Piano SKU: VD.ED13701 Composed by Robert Schumann. Edited by Clara Wieck-...(+)
Piano
SKU:
VD.ED13701
Composed
by Robert Schumann.
Edited by Clara
Wieck-Schumann and Thomas
Synofzik. Klavier-Werke
von Robert Schumann -
Instruktive Ausgabe von
Clara Schumann, Vol. 1.
Classical. Score. 12 + IV
S. pages. Verlag Dohr
#ED13701. Published by
Verlag Dohr (VD.ED13701).
Piano SKU: VD.ED13703 Composed by Robert Schumann. Edited by Clara Wieck-...(+)
Piano
SKU:
VD.ED13703
Composed
by Robert Schumann.
Edited by Clara
Wieck-Schumann and Thomas
Synofzik. Klavier-Werke
von Robert Schumann -
Instruktive Ausgabe von
Clara Schumann, Vol. 3.
Classical. Score. 29 + VI
S. pages. Verlag Dohr
#ED13703. Published by
Verlag Dohr (VD.ED13703).
Composed by Robert Schumann. Edited by Charles Timbrell. Book; Masterworks; Pian...(+)
Composed by Robert
Schumann. Edited by
Charles Timbrell. Book;
Masterworks; Piano
Collection; Piano
Supplemental. Alfred
Masterwork Edition. Form:
Suite. Masterwork;
Romantic. 56 pages.
Published by Alfred Music
(AP.45955).
Composed by Clara Wieck- Schumann (1819-1896). Edited by Jacqueline Ross. This ...(+)
Composed by Clara Wieck-
Schumann (1819-1896).
Edited
by Jacqueline Ross. This
edition: urtext edition.
Stapled. Barenreiter
Urtext.
Performance score, Parts
(2).
Opus 22. Baerenreiter
Verlag
#BA10947. Published by
Baerenreiter Verlag
Organ SKU: BR.BHM-367 Verzeichnis cantus-firmus-gebundener Orgelmusik<...(+)
Organ
SKU:
BR.BHM-367
Verzeichnis
cantus-firmus-gebundener
Orgelmusik. Composed
by Martin Bieri. Solo
instruments. Breitkopf
New Media. The Sherlock
Holmes of the Organ Gets
a Makeover. Music
pedagogy. New Media.
Breitkopf and Haertel
#BHM 367. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.BHM-367).
ISBN
9783765103674. 9 x 12
inches.
Seek
(ricercare) and you will
find! The little angel on
the cover of the book
shows the organist the
way to the music he's
looking for! In an
incredibly time-consuming
endeavor, Martin Bieri
has compiled all
currently available
chorale-based organ
works, cataloguing about
15,600 works. The bulk of
the work is devoted to
(chorale) melodies that
can be found in the major
German-language hymnals.
The Ricercare Book offers
concise information along
with indexes of
arrangements, composers,
editions and publishers.
Nach acht Jahren Laufzeit
war es soweit: Ricercare
der Sherlock Holmes des
Organisten brauchte
dringend eine
Frischzellenkur d. h.
neue Informationen und
technische Updates. Das
Lifting hat der CD-ROM
gut getan. Ricercare
saust nunmehr mit neuer
Kraft (neuen
Informationen)
prestissimo durch die
weite Datenwelt von uber
20.000
cantus-firmus-gebundenen
Orgelwerken und gibt
umfassend Auskunft uber
Melodien Komponisten
Ausgaben Bearbeitungen
Verlage u. a. m.
After eight years on the
beat it was finally time
for Ricercare the
Sherlock Holmes of the
Organ to get a badly
needed makeover i.e. to
be supplied with new
information and technical
updates. The makeover did
a world of good to the
CD-ROM. Loaded with new
info Ricercare now zips
along prestissimo through
the vast data world of
more than 20 000
cantus-firmus-related
organ works and provides
comprehensive information
on melodies composers
editions arrangements
publishers and much
more.
