Jonathan Garrity
NYC • CEO @ Tagup Inc.

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A Critical Review of Ravel's Piano Repertoire

February 26, 2026

Key Narrative

Ravel’s piano music occupies a peculiar position: universally admired, frequently programmed, yet often misunderstood. The surface glitter can obscure the structural rigor; the technical demands can overshadow the musical substance. This review examines each major work critically—not merely to praise, but to understand what Ravel achieved and where his approach creates challenges for performers and listeners alike.

The through-line: Ravel was an orchestrator who wrote for piano. His keyboard works often sound like reductions of imaginary orchestral scores—this is both their magic and their limitation.


Outline

I. Introduction: The Ravel Problem

II. Early Works (1895-1905)

A. Menuet antique (1895)

B. Pavane pour une infante défunte (1899)

C. Jeux d’eau (1901)

D. Sonatine (1905)

III. The Middle Period (1905-1913)

A. Miroirs (1905)

B. Gaspard de la nuit (1908)

C. Ma mère l’Oye (four hands, 1910)

D. Valses nobles et sentimentales (1911)

IV. Late Works (1914-1932)

A. Le Tombeau de Couperin (1917)

B. La Valse (two-piano version, 1920)

C. Concerto for the Left Hand (1930)

D. Concerto in G (1931)

V. Cross-Cutting Observations

A. Technical Demands

B. Interpretive Challenges

C. Recorded Performances

VI. Summary Assessment


Suggested Sources

Scores

Biographies

Analysis

Recordings to Study

Context

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