(First Edition Violin and Piano). By Nikolaj A. Roslawez. Edited by Maria Lobano...(+)
(First Edition Violin and
Piano). By Nikolaj A.
Roslawez. Edited by Maria
Lobanova. For Violin,
Piano Accompaniment.
String. Softcover. 44
pages. Schott Music
#VLB143. Published by
Schott Music
Piano; Violin SKU: HL.49045102 For Violin and Piano - German - English...(+)
Piano; Violin
SKU:
HL.49045102
For
Violin and Piano - German
- English. Composed
by Carl Maria von Weber.
Edited by Claudia Theis.
Arranged by Volker
Worlitzsch. This edition:
Saddle stitching. Sheet
music. String. This
edition of sonatas for
violin and piano includes
practical arrangements
based on the text of the
Weber Complete Edition.
Classical. Softcover.
Composed 1810. 44 pages.
Schott Music #VLB196.
Published by Schott Music
(HL.49045102).
ISBN
9790001202022. UPC:
841886024021.
9.0x12.0x0.135 inches.
German -
English.
When Weber
offered the sonatas for
violin and piano to the
publisher Andre von
Offenbach in 1810, the
latter refused to print
them because they were
'too good and demanding'.
In order to reach as
large a target group of
music-making amateurs as
possible, editors at that
time increasingly
selected only easily
playable works.
Fortunately, these
sonatas nevertheless
found their way into the
repertoire.This is a
practical edition in two
volumes based on the text
of the Weber Complete
Edition.
Composed by Camille Saint- Saens (1835-1921). Edited by Fabien Guilloux and Fra...(+)
Composed by Camille
Saint-
Saens (1835-1921). Edited
by
Fabien Guilloux and
François
de Médicis. This
edition:
Edition of selected
works,
Urtext edition. Linen.
Saint-
Saens, Camille. OEuvres
instrumentales completes
III/4. Edition of
selected
works, Performance score,
anthology. Baerenreiter
Verlag
#BA10304-01. Published by
Baerenreiter Verlag
Piano; Violin SKU: HL.49045155 For Violin and Piano (German, English)<...(+)
Piano; Violin
SKU:
HL.49045155
For
Violin and Piano (German,
English). Composed by
Carl Maria von Weber.
Edited by Claudia Theis.
Arranged by Volker
Worlitzsch. This edition:
Saddle stitching. Sheet
music. String. This
edition of sonatas for
violin and piano includes
practical arrangements
based on the text of the
Weber Complete Edition.
Classical. Softcover.
Composed 1810. 56 pages.
Schott Music #VLB197.
Published by Schott Music
(HL.49045155).
ISBN
9790001202039. UPC:
841886024038.
9.0x12.0x0.185 inches.
German -
English.
When Weber
offered the sonatas for
violin and piano to the
publisher Andre from
Offenbach in 1810, the
latter refused to print
them because they were
'too good and demanding'.
In order to reach as
large a target group of
music-making amateurs as
possible, the editors at
that time increasingly
saw to the works' easy
playability. Fortunately,
the sonatas nevertheless
found their way into the
repertoire of the
violinists.This is a
practical edition in two
volumes based on the text
of the Weber Complete
Edition.
Piano Accompaniment; Violin (Violin/Piano) SKU: HL.48025445 For Violin...(+)
Piano Accompaniment;
Violin (Violin/Piano)
SKU: HL.48025445
For Violin and
Piano. Composed by
Hans Winterberg. Boosey
and Hawkes Chamber Music.
Classical. Softcover.
Duration 420 seconds.
Boosey and Hawkes
#M202538852. Published by
Boosey and Hawkes
(HL.48025445).
ISBN
9783793145820. UPC:
196288216438.
Hans
Winterberg's
extraordinary life was
written in two chapters,
one Czech and one German,
split right down the
middle by the experience
of the Shoah, which
Winterberg, unlike his
colleagues Ullmann,
Krása, Haas and Klein,
miraculously survived. In
1947, the Prague-born
composer moved to Munich,
where he worked for the
Bavarian Broadcasting
Corporation. As a student
of Alexander Zemlinsky
and Alois Hába, he
belongs both to the Czech
tradition following
Janácek and to the
circle of the Second
Viennese School. He saw
himself as a bridge
builder between Western
and Eastern culture. The
circumstances under which
Winterberg was able to
compose during the war
years are still unclear.