The
present edition is based
on the music text of the
,,Gesamtausgabe of Robert
Schumann's works edited
by Clara Schumann
together with Johannes
Brahms and others between
1879 und 1893. This
publication is almost
entirely free from
arbitrary alterations in
the text. A few obvious
errors and unjustifiable
alterations of the
musical text were
eliminated after a
thorough comparison with
the first editions. Die
vorliegende Ausgabe folgt
dem Notentext der von
Clara Schumann in
Zusammenarbeit mit
Johannes Brahms u. a.
zwischen 1879 und 1893
herausgegebenen
Gesamtausgabe von Robert
Schumanns Werken. Diese
Edition ist von
willkurlichen
Veranderungen des Textes
weitgehend frei. Einige
offensichtliche Irrtumer
und nicht zu
rechtfertigende Eingriffe
in den Notentext wurden
nach Vergleich mit der
Erstausgabe und dem
Autograph beseitigt. The
present edition is based
on the music text of the
,,Gesamtausgabe of Robert
Schumann's works edited
by Clara Schumann
together with Johannes
Brahms and others between
1879 und 1893. This
publication is almost
entirely free from
arbitrary alterations in
the text. A few obvious
errors and unjustifiable
alterations of the
musical text were
eliminated after a
thorough comparison with
the first edition and the
autograph.
Classical Vocal, Piano (High Voice) SKU: HU.HN552 Original Keys for High and Me...(+)
Classical Vocal, Piano
(High Voice)
SKU: HU.HN552
Original Keys for High
and Medium Voice.
Composed by Robert
Schumann. Edited by
Kazuko Ozawa. Vocal,
Repertoire. Twelve Poems
Op. 35. Softcover Book.
G. Henle #HN552.
Published by G. Henle
(HU.HN552).
11.7 x 8.3 x 0.2 inches.
German.
Urtext based on the
Brahms Complete Edition
of the Gesellschaft der
Musikfreunde in
Vienna. Composed by
Johannes Brahms.
Orchestra; stapled.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library). EB
6043 is printed in score
form; two copies are
needed for performance.
Have a look into study
score PB 3654. Solo
concerto; Romantic. Part.
8 pages. Duration 43'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #OB
3210-27. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.OB-3210-27).
ISBN
9790004300732. 10 x 12.5
inches.
Johannes
Brahms' first Piano
Concerto was the fruit of
a complex, protracted,
and extremely trying
creative process. Its
origin goes back to a
sonata in D minor for two
pianos conceived in
spring 1854. The impulse
for the creation of the
main subject was however
a shocking event:
According to Joseqph
Joachim, the theme
originated after hearing
about Schumanns suicide
attempt. A few months
earlier, Schumann had
revealed Brahms to the
musical world in his
essay New Paths. In this
article, Brahms is
extolled as the musician
who is called to give
expression to the feeling
of his times in an ideal
fashion. The unusually
rapid genesis of the
D-minor sonata and its
prevailingly dark,
monumental mood can be
interpreted as an
impassioned compositional
response to Schumann's
suicide attempt. However,
the year-long struggle to
arrive at the final form
of the work should
perhaps also be seen in
the context of the
resounding praise of
Schumann's prophetic
article. Brahms undoubtly
felt a growing inner
pressure to live up to
the expectations aroused
therein.Together with
Clara Schumann, Brahms
played the three so far
existing movements of the
sonata, but he was very
self-critical. He felt
that he had not been able
to realize the
monumentality he had
envisioned, and which
Clara Schumann felt, by
merely doubling the piano
sound. He soon decided to
transform the sonata into
a symphony (his first
orchestral project).
However, this idea did
not seem to fit his
vision either. Only in
spring 1855 did he strike
upon the definitive
solution: a piano
concerto. With Brahms as
soloist, this concerto
premiered in 1859, though
he initially had little
success. He wrote to
Joachim about one of the
first performances that
the concerto was a
brilliant and
unmistakable - failure.
