What to play after Prelude Op.119 No.9 ?
Carl Reinecke · difficulty 20/100

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
Little Prelude for Beginners on Piano BWV 937
Johann Sebastian Bach
25/100 +5 pts 2-4 weeks
close skills low risk to confirm
Progression douce depuis Prelude Op.119 No.9. Augmentation progressive de 5 points de difficulté, idéale pour consolider les acquis sans risque de blocage. Compétences travaillées : Legato, Phrasé.
Gentle
Gymnopédie no. 2
Erik Satie
26/100 +5 pts 2-4 weeks
close skills low risk to confirm
Progression douce depuis Prelude Op.119 No.9. Augmentation progressive de 5 points de difficulté, idéale pour consolider les acquis sans risque de blocage. Nouvelles compétences abordées : Nuances.
Gentle
Gymnopédie no. 1
Erik Satie
26/100 +5 pts 2-4 weeks
close skills low risk to confirm
Progression douce depuis Prelude Op.119 No.9. Augmentation progressive de 5 points de difficulté, idéale pour consolider les acquis sans risque de blocage. Nouvelles compétences abordées : Nuances.
Gentle
Little Prelude from the "Pianobook" for W. F. Bach BWV 925
Johann Sebastian Bach
26/100 +6 pts 2-4 weeks
close skills low risk to confirm
Progression douce depuis Prelude Op.119 No.9. Augmentation progressive de 6 points de difficulté, idéale pour consolider les acquis sans risque de blocage. Compétences travaillées : Legato, Phrasé.
Gentle
6 Preludes from op. 65
Theodor Kirchner
24/100 +3 pts 2-4 weeks
partial transfer low risk to confirm
Progression douce depuis Prelude Op.119 No.9. Augmentation progressive de 3 points de difficulté, idéale pour consolider les acquis sans risque de blocage. Nouvelles compétences abordées : Lecture à vue.
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.