Competition Repertoire: Show Your Strengths – Not Your Stress

Competition Repertoire: Show Your Strengths - Not Your StressSelecting competition repertoire is not about choosing the hardest piece in the book. It’s about choosing music that allows the jury to hear your best playing within the first minute — clarity, confidence, tone, and musical personality. For the 2026 season of the Chicago International Violin Competition, repertoire has been curated to allow performers to demonstrate both technical command and artistic individuality. The strongest candidates will be those who choose repertoire strategically rather than impressively.

Start With Your Natural Musical Voice

The goal is simple: choose repertoire where your strengths appear immediately and naturally. Ask yourself:

  • Do you project best in lyrical music or dramatic music?

  • Is your strength tone color, articulation, virtuosity, or phrasing?

  • Do you sound most confident in classical clarity or romantic intensity?

For example, a player with elegant classical style may shine in Mozart Concerto No. 5, where refinement and musical control matter more than raw power.

A violinist with bold projection and rhythmic drive might instead excel in Khachaturian Concerto or Prokofiev Concerto No. 2, where character and energy are essential.

Balance Technique With Musical Authority

Jurors are not only listening for technical difficulty — they are listening for command.

In the Junior division, pieces such as Bruch Concerto No. 1, Vieuxtemps Concerto No. 5, Wieniawski Concerto No. 2 allow players to demonstrate expressive tone, shifting security, and mature phrasing without unnecessary technical strain.

Similarly, showpieces like Sarasate’s Zapateado, Bazzini’s La Ronde des Lutins, Bach’s E-Major Partita Preludiumoffer different ways to stand out — through brilliance, clarity, or stylistic authority.

Choose the one that lets you sound in control, not in survival mode.

Senior Division: Authority Over Flash

At the Senior level, juries expect a clear artistic identity.

Concertos such as Tchaikovsky Concerto, Elgar Concerto, Bartók Concerto No. 2, Szymanowski Concerto No. 1  reward performers who can sustain musical architecture across long phrases, not just execute difficult passages.

Likewise, solo selections including Bach Chaconne, Ravel Tzigane, Ysaÿe Sonata No. 6, Corigliano Red Violin Caprices require interpretive ownership as much as technique. These works reveal the qualities juries prioritize – maturity, structure, and emotional range.

The Rule: Confidence Wins Over Complexity

A clean, confident performance of a well-matched piece is always stronger than an ambitious program played cautiously. The most successful competitors rarely choose the hardest program.

They choose the program that:

  • speaks naturally in their hands, highlighting their strongest musical qualities

  • allows consistent performances under pressure

  • makes the jury trust them musically

Final Advice for Competitors

Before finalizing repertoire, test your choice by asking:

  • Does this piece sound like me?

  • Can I perform this confidently in one take?

  • Does this program show variety between concerto and solo work?

  • Would I enjoy performing this on stage?

  • If the answer is yes, you are on the right track.


For the full approved repertoire list for the 2026 competition, visit:

YOUNG ARTIST DIVISION – REPERTOIRE
SENIOR ARTIST DIVISION – REPERTOIRE

 

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