This hardly surprised
Brahms, for he was
undoubtedly aware of the
newness of the work,
which surpassed the
expectations of the
audience. The work's
complex structure and
symphonic dimensions, the
solo part's rejection of
showy, elegant
brilliance, and the
uniquely Brahmsian
orchestral density it
maintains throughout; all
of these qualities
inevitably exasperated
audiences at first -
until they raised this
work to the ranks of the
most celebrated concertos
of all time.
Urtext based on the
Brahms Complete Edition
of the Gesellschaft der
Musikfreunde in
Vienna. Composed by
Johannes Brahms.
Orchestra; stapled.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library).
Solo: pno - 2.2.2.2 -
4.2.0.0 - timp - str.
Solo concerto; Romantic.
Part. 8 pages. Duration
43'. Breitkopf and
Haertel #OB 3210-15.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.OB-3210-15).
ISBN
9790004300695. 10 x 12.5
inches.
Johannes
Brahms' first Piano
Concerto was the fruit of
a complex, protracted,
and extremely trying
creative process. Its
origin goes back to a
sonata in D minor for two
pianos conceived in
spring 1854. The impulse
for the creation of the
main subject was however
a shocking event:
According to Joseqph
Joachim, the theme
originated after hearing
about Schumanns suicide
attempt. A few months
earlier, Schumann had
revealed Brahms to the
musical world in his
essay New Paths. In this
article, Brahms is
extolled as the musician
who is called to give
expression to the feeling
of his times in an ideal
fashion. The unusually
rapid genesis of the
D-minor sonata and its
prevailingly dark,
monumental mood can be
interpreted as an
impassioned compositional
response to Schumann's
suicide attempt. However,
the year-long struggle to
arrive at the final form
of the work should
perhaps also be seen in
the context of the
resounding praise of
Schumann's prophetic
article. Brahms undoubtly
felt a growing inner
pressure to live up to
the expectations aroused
therein.Together with
Clara Schumann, Brahms
played the three so far
existing movements of the
sonata, but he was very
self-critical. He felt
that he had not been able
to realize the
monumentality he had
envisioned, and which
Clara Schumann felt, by
merely doubling the piano
sound. He soon decided to
transform the sonata into
a symphony (his first
orchestral project).
However, this idea did
not seem to fit his
vision either. Only in
spring 1855 did he strike
upon the definitive
solution: a piano
concerto. With Brahms as
soloist, this concerto
premiered in 1859, though
he initially had little
success. He wrote to
Joachim about one of the
first performances that
the concerto was a
brilliant and
unmistakable - failure.
This hardly surprised
Brahms, for he was
undoubtedly aware of the
newness of the work,
which surpassed the
expectations of the
audience. The work's
complex structure and
symphonic dimensions, the
solo part's rejection of
showy, elegant
brilliance, and the
uniquely Brahmsian
orchestral density it
maintains throughout; all
of these qualities
inevitably exasperated
audiences at first -
until they raised this
work to the ranks of the
most celebrated concertos
of all time.
Urtext based on the
Brahms Complete Edition
of the Gesellschaft der
Musikfreunde in
Vienna. Composed by
Johannes Brahms.
Orchestra; stapled.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library). EB
6043 is printed in score
form; two copies are
needed for performance.
Have a look into study
score PB 3654. Solo
concerto; Romantic. Part.
8 pages. Duration 43'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #OB
3210-23. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.OB-3210-23).
ISBN
9790004300725. 10 x 12.5
inches.
