Piano/harpsichord and
orchestra (solo: pno -
3(picc).3(cor ang).2.2 -
4.2.3.1 - timp.perc - hp
- cel - str)
SKU:
BR.EB-11450
Impresiones sinfonicas
- Urtext. Composed by
Manuel de Falla. Edited
by Ullrich Scheideler.
Orchestra; Softbound.
Edition Breitkopf.
In
Cooperation with G. Henle
Verlag
Solo concerto;
Symphonic poem;
Late-romantic; Early
modern. Piano reduction.
68 pages. Duration 23'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #EB
11450. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.EB-11450).
ISBN
9790201814506. 9.5 x 12
inches.
Composed by
Manuel de Falla during
his lengthy residence in
Paris, these three
symphonic impressions for
piano and orchestra are
an expressive work
bringing the southern
Spanish gardens, which
are laid out in the
European and
Arabic-Moorish tradition,
to life. The influence of
contemporary French music
is noticeable in this
composition. Despite many
modifications, involving
among other things, the
scoring, number of
movements, as well as
layout and content, the
basic idea of a nocturnal
impression is retained
from the outset. The work
was finished - and
likewise the orchestral
material - only shortly
before its premiere on 9
April 1916, which was a
great success. World War
I prevented its
publication, though
further performances
followed, played then
from manuscript material.
The Urtext edition
presented by Ullrich
Scheideler takes as the
main source the first
edition of the score. The
Critical Report gives
detailed information
about the source
situation.
Piano, orchestra SKU: SA.41762 Composed by Antonin Dvorak. Edited by Berk...(+)
Piano, orchestra
SKU:
SA.41762
Composed by
Antonin Dvorak. Edited by
Berkovec. Arranged by
Vilem Kurz. Original
Works, Concerto,
Instrumental Solo.
Reprint Source: Prague:
SNKLHU, 1956. Plate H
1790. Romantic, Czech.
Study score. Composed
1876. 260 pages. Duration
38-40 minutes. Petrucci
Library Press #41762.
Published by Petrucci
Library Press (SA.41762).
ISBN 9781608741762.
9.5 x 12.5
inches.
Composed in
the late summer of 1876,
Dvorak's first effort at
a full-blown concerto
shows signs of an unusual
amount of revision in the
composer's hand -
especially for the solo
piano part. This might
explain the delay in the
concerto's premiere,
which was given at the
Provisional Theatre in
Prague on March 24, 1878
with Karel Slavkovsky as
soloist accompanied by
the Provisional Theatre
Orchestra under the baton
of Adolf Cech. The
composer himself wrote: I
see I am unable to write
a Concerto for a
virtuoso; I must think of
other things. The
ungainly solo part no
doubt also played a role
in the work's dely in
publication, which didn't
take place until 1883.
Even after this, and
despite much beauty in
the music itself,
performances were scarce
due to the difficulty and
charchter of the solo
part. The solo part was
revised heavily by the
Czech pianist Vilem Kurz
(1872-1945), whose
version was premired by
his daughter Ilona
KurzovA! and the Czech
Philharmonic on December
9, 1919 and is the one
most often performed
today. This new study
score is a digitally
enhanced reissue of the
full score first
published in 1956 by the
Czech State Publishers as
part of the Dvorak
collected works, edited
by Jiri Berkovec and
Karel Solc, which
includes both the
composer's original solo
part and the re-arranged
one made by Kurz. Unlike
so many of the on-demand
scores now available,
this one comes with all
the pages and the images
have been thoroughly
checked to make sure it
is readable. As with all
PLP scores a percentage
of each sale is donated
to the amazing online
archive of free music
scores and recordings,
IMSLP - Petrucci Music
Library.
Piano and Orchestra SKU: BT.PWM8357 For Piano and Orchestra. Compo...(+)
Piano and Orchestra
SKU: BT.PWM8357
For Piano and
Orchestra. Composed
by Franciszek Lessel.
Classical. Piano
Reduction. Composed 2023.
44 pages. Polskie
Wydawnictwo Muzyczne
#PWM8357. Published by
Polskie Wydawnictwo
Muzyczne (BT.PWM8357).
Piano/harpsichord and orchestra (solo: pno - 2.2.2.2. - 2.2.1.0. - timp - str) <...(+)
Piano/harpsichord and
orchestra (solo: pno -
2.2.2.2. - 2.2.1.0. -
timp - str)
SKU:
BR.PB-4485
Composed
by Frederic Chopin.
Orchestra; Softbound.
Partitur-Bibliothek
(Score Library).
