Classical piano recordings for learning
Thirty Classical Piano Solos Recordings
Free listening recordings that mirror the pieces in Thirty Classical Piano Solos. These tracks are not accompaniment tracks — they are supportive examples students can hear while learning the music.
Hear each classical solo
Students can listen to the piece, follow the notation, and use the recording as a musical model for practice.
About the book
Easy classical piano music for developing players
Thirty Classical Piano Solos is a collection of simply arranged easy-to-intermediate classical pieces for pianists of many ages. The recordings on this page give students a helpful musical example for each piece as they learn the notes, rhythm, phrasing, and style.
How to use these recordings
Listen first, then practice at the piano
These recordings are best used as examples. Students can listen before practicing, compare their rhythm and tempo to the recording, and return to the track when learning a new piece.
Not accompaniment tracks
The recordings demonstrate the solos rather than providing a backing track. They are meant to help students hear how the music goes.
Helpful for home practice
Parents and students can use the recordings between lessons to check notes, rhythm, pacing, and musical style.
Great for repertoire goals
Students can choose favorite classical pieces for recitals, school performances, family gatherings, or personal practice.
Free recordings
Play the Thirty Classical Piano Solos recordings
Click any title below to hear the matching recording from the book.
Use these tracks as listening models for learning the pieces. They are especially helpful when students are beginning a new solo or checking how a familiar classical melody should sound.
Get the BookBook information
Get the matching piano book
Thirty Classical Piano Solos
A collection of easy-to-intermediate classical piano solos arranged for developing players. The book is useful for lessons, recitals, competitions, church services, celebrations, and personal enjoyment.
Frequently Asked Questions
Questions about these recordings
Are these accompaniment tracks?
No. These are supportive recordings that mirror the pieces in the book. They are intended as listening examples rather than backing tracks.
How should students use the recordings?
Students can listen before practicing, follow along in the book, compare rhythm and tempo, and use the recordings as models for phrasing and musical style.
What level is the book?
The book is best for beginning to intermediate pianists who are ready for simplified classical repertoire.
Can these pieces be used for recitals?
Yes. Many pieces in the collection are useful for studio recitals, school performances, church services, graduations, weddings, and other events.
Ready to learn the classical piano solos?
Use the recordings as listening examples, then follow the matching sheet music in the book as you practice.