Bittersweet and wistful, reaching for what is just gone — walking at a natural human pace, speaking clearly with nothing held back, steady and unwavering in tone.
No significant scale runs detected — this piece does not heavily rely on thumb-crossing technique.
🔁 Repeating Phrases
6%
Repeated
Only 3 of 47 bars repeat — this piece is largely through-composed with mostly unique material throughout.
Repeated barUnique bar
🎯 Suggested Practice Passages
?Each "passage" is 2 consecutive measures (ô nhịp). The algorithm scores every passage by note density and interval leaps, then picks the 3 hardest for focused practice.
The hardest passages in this piece — spend extra time here before running the full piece.
📍 Measures 31–32
Hardest
📍 Measures 33–34
2nd hardest
📍 Measures 37–38
3rd hardest
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
How difficult is Westworld Piano on piano?
Westworld Piano is rated
Advanced
on PianoMetric's piano difficulty scale, with a score of 59/100.
It was composed by Ramin Djawadi. This piece requires solid technique including hand independence, dynamics control, and expressive phrasing. The piece runs approximately 1m 46s. It contains 937 notes in total.
How long does it take to learn Westworld Piano?
Based on PianoMetric's analysis, learning Westworld Piano to a
performance-ready level takes approximately
10 weeks
(~62 total practice hours) for a advanced level student.
A serious study piece — consistent daily practice over several months is realistic.
Where can I download the piano sheet music PDF for Westworld Piano?
You can download the piano sheet music PDF for Westworld Piano directly on this page.
The sheet is 4 pages long.
Click the 'PDF Download' button above to get the full score.
What piano level is required to play Westworld Piano?
Westworld Piano is suited for
Advanced
level pianists (difficulty score 59/100).
Expect to work on hand independence, dynamics shaping, and nuanced phrasing — this is a serious repertoire piece.
What is the mood or feel of Westworld Piano?
Bittersweet and wistful, reaching for what is just gone — walking at a natural human pace, speaking clearly with nothing held back, steady and unwavering in tone. It belongs to the Piano
genre.
The piece is played at 105 BPM.