Although his “mixed
marriage” initially
saved him from
deportation, he had to
perform forced labour and
was eventually sent to
the Terezin ghetto in
January 1945. The Suite
for Violin and Piano was
composed in 1942, the
year in which both
Winterberg's mother and
his piano professor
Thérèse Wallerstein
were murdered by the
Nazis. Compared to the
violin sonata from 1936,
the Suite is much more
condensed, lasting less
than seven minutes. A
melody dominated by
chromatic turns and
expressionist harmony
lend the work its
melancholy character,
which gives way, however,
to an almost
irrepressible defiance in
the rhythmically
percussive last
movement.
Violin-solo, piano (Violin solo, Piano) SKU: BA.BA09099-92 First Versi...(+)
Violin-solo, piano
(Violin solo, Piano)
SKU: BA.BA09099-92
First Version
1844. Composed by
Felix Bartholdy
Mendelssohn. Edited by R.
Larry Todd. This edition:
urtext edition. Stapled.
Barenreiter Urtext. Early
version 1844. Piano
reduction, Part. Opus 64.
Duration 12 hours.
Baerenreiter Verlag
#BA09099_92. Published by
Baerenreiter Verlag
(BA.BA09099-92).
ISBN
9790006565733. 31 x 24.3
cm inches. Key: E minor.
Preface: Larry R.
Todd.
Mendelssohn's
Violin Concerto op. 64,
is a key work of the 19th
century, adhering to the
classical style of
Beethoven while pointing
the way to the romantic
ethos of Brahms. It has
long been known that
Mendelssohn performed the
work with three soloists
in succession: Ferdinand
David, who worked closely
with the composer during
its composition and
played it at the
premiere; the 'child
prodigy' Joseph Joachim;
and Hubert Leonard, a
young Belgian virtuoso
about whom little is
known.
As proof
sheets for the Violin
Concerto in E minor were
long considered lost, it
could be described as
somewhat of a sensation
when proofs for the solo
violin part resurfaced
together with a letter
from Mendelssohn to
Leonard.
The
letter informs us that
the composer invited
Leonard to his home in
Frankfurt in order to
make his acquaintance. It
was already known that
Mendelssohn had given
proof sheets to David;
now we know that he also
gave some to
Leonard.
The
recently discovered
proofs reveal how Leonard
played the concerto with
Mendelssohn on that
memorable evening in
February 1845. Besides
containing bowing marks
and fingering, they also
show how Leonard executed
shifts of position and
where he employed open
strings. Furthermore
modifications made to
dynamic markings and
additional legato bowing
are shown.
It is
safe to assume that all
of this was done with
Mendelssohn's approval.
That the young violinist
made a positive
impression on the
composer is confirmed in
the latter's
correspondence following
their joint performance.
Mendelssohn is full of
praise for Leonard's
playing and offers to
lend his support in
finding employment in
Germany.
This
revised edition of the
Mendelssohn Violin
Concerto (only the
orchestral parts remain
unchanged) includes a
separate booklet on
performance practice.
The editor, Clive
Brown, is an acknowledged
expert on Romantic
performance
practice.
- New
source situation owing to
recently rediscovered
proofs - Revised
Urtext edition - With
a separate booklet on
performance practice
(Eng/Ger).
About
Barenreiter Urtext
Orchestral
Parts
Why musicians
love to play from
B�¤renreiter Urtext
Orchestral
Parts
- Urtext
editions as close as
possible to the
composer�s
intentions - With
alternate versions in
full score and parts
- Orchestral parts in an
enlarged format of 25.5cm
x 32.5cm - With
cues, rehearsal letters,
and page turns where
players need them -
Clearly presented divisi
passages so that players
know exactly what they
have to play -
High-quality paper with a
slight yellow tinge which
does not glare under
lights and is thick
enough that reverse pages
do not shine
through
Virtuoso and Entertaing Pieces for Violin and Piano. Composed by Various. Edit...(+)
Virtuoso and Entertaing
Pieces for Violin and
Piano.
Composed by Various.
Edited
by Wolfgang Birtel.
String.
Softcover. Schott Music
#ED23308. Published by
Schott Music
6 Sonatas Op. 4a Violon et Piano [Conducteur] Breitkopf & Härtel
Violin, piano SKU: BR.EB-8327 Urtext. Composed by Tommaso Giordani...(+)
Violin, piano
SKU:
BR.EB-8327
Urtext. Composed
by Tommaso Giordani.
Edited by Martin Lutz.
