A Particularly Pleasing Piano Piece - Primer Gold Star - pg. 24-25

1900’s - Present

Difficulty Level: 0

(10 Points)

Description:

“A Particularly Pleasing Piano Piece - Primer Gold Star - pg. 24-25” is classified as a Level 0 Piano work worth 10 points within the Road to Virtuosity progression system. It is categorized under Faber Piano Adventures → Primer - Gold Star Performance and is part of the 1900’s - Present collection. The sheet music for “A Particularly Pleasing Piano Piece - Primer Gold Star - pg. 24-25” is not provided on this website because the work is copyrighted. Students may still use this page to view piece details, submit performance videos, earn points, and track their progress on Road to Virtuosity.

“A Particularly Pleasing Piano Piece” is a beginner piano piece by Nancy Faber, with words by Jennifer MacLean. It is written in 4/4 time and marked “Happily.” The music uses simple single-note melody, short lyric phrases, hand-position changes, black-key groups, octave markings, quarter rests, and a playful final sound effect. The piece is built around words that begin with the letter “P,” turning the music into a light wordplay activity as well as a piano piece.

Measures 1–8 introduce the main “P” idea. The melody begins in a simple five-finger position, with the right hand and left hand sharing short phrases. The lyrics focus on the letter “P,” and the music stays mostly stepwise with a clear, song-like shape.

Measures 9–16 move to the black keys. The score asks the student to move to the two-black-key groups, first in a normal register, then one octave higher, two octaves higher, and finally to the highest two-black-key group. This gives the middle of the piece a clear register change and a more playful keyboard effect.

Measures 17–24 return to the opening melody. The same “P is such a silly letter” material comes back, now after the black-key section. This return gives the piece a simple rounded form.

Measures 25 to the end form the closing section. The music returns to black-key sounds, includes quarter rests, and then moves into a final low C five-finger scale followed by the highest C on the piano. The ending creates a comic “Plink!” effect.

Interesting fact: The title “A Particularly Pleasing Piano Piece” is an example of alliteration because several words begin with the same “P” sound. The music continues that idea by using many “P” words in the lyrics, including pigs, plums, purple, pansies, ping-pong, pen pals, and pianissimo.

How to earn points for this piece:

  1. Download or purchase the sheet music.

  2. Practice the piece carefully. Watch the video example to make sure you are accurate.

  3. Record yourself on video and upload it to YouTube. Perfection is not required. A few minor mistakes are okay.

  4. Submit a link to your video here for evaluation. We will watch your performance and give you feedback. If you need more practice, we will let you know what to work on and provide additional practice suggestions. You may also submit your video publicly so other users can evaluate it.

  5. If your performance is approved, your video will be accepted and you can collect your points.