SKU: HH.HH512-SOL
ISBN 9790708185222.
Symphony No.63 La Roxelane the first movement of which re-employs (with reduced instrumentation and some structural adjustment to conform to its new symphonic setting) the overture to Haydn’s opera Il mondo della luna which was originally composed for the 1777 season at Esterháza. The second movement, headed Roxelane Allegretto, is a set of variations on the French melody La Roxelane which reveals itself as an early example of the composer’s favoured double-variation form of contrasting major and minor key sections. Roxelane herself is the leading female character in Les trois sultanes, a stage play by Charles Simon Favart performed by Karl Wahr and his theatrical troupe in a German translation at Esterháza in that same year with (we assume) incidental music by Haydn. The Menuetto and concluding Finale Presto of the symphony were newly-composed and do not (as far as we know) make use of re-cycled theatrical music.
SKU: HH.HH516-SOL
ISBN 9790708185260.
Next in the series of C. D. Stegmann’s piano arrangements of Haydn symphonies is the celebrated ‘Drumroll’, whose successful orchestral premiere took place in London on 2 March 1795. As The Morning Chronicle reported: ‘Another new Overture [Symphony], by the fertile and enchanting HAYDN, was performed; which, as usual, had continual strokes of genius, both in air and harmony. The Introduction excited the deepest attention, the Allegro charmed, the Andante was encored, the Minuets, especially the Trio, were playful and sweet, and the last movement was equal, if not superior to the preceding.’.
SKU: HH.HH490-SOL
ISBN 9781910359815.
Haydn’s Symphony No. 85, ‘La Reine de France’, belongs to the set of six ‘Paris’ Symphonies, Nos. 82–7, composed in 1785–6 to a commission by the directors of the Concert de la Loge Olympique at the instigation of the Comte d’Ogny and were first performed by that society during the 1787 season. The soubriquet ‘La Reine’ was attached to the work soon after its first performance (and was included in the first edition of printed parts) reflecting its status as a favourite work of Marie Antoinette.
SKU: HH.HH515-SOL
ISBN 9790708185253.
Haydn’s Symphony No. 101 was first performed on 3 March 1794 at the Hanover Square Rooms under the direction of Salomon as concertmaster with the composer himself at the fortepiano. The work was an instant success and soon became, and remains to this day, one of Haydn’s most popular symphonies.
SKU: HL.14009666
A piano transcription of Edward Elgar's First Symphony, which was written in 1908.
SKU: HH.HH517-SOL
ISBN 9790708185277.
Haydn’s Symphony No. 104 – ‘The 12th that I have composed in England’ as proudly inscribed by Haydn himself on his autograph score – was first performed on 13 April 1795 at the King’s Theatre, Haymarket, under the direction of the composer himself at the fortepiano, at the sixth concert of G.B.Viotti’s Opera Concert Series.
SKU: HH.HH566-SOL
ISBN 9790708185819.
Mozart’s final three symphonies were composed, according to Mozart’s autograph Verzeichnüß, in the space of a few weeks, from late June to early August 1788. During that year the 11-year-old Hummel was a resident pupil of Mozart and would have been a daily witness to the creation of these foundational works of the Western musical canon. There is an almost total lack of documentary evidence concerning the circumstances of these works, however, which has led to considerable speculation as to their origins, early performances and reception. There are three plausible scenarios for the genesis of these symphonies: that they were written for a series of subscription concerts scheduled for autumn 1788; that Mozart wrote them with the (unfulfilled) intention of publication as an opus; that they may have been prepared in advance of Mozart’s projected visit to London with his British friends the Storace family, Thomas Attwood and Michael Kelly (again unfulfilled). A contemporaray review in The Harmonicum (1823) of Hummel’s piano arrangements of these works notes, approvingly, that they show his perfect knowledge of the instrument and his nice [= fastidious] discrimination in selecting the most effective parts from the score in those places where the whole could not be taken.
SKU: HH.HH531-SOL
ISBN 9781914137280.
Mozartâ??s final three symphonies were composed, according to Mozartâ??s autograph VerzeichnüÃ?, in the space of a few weeks, from late June to early August 1788. During that year the 11-year-old Hummel was a resident pupil of Mozart and would have been a daily witness to the creation of these foundational works of the Western musical canon. There is an almost total lack of documentary evidence concerning the circumstances of these works, however, which has led to considerable speculation as to their origins, early performances and reception. There are three plausible scenarios for the genesis of these symphonies: that they were written for a series of subscription concerts scheduled for autumn 1788; that Mozart wrote them with the (unfulfilled) intention of publication as an opus; that they may have been prepared in advance of Mozartâ??s projected visit to London with his British friends the Storace family, Thomas Attwood and Michael Kelly (again unfulfilled). A contemporaray review in The Harmonicum (1823) of Hummelâ??s piano arrangements of these works notes, approvingly, that they show his perfect knowledge of the instrument and his nice [= fastidious] discrimination in selecting the most effective parts from the score in those places where the whole could not be taken.
SKU: HH.HH532-SOL
ISBN 9790708185444.
