Road to Virtuosity is a structured sheet music library built around clarity, quality, and musical truth. Every score on the site is carefully edited in high definition, designed to be clean, readable, and practical for real practice and performance — not scanned, cluttered, or inconsistently formatted.
Each piece is presented alongside a reference recording on the same page, allowing musicians to study the music and hear it performed without switching platforms.
All public-domain music on Road to Virtuosity is free to download, with no registration required. The library is open by default, making high-quality repertoire accessible to anyone, anywhere.
To make the library easy to explore, all sheet music is carefully organized by difficulty and by a precise, repertoire-based point system. Musicians can browse pieces by composer, genre, style, or by the exact technical and musical demands of the music.
Beyond providing sheet music, Road to Virtuosity measures musical progress through repertoire. Pianists learn pieces from the library, record their performances, and submit them for verification. Each approved performance earns calibrated points based on the true demands of the music, forming a transparent skill economy where progress is defined by completed repertoire.
Rankings and leaderboards exist as a reflection of that repertoire, helping to motivate practice and long-term growth. Whether learning independently, studying with a teacher, or training in a conservatory, musicians everywhere can use the same system to track progress, celebrate milestones, and build a lasting record of musical achievement.
My name is Michael Kravchuk.
I discovered the piano at age fourteen and quickly became absorbed in it. I practiced three to four hours a day, driven by the belief that dedication alone would lead me toward mastery. For a long time, I felt confident in my progress — until I began to realize how limited my perspective was. Outside of my own practice room, there was no clear, objective way to understand where I truly stood or what meaningful progress actually looked like.
It wasn't until I entered college as a piano performance major that I began to grasp what reaching a professional level really requires. I saw the depth of repertoire, technical consistency, and long-term discipline that musicians around the world had already built — often far earlier than I had.
If I had understood that reality sooner, I would have practiced harder and smarter, with a clearer understanding of how far behind I actually was.
That realization became the foundation of Road to Virtuosity.
I wanted to create the kind of resource I wish had existed when I was younger — a place where pianists could access high-quality sheet music, explore repertoire that was clearly organized by difficulty, and understand progress in concrete, honest terms.
Road to Virtuosity was built to make musical progress visible. By connecting carefully edited sheet music with a repertoire-based measurement system, it allows musicians to see how far they’ve come and what lies ahead — even when practicing alone.
The rankings and leaderboards are not the goal. They exist to reflect completed repertoire and to provide motivation, context, and recognition for sustained work.
Road to Virtuosity is my way of giving back to the next generation of pianists — helping them understand earlier than I did what it truly means to build skill, grow through repertoire, and walk the road to virtuosity.