Jean-Amédée Lefroid de Méreaux's "Grandes études en 60 caprices" (1854) is a monumental cycle of virtuosic piano études, renowned for their extreme technical demands and exploration of contrasting styles. Each caprice addresses specific challenges, ranging from velocity and polyphony to expressive nuances, cementing its status as one of the most ambitious étude collections of the Romantic era.
A monumental collection of piano studies blending Romantic virtuosity with Baroque-inspired counterpoint, considered Méreaux's magnum opus.
This monumental cycle of 60 piano études by Méreaux represents a unique fusion of technical virtuosity and stylistic duality, bridging classical rigor with romantic freedom. Each caprice explores distinct musical characters while pushing pianistic boundaries.
This monumental 19th-century work explores both strict counterpoint and free romantic styles through extreme technical challenges, including passages requiring 11-note spans and polyrhythms.
Composed between 1837-1854, this monumental cycle of 60 piano études pushes performers to their technical limits while exploring contrasting musical philosophies. Each "caprice caractéristique" presents unique challenges, collectively forming one of the most ambitious étude collections of the Romantic era. Méreaux intended them as both pedagogical tools and concert pieces.