Johannes
Brahms' first Piano
Concerto was the fruit of
a complex, protracted,
and extremely trying
creative process. Its
origin goes back to a
sonata in D minor for two
pianos conceived in
spring 1854. The impulse
for the creation of the
main subject was however
a shocking event:
According to Joseqph
Joachim, the theme
originated after hearing
about Schumanns suicide
attempt. A few months
earlier, Schumann had
revealed Brahms to the
musical world in his
essay New Paths. In this
article, Brahms is
extolled as the musician
who is called to give
expression to the feeling
of his times in an ideal
fashion. The unusually
rapid genesis of the
D-minor sonata and its
prevailingly dark,
monumental mood can be
interpreted as an
impassioned compositional
response to Schumann's
suicide attempt. However,
the year-long struggle to
arrive at the final form
of the work should
perhaps also be seen in
the context of the
resounding praise of
Schumann's prophetic
article. Brahms undoubtly
felt a growing inner
pressure to live up to
the expectations aroused
therein.Together with
Clara Schumann, Brahms
played the three so far
existing movements of the
sonata, but he was very
self-critical. He felt
that he had not been able
to realize the
monumentality he had
envisioned, and which
Clara Schumann felt, by
merely doubling the piano
sound. He soon decided to
transform the sonata into
a symphony (his first
orchestral project).
However, this idea did
not seem to fit his
vision either. Only in
spring 1855 did he strike
upon the definitive
solution: a piano
concerto. With Brahms as
soloist, this concerto
premiered in 1859, though
he initially had little
success. He wrote to
Joachim about one of the
first performances that
the concerto was a
brilliant and
unmistakable - failure.
This hardly surprised
Brahms, for he was
undoubtedly aware of the
newness of the work,
which surpassed the
expectations of the
audience. The work's
complex structure and
symphonic dimensions, the
solo part's rejection of
showy, elegant
brilliance, and the
uniquely Brahmsian
orchestral density it
maintains throughout; all
of these qualities
inevitably exasperated
audiences at first -
until they raised this
work to the ranks of the
most celebrated concertos
of all time.
Urtext based on the
Brahms Complete Edition
of the Gesellschaft der
Musikfreunde in
Vienna. Composed by
Johannes Brahms.
Orchestra; stapled.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library). EB
6043 is printed in score
form; two copies are
needed for performance.
Have a look into study
score PB 3654. Solo
concerto; Romantic. Part.
12 pages. Duration 43'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #OB
3210-19. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.OB-3210-19).
ISBN
9790004300718. 10 x 12.5
inches.
Johannes
Brahms' first Piano
Concerto was the fruit of
a complex, protracted,
and extremely trying
creative process. Its
origin goes back to a
sonata in D minor for two
pianos conceived in
spring 1854. The impulse
for the creation of the
main subject was however
a shocking event:
According to Joseqph
Joachim, the theme
originated after hearing
about Schumanns suicide
attempt. A few months
earlier, Schumann had
revealed Brahms to the
musical world in his
essay New Paths. In this
article, Brahms is
extolled as the musician
who is called to give
expression to the feeling
of his times in an ideal
fashion. The unusually
rapid genesis of the
D-minor sonata and its
prevailingly dark,
monumental mood can be
interpreted as an
impassioned compositional
response to Schumann's
suicide attempt. However,
the year-long struggle to
arrive at the final form
of the work should
perhaps also be seen in
the context of the
resounding praise of
Schumann's prophetic
article. Brahms undoubtly
felt a growing inner
pressure to live up to
the expectations aroused
therein.Together with
Clara Schumann, Brahms
played the three so far
existing movements of the
sonata, but he was very
self-critical. He felt
that he had not been able
to realize the
monumentality he had
envisioned, and which
Clara Schumann felt, by
merely doubling the piano
sound. He soon decided to
transform the sonata into
a symphony (his first
orchestral project).
However, this idea did
not seem to fit his
vision either. Only in
spring 1855 did he strike
upon the definitive
solution: a piano
concerto. With Brahms as
soloist, this concerto
premiered in 1859, though
he initially had little
success. He wrote to
Joachim about one of the
first performances that
the concerto was a
brilliant and
unmistakable - failure.
This hardly surprised
Brahms, for he was
undoubtedly aware of the
newness of the work,
which surpassed the
expectations of the
audience. The work's
complex structure and
symphonic dimensions, the
solo part's rejection of
showy, elegant
brilliance, and the
uniquely Brahmsian
orchestral density it
maintains throughout; all
of these qualities
inevitably exasperated
audiences at first -
until they raised this
work to the ranks of the
most celebrated concertos
of all time.
