By Martin Wulfhorst. This edition: 1st printing 2012 edition. Paperback. A compr...(+)
By Martin Wulfhorst. This
edition: 1st printing
2012 edition. Paperback.
A comprehensive guidebook
with hundreds of
excerpts. Book. Language:
English. 483 pages.
Published by Baerenreiter
Verlag
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.
Performed by Billy Joel. For voice, piano and guitar chords. Format: piano/vocal...(+)
Performed by Billy Joel.
For voice, piano and
guitar chords. Format:
piano/vocal/chords
songbook. With vocal
melody, piano
accompaniment, lyrics,
chord names, guitar chord
diagrams and black and
white photos. Soft rock
and pop rock. 136 pages.
9x12 inches. Published by
Hal Leonard.
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). 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.
Combo Edition of Books 1 and 2 with Online Audio. Guitar Tab Method. Instructi...(+)
Combo Edition of Books 1
and 2
with Online Audio. Guitar
Tab
Method. Instruction,
Method.
Softcover Audio Online.
64
pages. Published by Hal
LeonISBN 9781705141724.
9.0x12.0 inches.
Get started quickly and
easily, and with songs
you
want to play! Learn the
notes
of the bass with riffs
like
"Day Tripper" and "Stand
by
Me," reading rhythms and
tab
with classics by the Who
and
Red Hot Chili Peppers,
fingerstyle and pick
technique with songs like
"Roxanne" and "Low
Rider,"
beginning slap technique
with
songs like "Higher
Ground"
and "Fly Away," and much
more. The method's
unique,
well-paced, and logical
teaching sequence will
get
students playing more
easily
than ever before, and
music
from popular artists like
the
Beatles, Nirvana, and
Green
Day will keep them
playing
and having fun. This
special
combo edition includes
books
one and two of the series
plus online audio
access.ard
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.
Urtext. Composed
by Wolfgang Amadeus
Mozart. Edited by Ernst
Herttrich. Stapled.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library).
In Cooperation with G.
Henle VerlagEB 10787 is
printed in score form;
two copies are needed for
performance.Our ed
ition EB 8579
contains Ferrucci
Busoni's cadenzas for the
Piano Concerto in C majo.
Solo concerto; Classical.
Part. 8 pages. Duration
28'. Breitkopf and
Haertel #OB 15148-15.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.OB-15148-15).
ISBN
9790004342176. 10 x 12.5
inches.
Composed
under pressure, edited in
peace: K. 491In spring
1786 Mozart was under
pressure: he had only two
weeks between the
composition and first
performance of the
C-minor Piano Concerto K.
491. It is no wonder that
the autograph was written
very hastily and the
piano part occasionally
only sketched. Mozart,
who played the solo part
at the premiere, still
thought about it later.
During subsequent
revisions of the piano
part, he caused a certain
amount of confusion
through corrected
versions and parallel
versions. Editor Ernst
Herttrich thus faced
great challenges when
preparing the Breitkopf
Urtext edition,
especially since printed
editions were only
published posthumously.
But since they contain
readings that play an
important role in the
reception of the work,
they were included in the
new edition as
variants.
Urtext. Composed
by Wolfgang Amadeus
Mozart. Edited by Ernst
Herttrich. Stapled.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library).
In Cooperation with G.
Henle VerlagEB 10787 is
printed in score form;
two copies are needed for
performance.Our ed
ition EB 8579
contains Ferrucci
Busoni's cadenzas for the
Piano Concerto in C majo.
Solo concerto; Classical.
Part. 8 pages. Duration
28'. Breitkopf and
Haertel #OB 15148-19.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.OB-15148-19).
ISBN
9790004342190. 10 x 12.5
inches.
Composed
under pressure, edited in
peace: K. 491In spring
1786 Mozart was under
pressure: he had only two
weeks between the
composition and first
performance of the
C-minor Piano Concerto K.
491. It is no wonder that
the autograph was written
very hastily and the
piano part occasionally
only sketched. Mozart,
who played the solo part
at the premiere, still
thought about it later.
During subsequent
revisions of the piano
part, he caused a certain
amount of confusion
through corrected
versions and parallel
versions. Editor Ernst
Herttrich thus faced
great challenges when
preparing the Breitkopf
Urtext edition,
especially since printed
editions were only
published posthumously.
But since they contain
readings that play an
important role in the
reception of the work,
they were included in the
new edition as
variants.