Solo instruments;
Softcover. Edition
Breitkopf. Tommaso
Giordani wrote sonatas -
here for violin or flute
- that are typical
examples of early
Classical chamber music:
their scoring is
flexible, they are fun to
play, and their technical
demands are moderate.
Sonata; Classical. Score.
48 pages. Breitkopf and
Haertel #EB 8327.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.EB-8327).
ISBN 9790004176351. 9
x 12
inches.
Tommaso
Giordani wrote sonatas -
here for violin or flute
- that are typical
examples of early
Classical chamber music:
their scoring is
flexible, they are fun to
play, and their technical
demands are moderate. The
Sonatas Op. IVa show that
Giordani is a Haydn
contemporary who can
really hold his own.
Giordani's chamber-music
works with obbligato
piano were actually very
important for the
development of chamber
music. Too bad Giordani
did not contend himself
with writing more of
these enchanting ensemble
sonatas rather than
investing in dubious
opera projects and going
bankrupt. That was no way
to become a serious
Classical
composer!
Tommaso
Giordani wrote sonatas -
here for violin or flute
- that are typical
examples of early
Classical chamber music:
their scoring is
flexible, they are fun to
play, and their technical
demands are moderate.
Violin, piano SKU: BR.EB-9413 Composed by Nicola Campogrande. Solo instru...(+)
Violin, piano
SKU:
BR.EB-9413
Composed
by Nicola Campogrande.
Solo instruments;
stapled. Edition
Breitkopf. New music
(post-2000). Score.
Composed 2020. 28 pages.
Duration 9'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #EB 9413.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.EB-9413).
ISBN 9790004188873. 9
x 12 inches.
For a
long time after
Romanticism had come to
the fore, it was
generally agreed that
Brahms somehow did not
get it: History and
Progress - it was thought
- were proceeding along
one clear path and Brahms
- who was composing
sonatas and symphonies
instead of nocturnes and
symphonic poems - had
taken the wrong way.
Almost one century later,
Schonberg wrote an essay,
Brahms, der
Fortschrittliche (Brahms,
the progressive), in
which he explained that
it wasn't like that at
all.Fully assuming the
risk to appear somehow
irreverent, I have to
confess: Over the years,
I came to the conclusion
that the present - and
the future - can be
created only by loving
the past. As Brahms had
shown us, it is only by
accepting the challenge
of taking our heritage
into our own hands, that
we can create something
new. We cannot avoid
engaging with the past.
Therefore, starting with
my Sinfonia n. 1, I began
to flirt with such a
strong and effective
musical structure like
the sonata form. I
re-read and freely
transformed it, because
it is a sturdy and
resilient structure, but
also a theatrical and
colorful one. For me, it
is a happy structure. And
I think that today more
than ever we need
something like this: We
need to find places -
even imaginary ones -
where we can give
happiness a form of its
own.Nicola Campogrande,
December
2020
World
premiere: Bologna/Italy,
Streaming, April 11,
2021Commissioned by the
Fondazione Musica
Insieme.
Piano Accompaniment; Violin (Violin/Piano) SKU: HL.48025444 For Violin...(+)
Piano Accompaniment;
Violin (Violin/Piano)
SKU: HL.48025444
For Violin and
Piano. Composed by
Hans Winterberg. Boosey
and Hawkes Chamber Music.
Classical. Softcover.
Bote and Bock
#M202538838. Published by
Bote and Bock
(HL.48025444).
ISBN
9783793145806. UPC:
196288216421.
Hans
Winterberg has only
recently been
rediscovered as one of
the most important
representatives of the
Czech avant-garde of the
first half of the 20th
century. Performed but
not published during his
lifetime, his works were
locked away after his
death due to tragic
circumstances and are now
being published for the
first time in a
collaboration between the
Exilarte Centre of the
Vienna University of
Music and Boosey and
Hawkes. In contrast to
his colleagues and
friends Ullmann, Haas,
Krása and Klein,
Winterberg survived the
Shoah through a series of
miracles. As a student of
Alexander Zemlinsky and
Alois Hába, he is both a
successor to Janácek and
a member of the wider
circle of the Second
Viennese School. The
Sonata for Violin and
Piano, written and
premièred in Prague in
1936, is one of the most
important chamber music
works of the pre-war
period. It exhibits all
the characteristics of
Winterberg's personal
style: a sensuality of
sound grounded in French
Impressionism with a
simultaneous
expressionist rigour of
harmony, a small-scale
motivic structure, a
sophisticated play with
polyrhythmic patterns
and, especially in the
last movement, a musical
impetus borrowed from
Czech folklore.