Category
page 1Composers for piano

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was a Classical composer and musician. He completed more than 800 works in his life—including outstanding examples of most of the genres of his time: symphonies, concertos, chamber music, opera, and choral music.
Ludwig van Beethoven
German composer (1770-1827)

Frédéric Chopin
Polish composer and pianist (1810–1849)
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
Russian composer (1840–1893)
Franz Schubert
Austrian composer (1797–1828)

Igor Stravinsky
Russian composer (1882–1971)
Johannes Brahms
German composer (1833–1897)
Joseph Haydn
Austrian composer (1732–1809)
Robert Schumann
German composer, pianist and critic (1810–1856)
Claude Debussy
French classical composer (1862–1918)
Franz Liszt
Hungarian romantic composer and virtuoso pianist (1811-1886)
Felix Mendelssohn
German composer, pianist, organist and conductor of Jewish descent (1809-1847)
Edvard Grieg
Norwegian composer and pianist (1843–1907)

Maurice Ravel
French composer (1875–1937)
Dmitri Shostakovich
Soviet composer and pianist (1906-1975)
Jean Sibelius
Finnish composer (1865–1957)
Georges Bizet
French composer (1838–1875)
Béla Bartók
Hungarian composer and pianist (1881–1945)
Sergei Prokofiev
Russian and Soviet pianist, composer and conductor (1891–1953)

Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
Russian composer (1844–1908)
Bedřich Smetana
Czech composer (1824–1884)
Sergei Rachmaninoff
Russian composer, pianist and conductor (1873–1943)
Alexander Borodin
Russian composer, doctor and chemist (1833–1887)
Modest Petrovich Mussorgsky
Russian composer (1839–1881)
George Gershwin
American composer and pianist (1898–1937)
Erik Satie
French composer and pianist (1866-1925)

Arnold Schoenberg
Austrian-Jewish American composer (1874-1951)
Carl Maria von Weber
German Romantic composer (1786–1826)
Leonard Bernstein
American conductor and composer (1918–1990)
Clara Schumann
German musician and composer (1819–1896)
Aram Khachaturian
Soviet Armenian composer (1903–1978)
Camille Saint-Saëns
French composer, organist, conductor and pianist (1835–1921)
Alexander Scriabin
Russian composer and pianist (1872–1915)
Charles Gounod
French composer (1818–1893)

John Williams
American composer and conductor (born 1932)
Gaetano Donizetti
Italian opera composer (1797–1848)
Benjamin Britten
English composer, conductor, and pianist (1913-1976)

Mily Balakirev
Russian composer, pianist, and conductor (1837-1910)
Olivier Messiaen
French composer, organist and ornithologist (1908–1992)
Philip Glass
American composer (born 1937)
Leoš Janáček
Czech composer (1854–1928)
Karlheinz Stockhausen
German composer (1928–2007)
Scott Joplin
American composer, musician, pianist (1867/68-1917)
Pierre Boulez
French composer, conductor and writer (1925–2016)
Aaron Copland
American composer, composition teacher, writer, and conductor (1900-1990)

Isaac Albéniz
Spanish composer (1860-1909)

Ignacy Jan Paderewski
Polish pianist, composer, supporter of Poland's independence movements, politician, Prime Minister of reborn Poland (1860–1941)
César Franck
Belgian-French composer and organist (1822–1890)

Francis Poulenc
French composer and pianist (1899–1963)
Alexander Glazunov
Russian composer, music teacher and conductor (1865-1936)

Anton Rubinstein
Russian pianist, composer and conductor (1829–1894)
György Ligeti
Hungarian composer (1923-2006)
Q193283
Spanish composer (1876–1946)
George Enesco
Romanian composer and violinist (1881–1955)

César Cui
Russian composer and army officer
Ferruccio Busoni
Italian composer, pianist, conductor, editor, born 1866

Heitor Villa-Lobos
Brazilian composer (1887–1959)
Carl Czerny
Austrian composer and pianist (1791-1857)
Max Reger
German composer, pianist and conductor (1873-1916)

Ryuichi Sakamoto
Japanese composer (1952–2023)