Violin and Orchestra SKU: HL.50485236 Composed by Ludwig van Beethoven. C...(+)
Violin and Orchestra
SKU: HL.50485236
Composed by Ludwig van
Beethoven. Classic. EMB.
Solo & Concerto. Book
[Softcover]. Op. 61.
Editio Musica Budapest
#Z40060. Published by
Editio Musica Budapest
(HL.50485236).
ISBN
9790080400609. A/5
(14,2x20) inches. Gabor
Darvas.
Though some
themes of the D major
Violin Concerto appear
fragmentarily among
Beethoven's earlier
drafts, the score
received its final shape
- according to the
autograph manuscript - in
1806 only. The first
performance took place on
December 23 of the same
year in Vienna, the
violon solo was played by
Franz Clement. The
concerto met with a
rather cold reception:
this critic of the Wiener
Theaterzeitung admitted
'some beauty' in it but
for the rest he found
that '...the coherence
often seems totally
broken and the endless
repetitions of some
commonplace sections can
easily become tedious.'
The performance may have
not been totally
satisfying, it is
certainly surprising that
the setof parts published
in 1808 is dedicated to
Stephan von Breuning
instead of Clement. It is
not impossible that
Beethoven lost faith in
the value and future of
his work, too, - his
later attempt to change
it into a piano concerto
can be interpreted in
this way.
Violin and Orchestra SKU: BT.EMBZ40060 Composed by Ludwig van Beethoven. ...(+)
Violin and Orchestra
SKU: BT.EMBZ40060
Composed by Ludwig van
Beethoven. EMB Study
Scores. Solo & Concerto.
Book Only. Editio Musica
Budapest #EMBZ40060.
Published by Editio
Musica Budapest
(BT.EMBZ40060).
Though some
themes of the D major
Violin Concerto appear
fragmentarily among
Beethoven's earlier
drafts, the score
received its final shape
- according to the
autograph manuscript - in
1806 only. The first
performance took place on
December 23 of the same
year in Vienna, the
violon solo was played by
Franz Clement. The
concerto met with a
rather cold reception:
this critic of the Wiener
Theaterzeitung admitted
'some beauty' in it but
for the rest he found
that '...the coherence
often seems totally
broken and the endless
repetitions of some
commonplace sections can
easily become tedious.'
The performance may have
not been totally
satisfying, it is
certainly surprising that
the setof parts published
in 1808 is dedicated to
Stephan von Breuning
instead of Clement. It is
not impossible that
Beethoven lost faith in
the value and future of
his work, too, - his
later attempt to change
it into a piano concerto
can be interpreted in
this way.