Violin and orchestra (solo: vl - 2.2.2.2 - 4.2.0.0 - timp - str) SKU: BR.PB-1...(+)
Violin and orchestra
(solo: vl - 2.2.2.2 -
4.2.0.0 - timp - str)
SKU: BR.PB-15132
Urtext. Composed
by Max Bruch. Edited by
Michael Kube. Orchestra;
stapled.
Partitur-Bibliothek
(Score Library). In
Cooperation with G. Henle
Verlag. Solo concerto;
Romantic; Late-romantic.
Full score. 84 pages.
Duration 25'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #PB 15132.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.PB-15132).
ISBN
9790004214688. 10 x 12.5
inches.
Bruch's
evergreen for the first
time in UrtextThanks to
the premiere performance
by Joseph Joachim and to
the release of the
printed edition in 1868,
Max Bruch's Violin
Concerto no. 1 zipped
onto the road to success
and has never left it
since. Yet from the
preface of the
BreitkopfUrtext
edition,one can infer how
things looked like behind
the dazzling facade.
After the world premiere,
the composer struggled
for the definitive form.
He wrote 3, 4 development
sections in the finale,
and sought the advice of
celebrated virtuosi such
as Joseph Joachim and
Ferdinand David to revise
the solo part. And after
all this was done (see
above), Bruch suffered
under the work's
popularity: Have I
written nothing but this
one concerto?The new
Urtext edition is based
primarily on the first
edition. Next to the main
source and the autograph,
what is supremely
interesting is a solo
part with entries by
Joachim and Bruch. It
confirms how intensively
the two men collaborated
on honing the final form
of the work.
Violin and orchestra (solo: vl - 2.2.2.2 - 4.2.0.0 - timp - str) SKU: BR.PB-1...(+)
Violin and orchestra
(solo: vl - 2.2.2.2 -
4.2.0.0 - timp - str)
SKU:
BR.PB-15133-07
Urtext. Composed
by Max Bruch. Edited by
Michael Kube. Orchestra;
stapled.
Partitur-Bibliothek
(Score Library).
In
Cooperation with
G. Henle Verlag
Solo concerto; Romantic;
Late-romantic. Study
Score. 84 pages. Duration
25'. Breitkopf and
Haertel #PB 15133-07.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.PB-15133-07).
ISBN
9790004214695. 6.5 x 9
inches.
Bruch's
evergreen for the first
time in UrtextThanks to
the premiere performance
by Joseph Joachim and to
the release of the
printed edition in 1868,
Max Bruch's Violin
Concerto no. 1 zipped
onto the road to success
and has never left it
since. Yet from the
preface of the
BreitkopfUrtext
edition,one can infer how
things looked like behind
the dazzling facade.
After the world premiere,
the composer struggled
for the definitive form.
He wrote 3, 4 development
sections in the finale,
and sought the advice of
celebrated virtuosi such
as Joseph Joachim and
Ferdinand David to revise
the solo part. And after
all this was done (see
above), Bruch suffered
under the work's
popularity: Have I
written nothing but this
one concerto?The new
Urtext edition is based
primarily on the first
edition. Next to the main
source and the autograph,
what is supremely
interesting is a solo
part with entries by
Joachim and Bruch. It
confirms how intensively
the two men collaborated
on honing the final form
of the work.
Violin and orchestra (Solo: vl - 2.2.2.2 - 4.2.0.0 - timp - str) SKU: BR.PB-1...(+)
Violin and orchestra
(Solo: vl - 2.2.2.2 -
4.2.0.0 - timp - str)
SKU: BR.PB-16110
Urtext from the new
Complete Edition (G.
Henle Verlag).
Composed by Johannes
Brahms. Edited by Linda
Correll Roesner and
Michael Struck.
Orchestra; Softbound.
Partitur-Bibliothek
(Score Library). Solo
concerto; Romantic;
Late-romantic. Full
score. 216 pages.
Duration 35'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #PB 16110.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.PB-16110).
ISBN
9790004214374. 10 x 12.5
inches.
Johannes
Brahms's only violin
concerto, one of the most
important violin
concertos of the 19th
century, is now a central
repertoire piece. This
fact is all the more
notable, as, by his own
account, Brahms
understood all too little
about the instrument. The
concerto was composed at
Worthersee during the
summer of 1878 in
collaboration with Joseph
Joachim, a leading
contemporary violinist.
The solo part is
extremely demanding, with
really unusual
difficulties. This
circumstance did not go
unnoticed by the critics
of the first performance:
Even to Joachim, the
battled-seasoned
wrestler, the technically
difficult and tricky solo
part was to be mastered
only with obvious effort.
Evidencing this close
collaboration between
composer and performer is
not only the work's
genesis and publication
history, together with
its dedication to
Joachim, but also its
solo cadenza. Based on
the New Brahms Complete
Edition, this Urtext
edition includes both the
printed version of
Joachim's cadenza as well
as its shorter version
arranged in 1885 by the
violinist Marie
Soldat.