubert's "original" serenade--I didn't have a Liszt version.... oh, and to pianoboy, since you're looking for a Sonata, I soooo reccomend Beethoven's Sonata (2nd Movement). I think that entire song was called Pathetique Sonata in C minor. If you need more specifics, I'll be happy 2 give it 2 you. That is one of the most GORGEOUS songs I know, but just a hint: if you really play it yourself with "expression," it'll sound a lot better than if you listen to a crappy version of it on the computer. :)</p>