SKU: HL.49007688
ISBN 9790001082402. UPC: 884088033576. 9.0x12.0x0.19 inches.
Flips in the park * Lollopping Hare Waltz * In the Galleys * Ripples in the Water * Come on, Run! * Grandpa's Ragtime * Butterfly Meadow * Hippopotamus and Humming Bird. One piano, four hands.
SKU: HL.49008079
ISBN 9790001114806. UPC: 073999699623. 9.0x12.0x0.076 inches.
Contemporary pieces suitable for 'jazzing-up' the teaching repertoire. Originally published for two hands as 'Mr. Clementi goin on Holidays' (ED 6662) and 'Waltzing the Blues' (ED 8033). Fritz Emonts arranged the pieces for four hands, with the slightly easier primo part suitable for third year students. For one piano, four hands.
SKU: FG.55011-839-3
ISBN 9790550118393.
A new arrangement four piano duet (four hands) of Dmitri Shostakovich's famous Waltz no. 2 for Suite for Variety Orchestra divides melody and accompaniment equally between the two voices.
SKU: BR.EB-6713
ISBN 9790004169162. 9 x 12 inches.
The present series of easy piano music for teaching provides pupils in the lower and lower-middle grades with a careful selection of well-known and little-lmown compositions by important masters. Each book has intentionally been kept small in extent, since it is more stimulating for children to change the teaching material frequently. In the course of his brief creative life, Schubert wrote more than 200 dances and waltzes for piano, which he grouped together and published in sets. The technical difficulties, which are sometimes considerable, are greatly reduced by dividing the music up between four hands; a process which has been carried out without necessitating any major alterations to the original versions for piano solo. Ten of the most beautiful waltzes from different opus numbers have been selected for the present book. Heinz Walter, Salzburg, Fall 1974.
SKU: HL.49044757
ISBN 9790001202961. UPC: 841886024885. 9.0x12.0x0.066 inches.
Everybody knows it, and for many a player it was perhaps the first tentative attempt to coax sounds out of the piano: Chopsticks. The origin of this popular piano piece, like that of most folksongs, cannot be ultimately settled today. Legend has it that it was written by Ferdinand Loh and that the designation of the work 'F. Loh: Walzer' eventually turned into 'Flohwalzer'. But no matter who actually wrote the waltz: It is, without doubt, one of the most famous piano pieces and known all over the world. In France, it is called 'Cotelettes' [Chops], in Great Britain 'Chopsticks', and in Mexico 'Los Changuitos' (Little Monkeys). Technically speaking, however, it is not even a waltz. It is composed in 2/4 time and, with regard to style, rather is a polka or a galop. Eric Mayr transcribed the 16-bar original into a concert version for piano duet.
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