Urtext. Composed
by Wolfgang Amadeus
Mozart. Edited by Ernst
Herttrich. Stapled.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library).
In Cooperation with G.
Henle VerlagEB 10787 is
printed in score form;
two copies are needed for
performance.Our ed
ition EB 8579
contains Ferrucci
Busoni's cadenzas for the
Piano Concerto in C majo.
Solo concerto; Classical.
Part. 8 pages. Duration
28'. Breitkopf and
Haertel #OB 15148-26.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.OB-15148-26).
ISBN
9790004342206. 10 x 12.5
inches.
Composed
under pressure, edited in
peace: K. 491In spring
1786 Mozart was under
pressure: he had only two
weeks between the
composition and first
performance of the
C-minor Piano Concerto K.
491. It is no wonder that
the autograph was written
very hastily and the
piano part occasionally
only sketched. Mozart,
who played the solo part
at the premiere, still
thought about it later.
During subsequent
revisions of the piano
part, he caused a certain
amount of confusion
through corrected
versions and parallel
versions. Editor Ernst
Herttrich thus faced
great challenges when
preparing the Breitkopf
Urtext edition,
especially since printed
editions were only
published posthumously.
But since they contain
readings that play an
important role in the
reception of the work,
they were included in the
new edition as
variants.
Woodwinds (solo: pno-
1.2.2.2 - 2.2.0.0 - timp
- str)
SKU:
BR.OB-15148-30
Urtext. Composed
by Wolfgang Amadeus
Mozart. Edited by Ernst
Herttrich. Folder.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library).
In Cooperation with G.
Henle VerlagEB 10787 is
printed in score form;
two copies are needed for
performance.Our ed
ition EB 8579
contains Ferrucci
Busoni's cadenzas for the
Piano Concerto in C majo.
Solo concerto; Classical.
Set of parts. 72 pages.
Duration 28'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #OB 15148-30.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.OB-15148-30).
ISBN
9790004342213. 10 x 12.5
inches.
Composed
under pressure, edited in
peace: K. 491In spring
1786 Mozart was under
pressure: he had only two
weeks between the
composition and first
performance of the
C-minor Piano Concerto K.
491. It is no wonder that
the autograph was written
very hastily and the
piano part occasionally
only sketched. Mozart,
who played the solo part
at the premiere, still
thought about it later.
During subsequent
revisions of the piano
part, he caused a certain
amount of confusion
through corrected
versions and parallel
versions. Editor Ernst
Herttrich thus faced
great challenges when
preparing the Breitkopf
Urtext edition,
especially since printed
editions were only
published posthumously.
But since they contain
readings that play an
important role in the
reception of the work,
they were included in the
new edition as
variants.
Piano duets (solo: pno- 1.2.2.2 - 2.2.0.0 - timp - str) SKU: BR.EB-10787 ...(+)
Piano duets (solo: pno-
1.2.2.2 - 2.2.0.0 - timp
- str)
SKU:
BR.EB-10787
Urtext. Composed
by Wolfgang Amadeus
Mozart. Edited by Ernst
Herttrich. Solo
instruments; Softcover.
Edition Breitkopf.
In
Cooperation with G. Henle
VerlagEB 10787 is printed
in score form; two copies
are needed for
performance.Our ed
ition EB 8579
contains Ferrucci
Busoni's cadenzas for the
Piano Concerto in C majo.
Solo concerto; Classical.
Piano reduction. 68
pages. Duration 28'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #EB
10787. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.EB-10787).
ISBN
9790201807874. 9.5 x 12
inches.
Composed
under pressure, edited in
peace: K. 491In spring
1786 Mozart was under
pressure: he had only two
weeks between the
composition and first
performance of the
C-minor Piano Concerto K.
491. It is no wonder that
the autograph was written
very hastily and the
piano part occasionally
only sketched. Mozart,
who played the solo part
at the premiere, still
thought about it later.
During subsequent
revisions of the piano
part, he caused a certain
amount of confusion
through corrected
versions and parallel
versions. Editor Ernst
Herttrich thus faced
great challenges when
preparing the Breitkopf
Urtext edition,
especially since printed
editions were only
published posthumously.
But since they contain
readings that play an
important role in the
reception of the work,
they were included in the
new edition as
variants.
Urtext. Composed
by Wolfgang Amadeus
Mozart. Edited by Ernst
Herttrich. Stapled.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library).
In Cooperation with G.
Henle VerlagEB 10787 is
printed in score form;
two copies are needed for
performance.Our ed
ition EB 8579
contains Ferrucci
Busoni's cadenzas for the
Piano Concerto in C majo.