Urtext based on the
Brahms Complete Edition
of the Gesellschaft der
Musikfreunde in
Vienna. Composed by
Johannes Brahms.
Orchestra; Folder.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library). EB
6043 is printed in score
form; two copies are
needed for performance.
Have a look into study
score PB 3654. Solo
concerto; Romantic. Set
of parts. 90 pages.
Duration 43'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #OB 3210-30.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.OB-3210-30).
ISBN
9790004300749. 10 x 12.5
inches.
Johannes
Brahms' first Piano
Concerto was the fruit of
a complex, protracted,
and extremely trying
creative process. Its
origin goes back to a
sonata in D minor for two
pianos conceived in
spring 1854. The impulse
for the creation of the
main subject was however
a shocking event:
According to Joseqph
Joachim, the theme
originated after hearing
about Schumanns suicide
attempt. A few months
earlier, Schumann had
revealed Brahms to the
musical world in his
essay New Paths. In this
article, Brahms is
extolled as the musician
who is called to give
expression to the feeling
of his times in an ideal
fashion. The unusually
rapid genesis of the
D-minor sonata and its
prevailingly dark,
monumental mood can be
interpreted as an
impassioned compositional
response to Schumann's
suicide attempt. However,
the year-long struggle to
arrive at the final form
of the work should
perhaps also be seen in
the context of the
resounding praise of
Schumann's prophetic
article. Brahms undoubtly
felt a growing inner
pressure to live up to
the expectations aroused
therein.Together with
Clara Schumann, Brahms
played the three so far
existing movements of the
sonata, but he was very
self-critical. He felt
that he had not been able
to realize the
monumentality he had
envisioned, and which
Clara Schumann felt, by
merely doubling the piano
sound. He soon decided to
transform the sonata into
a symphony (his first
orchestral project).
However, this idea did
not seem to fit his
vision either. Only in
spring 1855 did he strike
upon the definitive
solution: a piano
concerto. With Brahms as
soloist, this concerto
premiered in 1859, though
he initially had little
success. He wrote to
Joachim about one of the
first performances that
the concerto was a
brilliant and
unmistakable - failure.
This hardly surprised
Brahms, for he was
undoubtedly aware of the
newness of the work,
which surpassed the
expectations of the
audience. The work's
complex structure and
symphonic dimensions, the
solo part's rejection of
showy, elegant
brilliance, and the
uniquely Brahmsian
orchestral density it
maintains throughout; all
of these qualities
inevitably exasperated
audiences at first -
until they raised this
work to the ranks of the
most celebrated concertos
of all time.
Urtext based on the
Brahms Complete Edition
of the Gesellschaft der
Musikfreunde in
Vienna. Composed by
Johannes Brahms.
Orchestra; stapled.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library). EB
6043 is printed in score
form; two copies are
needed for performance.
Have a look into study
score PB 3654. Solo
concerto; Romantic. Part.
8 pages. Duration 43'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #OB
3210-16. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.OB-3210-16).
ISBN
9790004300701. 10 x 12.5
inches.
Johannes
Brahms' first Piano
Concerto was the fruit of
a complex, protracted,
and extremely trying
creative process. Its
origin goes back to a
sonata in D minor for two
pianos conceived in
spring 1854. The impulse
for the creation of the
main subject was however
a shocking event:
According to Joseqph
Joachim, the theme
originated after hearing
about Schumanns suicide
attempt. A few months
earlier, Schumann had
revealed Brahms to the
musical world in his
essay New Paths. In this
article, Brahms is
extolled as the musician
who is called to give
expression to the feeling
of his times in an ideal
fashion. The unusually
rapid genesis of the
D-minor sonata and its
prevailingly dark,
monumental mood can be
interpreted as an
impassioned compositional
response to Schumann's
suicide attempt. However,
the year-long struggle to
arrive at the final form
of the work should
perhaps also be seen in
the context of the
resounding praise of
Schumann's prophetic
article. Brahms undoubtly
felt a growing inner
pressure to live up to
the expectations aroused
therein.Together with
Clara Schumann, Brahms
played the three so far
existing movements of the
sonata, but he was very
self-critical. He felt
that he had not been able
to realize the
monumentality he had
envisioned, and which
Clara Schumann felt, by
merely doubling the piano
sound. He soon decided to
transform the sonata into
a symphony (his first
orchestral project).
