QUOTE(Babybird2 @ Jun 1 2008, 03:48 PM)

Hello all
Anyone else thinking about Grade 4 flute sometime soon/done it recently? What do you all think of the new pieces?
I like lots of the List A pieces

but not so many of the B/C ones
I hope it is not too late for you if I add my comments to this thread - I have just taken Grade 4 flute (still awaiting results though.) The problem I had was choosing my pieces when I couldn't actually play any of them properly! However, I started just after Easter and worked my way through eliminating my "difficult" ones over a period of about three weeks. That then left me plenty of time to work up the three I had chosen, which I thought I might need having taken my last ABRSM exam (piano) in 1952 and only starting to learn the flute last October!
A Pieces Bach Rondeau - decided not, as too many runs for me.
Roseingrave Largo & Presto - could not get my fingers round all the turns.
Paradis Sicilienne - took to this straight away, lovely piece of music and became my favourite.
Rameau Tambourin - tried this but preferred the previous one. Also thought it was a bit long.
B PiecesHindemith Echo - thought this was not too hard to play alone, but decided the timing with the piano was going to be everything in getting good marks. Since taking my exam I have now been able to play it OK with the CD so consider it if you are good at timing the rests.
Seiber Novelty Foxtrot - I really like this piece - but just could not play it at anything like the speed suggested! I think I need to have another go at this one.
McDowall Comic Song - I think this is quite a popular piece to choose, so decided to give the examiner something else to listen to (he said, hoping there would be another one!)
Prokofiev Gavotte - I have always loved the Classical Symphony and so when my teacher offered this one to me, I decided there and then that I wanted to choose it. There is an extended staccato section in the middle which was the last thing to come right, and as someone else has said, the piece is full of lovely changes of dynamics and articulation, giving you a good chance to show your interpretation to the examiner. The thumb trill took a bit of mastering, though.
C PiecesAndersen Study - when I tried out this piece, I simply could not get my head and fingers round all the changes of rhythm and accidentals, and the way it goes up and down the registers. However, I used it as a relaxation piece during the latter stages of my learning of the chosen ones, and it has now become one of my favourite pieces. I think I might have been able to pass with this one, after all.
Rose Impromptu - I found choosing a C piece difficult, and ended up with this one by a process of elimination. I personally don't have a problem with 7/8 time and found that as we are constantly told by our teachers, we must practice if we want to play a difficult piece well! It took a while to get anything near the suggested speed, but hopefully I cracked it in the end, even though I know it wasn't as good as the other two.
Tulou Study in D - I liked the first page, but it seemed to me to just become a series of scales, and as I was having great difficulty converting my piano playing ability on scales to flute, it put me right off.
Bullard Playful Flute - this ran for several weeks as the competitor to the Impromptu, but one of them had to go. Otherwise I quite liked this. My teacher asked me to play it with a swing, which is not how it sounds on the CD.
Good Luck in your own choice!
PS (added Saturday 26th July) - Just heard my result - I passed with a Merit! Whoopee now I can celebrate!