Shubert's Fantasia in F minor for four hands is a hauntingly beautiful work; and considered one of his most important. I think the most difficult technical parts are the trills and tremolos. read more
Following the F ♯ minor, agitated second movement, the third movement scherzo is a bright, lively movement in the same key, reminiscent of the scherzos of other works Schubert wrote at this time, like those of his piano trios. read more
Shubert's Fantasia in F minor for four hands is a hauntingly beautiful work; and considered one of his most important. I think the most difficult technical parts are the trills and tremolos. The hardest thing in general for the piece, in my humble opinion would be executing the beautiful romantic sentiment that constitutes the piece. read more
Before Schubert, 'Fantasie' usually implied improvisatory material and structural freedom, but the F minor Fantasie is a tightly constructed work in which four movements are fused into one, to be played without pause. read more