However, this idea did
not seem to fit his
vision either. Only in
spring 1855 did he strike
upon the definitive
solution: a piano
concerto. With Brahms as
soloist, this concerto
premiered in 1859, though
he initially had little
success. He wrote to
Joachim about one of the
first performances that
the concerto was a
brilliant and
unmistakable - failure.
This hardly surprised
Brahms, for he was
undoubtedly aware of the
newness of the work,
which surpassed the
expectations of the
audience. The work's
complex structure and
symphonic dimensions, the
solo part's rejection of
showy, elegant
brilliance, and the
uniquely Brahmsian
orchestral density it
maintains throughout; all
of these qualities
inevitably exasperated
audiences at first -
until they raised this
work to the ranks of the
most celebrated concertos
of all time.
Score and Parts Soprano; String Quartet (Score & Parts) SKU: HL.49046304 ...(+)
Score and Parts Soprano;
String Quartet (Score &
Parts)
SKU:
HL.49046304
Arranged for Soprano
and String Quartet by
Aribert Reimann
Score. Composed by
Clara Wieck-Schumann.
Edited by Aribert
Reimann. Vocal
Collection. Classical.
Softcover. 36 pages.
Duration 420 seconds.
Schott Music #ED23139.
Published by Schott Music
(HL.49046304).
By Christine H. Barden, Gayle Kowalchyk, and E. L. Lancaster. For Piano. Piano M...(+)
By Christine H. Barden,
Gayle Kowalchyk, and E.
L. Lancaster. For Piano.
Piano Method. Music for
Little Mozarts. 0. Sheet.
4 pages. Published by
Alfred Publishing.
SKU: CA.4033580 War Gott nicht mit uns diese Zeit (God was not with us th...(+)
SKU: CA.4033580
War Gott nicht mit uns
diese Zeit (God was not
with us this time). Clara
Und Robert Schumann.
Lithographie Kaiser. Post
card. 2 pages. Carus
Verlag #CV 40.335/80.
Published by Carus Verlag
(CA.4033580).
ISBN
9790007131470. Language:
all languages.
Illustrator: Eduard
Kaiser.
Composed by Clara Wieck- Schumann. Piano Solo, Piano and Keyboard, Repertoire, ...(+)
Composed by Clara Wieck-
Schumann. Piano Solo,
Piano and
Keyboard, Repertoire,
Collections. Selected
Piano
Works. Softcover Book. G.
Henle #HN393. Published
by G.
Henle
Mittelschwere Kompositionen. By Clara Schumann. Edited by Franzpeter Goebels. Fo...(+)
Mittelschwere
Kompositionen. By Clara
Schumann. Edited by
Franzpeter Goebels. For
Piano. Playing Score.
Published by
Baerenreiter-Ausgaben
(German import). ISBN
M006480968.
Study Score. Composed by Robert Schumann. Henle Study Scores. Study score...(+)
Study Score.
Composed by Robert
Schumann. Henle Study
Scores. Study score
(paperbound). 270 pages.
G. Henle #HN9922.
Published by G. Henle
(HL.51489922).
(Softcover Edition). By Robert Schumann. Edited by Ernst Herttrich. Henle Music ...(+)
(Softcover Edition). By
Robert Schumann. Edited
by Ernst Herttrich. Henle
Music Folios. Softcover.
280 pages. G. Henle
Verlag #HN924. Published
by G. Henle Verlag