SKU: HL.49039291
SKU: BT.DHP-1115233-400
ISBN 9789043136204. 9x12 inches. English-German-French-Dutch.
The Concertino op. 12 by the German violinist, composer and violin educator Ferdinand Küchler (1867-1937) is a three-movement work that is ideal for the development of playing in first and third position. The first movement is both powerful and playful in character, and its themes that follow on from each other rapidly, producing a concise sonata form. The second movement has been written in a three-part song form (A-B-A). The A section has a cantabile atmosphere, whereas section B is more dramatic. The third movement is a rondo (with a refrain and episodes). The refrain is joyful in spirit, and the episodes present variation.Het Concertino op. 12 van Ferdinand Küchler (1867-1937) is een driedelig werk. Voor de leerling is dit het ideale werk om aan de eerste en derde positie te werken. Het eerste deel is krachtig en speels tegelijk. Het tweededeel is in de vorm van een driedelige lied geschreven (A-B-A). Het derde deel is een rondo.Das Concertino op. 12 von Ferdinand Küchler (1867-1937) ist ein dreisätziges Werk, mit dem Schüler ausgezeichnet an ihrem Spiel in der ersten und dritten Lage arbeiten können. Der erste Satz ist kraftvoll und verspielt zugleich; der zweite Satz wurde in der Form eines dreistimmigen Liedes geschrieben (A-B-A). Der dritte Satz ist ein Rondo. Le Concertino opus 12 de Ferdinand Küchler (1867-1937) est un Å?uvre en trois mouvements, destinées aux élèves maîtrisant le jeu en première et troisième position. Le premier mouvement est puissant et ludique, le deuxième a été écrit sous la forme d'une mélodie en trois parties (ABA). Le troisième mouvement est un rondo. Il Concertino op. 12 di Ferdinand Küchler (1867-1937) è un brano in tre movimenti, ideale per praticare la prima e terza posizione. Il primo movimento è al contempo potente e gioioso, il secondo in forma di un canto a voci (A-B-A), mentre il terzo movimento è un rondò.
SKU: BT.EMBZ433
English-German-Hungarian.
Béla Bartók often used musical material from his folk music collections for his compositions. His Sonatina, originally written for solo piano in 1915, was based on songs that he collected in Transylvania. The three movements (1. Bagpipers - Molto moderato, 2. Bear Dance - Moderato, and 3. Finale - Allegro vivace) were orchestrated by Bartók in 1931. Shortly before Bartók's orchestral transcription was finished, violinist Gertler Endre's transcript for violin and piano was completed. Gertler and Bartók knew each other personally and, in fact, first made each other's acquaintance as a result of their shared experience with their respective transcriptions.
SKU: BT.EMBZ213
Béla Bartók composed his four-volume series comprising short pieces for beginner pianists, For Children, between 1908 and 1910. It consists of folksong and nursery song arrangements the first two volumes utilize Hungarian music and the latter two are of Slovak origin. Bartók revised the series during the last years of his life (1943 to 1945). This collection contains easy arrangements of ten pieces from For Children for violin and piano they can either be played separately or one after the other as a suite. These arrangements are by the legendary violinist Ede Zathureczky (1903-1959), who regularly gave concerts with Bartók during the 1930s.
SKU: HH.HH473-FSP
ISBN 9790708146841.
The model for this sonata is Mozart, specifically his Sonata in B flat major, K.454, written in 1784. Eberl borrows many structural and stylistic features from K.454: the grand, slow introduction of the first movement; the song-like second movement opening over rocking accompaniment; and the gavotte-like closing rondo. Eberl even quotes directly from K.454. But the work also looks forward to Beethoven’s contributions to the genre, and in its duration, formal and harmonic novelty, and in the lively relationship between the violin and keyboard, Op.50 shares much of the musical ambition and quality of Beethoven’s early works in this genre.