Mozart’s final three symphonies were composed, according to Mozart’s autograph Verzeichnüß, in the space of a few weeks, from late June to early August 1788. During that year the 11-year-old Hummel was a resident pupil of Mozart and would have been a daily witness to the creation of these foundational works of the Western musical canon. There is an almost total lack of documentary evidence concerning the circumstances of these works, however, which has led to considerable speculation as to their origins, early performances and reception. There are three plausible scenarios for the genesis of these symphonies: that they were written for a series of subscription concerts scheduled for autumn 1788; that Mozart wrote them with the (unfulfilled) intention of publication as an opus; that they may have been prepared in advance of Mozart’s projected visit to London with his British friends the Storace family, Thomas Attwood and Michael Kelly (again unfulfilled). A contemporaray review in The Harmonicum (1823) of Hummel’s piano arrangements of these works notes, approvingly, that they show his perfect knowledge of the instrument and his nice [= fastidious] discrimination in selecting the most effective parts from the score in those places where the whole could not be taken.
SKU: HL.14009667
Composed in 1911, this work is dedicated to the memory of Edward VII who died in 1910. The symphony reflects the abrupt change of mood that took place throughout the country upon Edward's death. Here, it has been transcribed for piano.
SKU: HL.49009014
ISBN 9790001090384. 9.0x12.0x0.054 inches.
SKU: BT.WA-4138-401
English.
A beautiful arrangement of this march from Tchaikovsky's famous symphony.
SKU: HL.50514817
SKU: BT.EMBZ20004A
English-German-Hungarian.
Supplementary Volume 16 of the New Liszt Edition contains free arrangements and technical exercises. In the first section can be found early versions of three arrangements. The first consists of the first and intermediary versions of a transcription of Die Rose, a song Schubert composed to a poem by Schlegel. The arrangement of the second movement of Berlioz's Harold Symphony also draws on literary inspiration: Lord Byron's (1788-1824) narrative poem Childe Harold's Pilgrimage (1812-18) was a literary experience Liszt shared with Berlioz. The fantasy on themes from Bellini's opera La sonnambula [The Sleepwalker] (here the first version of 1842, and the second version dating from the following decade are given) is important in music history because it was while he worked on this (and other operatic fantasies) that Liszt developed a new concept of the form, which took shape in more complex and more concentrated fantasies than before. Particularly interesting material can be found in the appendix. In addition to sketches and drafts for arrangements of Spanish themes, there are three sources published here for the first time, which shed light on technical aspects of Liszt's piano teaching. These are three sets of exercises: the first written by Liszt himself for Valérie Boissier in 1832; the second a copy in an unidentified hand from the same period or slightly later; and finally the third which was noted down in 1871 by Henri Maréchal in Rome based on the composer's dictation. This latest volume of the New Liszt Edition includes a detailed preface in German, English, and Hungarian containing new research findings, together with five manuscript facsimiles and critical notes. Simultaneously with the cloth-bound Complete Edition, a practical paperback version has been published, the contents of which are identical to those of the hardcover edition, minus the inclusion of critical notes.
SKU: LM.27706
ISBN 9790230977067.
Sonatine en Sol maj. - Pour Elise WoO 59 - Nel cor piu non mi sento WoO 70 - Lustig / Traurig WoO 54 - Sonate Au clair de lune (1er mouvement) - Concerto pour piano n. 3 et 5 - Concerto pour violon - Marche funebre (Symphonie n. 3) - Symphonie n. 5 (1er mouvement) - Symphonie n. 8 (2eme mouvement) - Hymne a la joie (Symphonie n. 9) - Die Ehre Gottes aus der Natur op.48 n. 4 - Sonate pour violon et piano Le Printemps (1er mouvement) - Tochter Zion, freue dich WoO 45 - Ich Liebe dich WoO 125 - O welche Lust, in freier Luft (Fidelio).
SKU: BU.EBR-A092
ISBN 9790560151946. 8.58 x 12.48 inches.
La collection ANACROUSE offre aux pianistes novices et confirmés un large choix d’œuvres classiques, allant de la Renaissance à l’époque moderne.Proposer tout à la fois des « incontournables » du répertoire classique et des pièces de compositeurs parfois oubliés, toutes d’une valeur pédagogique indéniable, tels sont les objectifs que nous nous sommes fixés. Chaque pièce, vendue à l’unité, a fait l’objet d’un travail éditorial attentif, tant sur le plan de l’établissement du texte musical que de sa gravure, afin de garantir aux musiciens les conditions indispensables aux plaisirs tirés du commerce fréquent de ces œuvres.Les partitions sont proposées sous la forme d’ouvrages traditionnels (feuillets papier), et disponibles également par téléchargement.La Symphonie n°5 en ut mineur (opus 67), dite `Symphonie du Destin`, a été composée par Ludwig van Beethoven entre 1805-1807, et fut créée en 1808 à Vienne. Le compositeur dédia l'œuvre au prince Lobkowitz et au comte Razumovsky, diplomate russe qui avait commandé trois des quatuors à cordes de Beethoven.Tout le génie de Beethoven se remarque dans cette symphonie devenue l'une des compositions les plus populaires et intenses de l'histoire de la musique.Elle se compose de quatre mouvements : Allegro con brio, Andante con moto, Scherzo - Allegro, Finale - Allegro. Le troisième et le quatrième mouvement s'enchaînent et s'imbriquent même l'un dans l'autre : Beethoven reprend le thème du scherzo avant la réexposition du dernier mouvement.Le motif représentatif de l'œuvre qui apparaît dès la première mesure du premier mouvement est l'un des plus célèbres de la musique occidentale. Ces huit notes (sol-sol-sol-mib, auxquelles répondent fa-fa-fa-ré) jouées fortissimo, symbolisent la puissance, la passion et le caractère révolutionnaire de la musique de Beethoven.
© 2000 - 2024 Home - New realises - Composers Legal notice - Full version