Solo concerto; Classical.
Part. 8 pages. Duration
28'. Breitkopf and
Haertel #OB 15148-16.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.OB-15148-16).
ISBN
9790004342183. 10 x 12.5
inches.
Composed
under pressure, edited in
peace: K. 491In spring
1786 Mozart was under
pressure: he had only two
weeks between the
composition and first
performance of the
C-minor Piano Concerto K.
491. It is no wonder that
the autograph was written
very hastily and the
piano part occasionally
only sketched. Mozart,
who played the solo part
at the premiere, still
thought about it later.
During subsequent
revisions of the piano
part, he caused a certain
amount of confusion
through corrected
versions and parallel
versions. Editor Ernst
Herttrich thus faced
great challenges when
preparing the Breitkopf
Urtext edition,
especially since printed
editions were only
published posthumously.
But since they contain
readings that play an
important role in the
reception of the work,
they were included in the
new edition as
variants.
EB 10787
is printed in score form;
two copies are needed for
performance. Our edition
EB 8579 contains Ferrucci
Busoni's cadenzas for the
Piano Concerto in C major
K. 491.
SKU: HL.48181499 Composed by Henri Tomasi. Leduc. Classical. 40 pages. Al...(+)
SKU: HL.48181499
Composed by Henri Tomasi.
Leduc. Classical. 40
pages. Alphonse Leduc
#AL21123. Published by
Alphonse Leduc
(HL.48181499).
UPC:
888680842659.
9.0x12.0x0.288
inches.
French
composer and conductor,
Henri Tomasi (1901-1971)
published Liturgical
Fanfares in 1952. As with
his other wind
compositions, Liturgical
Fanfares was
well-received by
audiences. Tomasi was
born in Marseille, but
his Father and Mother
were originally from La
Casinca in Corsica.
Despite being pressured
into musical studies by
his parents, Tomasi
dreamed of becoming a
sailor, and during the
summer he stayed with his
Grandmother in Corsica
where he learnt
traditional Corsican
songs. However, in 1921,
he began his studies at
the Paris Conservatoire
and went on to become a
high profile composer and
conductor. Tomasi did not
forget his Corsican
routes, often
incorporating themes of
the songs he had learnt
during the summers with
his Grandmother into his
compositions. Composed
for an unusual
instrumentation of Brass
Ensemble, Timpani and
Drums, Liturgical
Fanfares comprises four
movements; 1)
Annunciation, 2) Gospel,
3) Apocalypse, and 4)
Good Friday Procession.
This Tomasi piece is
suitable to advanced
players and provides an
exciting, alternative
addition to the ensemble
repertoire..
SKU: HL.48182297 Composed by Henri Tomasi. Leduc. Classical. 9 pages. Alp...(+)
SKU: HL.48182297
Composed by Henri Tomasi.
Leduc. Classical. 9
pages. Alphonse Leduc
#AL23411. Published by
Alphonse Leduc
(HL.48182297).
UPC:
888680839994.
9.0x12.0x0.183
inches.
â??French
composer and conductor,
Henri Tomasi (1901-1971)
published Three
Divertissements for
Clarinet Quartet in 1964.
As with his other wind
compositions, Three
Divertissements was
well-received by
audiences. Tomasi was
born in Marseille, but
his Father and Mother
were originally from La
Casinca in Corsica.
Despite being pressured
into musical studies by
his parents, Tomasi
dreamed of becoming a
sailor, and during the
summer, he stayed with
his Grandmother in
Corsica where he learnt
traditional Corsican
songs. However, in 1921,
he began his studies at
the Paris Conservatoire
and went on to become a
high profile composer and
conductor. Tomasi did not
forget his Corsican
routes, often
incorporating themes of
the songs he had learnt
during the summers with
his Grandmother into his
compositions. The Three
Divertissements are
named; 1) Proceedings, 2)
Masquerade, and 3)
Rounds. This Tomasi piece
is suitable to an
advanced Clarinet
Quartet, providing an
exciting alternative
addition to the ensemble
repertoire.â?.
Interieur III. Composed by Helmut Lachenmann. World premiere: Nuremberg (Ars ...(+)
Interieur III. Composed
by
Helmut Lachenmann. World
premiere: Nuremberg (Ars
nova), June 4, 1970.
Breitkopf and Haertel #EB
9395. Published by
Breitkopf
and Haertel