What to play after Sonata for Piano 4-Hands, FP8 ?
Francis Poulenc · difficulty 50/100

Choose your level of commitment: consolidate, move up a tier or prepare a challenge. The top-ranked cards combine difficulty, risk, shared skills and confidence.

Back to the full work page
Gentle step

The safest next step.

Gentle
Piano Sonata no. 2 in D minor, op. 14
Sergei Prokofiev
55/100 +5 pts 5-10 weeks
close skills low risk to confirm
Progression douce depuis Sonata for Piano 4-Hands, FP8. Augmentation progressive de 5 points de difficulté, idéale pour consolider les acquis sans risque de blocage. Nouvelles compétences abordées : Legato.
Gentle
Piano Sonata, op. 1
Roy Harris
55/100 +5 pts 5-10 weeks
close skills low risk to confirm
Progression douce depuis Sonata for Piano 4-Hands, FP8. Augmentation progressive de 5 points de difficulté, idéale pour consolider les acquis sans risque de blocage. Nouvelles compétences abordées : Nuances.
Gentle
Sonata no. 2 in E flat major, op. 45
Dmitry Kabalevsky
55/100 +5 pts 5-10 weeks
close skills low risk to confirm
Progression douce depuis Sonata for Piano 4-Hands, FP8. Augmentation progressive de 5 points de difficulté, idéale pour consolider les acquis sans risque de blocage. Nouvelles compétences abordées : Legato, Demi-pédale.
Gentle
Les soirées de Nazelles, FP84
Francis Poulenc
55/100 +5 pts 5-10 weeks
partial transfer low risk to confirm
Progression douce depuis Sonata for Piano 4-Hands, FP8. Augmentation progressive de 5 points de difficulté, idéale pour consolider les acquis sans risque de blocage. Nouvelles compétences abordées : Nuances.
Gentle
Badinage, FP73
Francis Poulenc
57/100 +7 pts 5-10 weeks
partial transfer low risk to confirm
Progression douce depuis Sonata for Piano 4-Hands, FP8. Augmentation progressive de 7 points de difficulté, idéale pour consolider les acquis sans risque de blocage. Nouvelles compétences abordées : Nuances.
Same level

To widen the repertoire without raising the level.

Progressions computed from difficulty, skill overlap and style between works. A What do we play next? recommendation should remain a pedagogical starting point, not an automatic prescription.