Frederic Chopin's
Piano Concertos in e
minor op. 11 and
f minor op. 21
were written when the
composer had just barely
entered his
twenties.
EB 3942
is printed in score form;
two copies are needed for
performance.Have a look.
Solo concerto; Romantic.
Full score. 68 pages.
Duration 30'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #PB 4485.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.PB-4485).
ISBN 9790004203910. 9
x 12
inches.
Frederic
Chopin's Piano Concertos
in e minor op. 11 and f
minor op. 21 were written
when the composer had
just barely entered his
twenties. Since he needed
effective, virtuoso works
for his major concert
appearances with
orchestral accompaniment,
he decided to simply
write them himself.
Although it is clear that
the piano part always
holds center stage in
these pieces, Chopin
never degrades the
orchestra by turning it
into a stereotypical
cue-giver. This is
confirmed by the
imaginatively
orchestrated tutti
transition in the first
movement, the lengthy
string tremolo in the
middle movement and the
col legno passage in the
finale.The first
performance of the
f-minor concerto took
place in Warsaw on 17
March 1830. The first
edition of the score was
published in 1879 by
Breitkopf & Hartel in
Leipzig. The present
edition for two pianos by
Ignaz Friedmann was first
issued in 1913 in the
framework of the
12-volume Chopin edition
for which the Polish
pianist undertook a
careful evaluation of the
sources.
Frederic
Chopin's Piano Concertos
in e minor op. 11 and f
minor op. 21 were written
when the composer had
just barely entered his
twenties.
Piano/harpsichord and orchestra (solo: pno - 2(picc).2.2.2 - 4.2.3.0 - timp - st...(+)
Piano/harpsichord and
orchestra (solo: pno -
2(picc).2.2.2 - 4.2.3.0 -
timp - str)
SKU:
BR.PB-15164-07
Urtext. Composed
by Edvard Grieg. Edited
by E.-G. Heinemann.
Orchestra; Softbound.
Partitur-Bibliothek
(Score Library). Solo
concerto; Romantic. Study
Score. 108 pages.
Duration 30'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #PB 15164-07.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.PB-15164-07).
ISBN
9790004215906. 6.5 x 9
inches.
The piano
concerto in a minor
stands out in Edvard
Grieg's oeuvre. Besides
this famous concerto, he
composed only a few other
large orchestral works.
Because of its popularity
even in Grieg's lifetime,
it was often performed,
not least by the composer
himself. So it is not
surprising that Grieg
made many changes to the
score up to 1907. But at
the same time, the
concerto's size, form and
substance remained
completely unaltered.
Interventions in the
piano part basically
involved subtleties of
nuance, and only a very
few places in the music
text were altered. The
situation was different
with the orchestration.
Here Grieg was keen to
experiment and kept
filing away at the
orchestra sound right up
to the last. Melodies
were moved to other
instruments, accompanying
string chords were
reconstructed, and above
all the list of scored
instruments was changed.
The main source of the
Urtext edition by
Ernst-Gunter Heinemann is
the new edition of the
score originally
published in 1907 by C.
F. Peters, thus several
years after the first
edition of 1872. Taken
into account in the
present edition are the
changes that Grieg made
up to the time of his
death. Piano reduction
and fingering by Einar
Steen-Nokleberg.
Urtext. Composed
by George Gershwin.
Orchestra; Softbound.
Edition Breitkopf. Solo
concerto; Early modern;
Music post-1945. Piano
reduction. 88 pages.
Duration 36'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #EB 10859.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.EB-10859).
ISBN
9790201808598. 9.5 x 12
inches.
After
achieving sensational
success with the musical
Lady, be good! , with
evergreens such as
Fascinating Rhythm and
The Man I love, as well
as with his Rhapsody in
Blue , Gershwin premiered
his Concerto in F for
piano and orchestra as a
soloist at Carnegie Hall
in 1925. Now, the new
superstar of Broadway had
also arrived at the
center of New York's
classical music scene. In
its eventful history, the
work went through
numerous changes,
cuttings, arrangements,
many of which doubtful
and unauthorized. Even
the first and so far only
printed orchestral score,
edited by Frank
Campbell-Watson,
published in 1942 five
years after Gershwin's
death, contains many
unauthorized
interventions. Through
years of research, editor
Norbert Gertsch has
succeeded in ridding the
work of all unauthorized
additions and alterations
and thus reconstructing
an Urtext in its original
literal sense from the
complex source material -
from autograph sketches
to early recordings. The
first text-critical
edition of the work is a
joint production of
Breitkopf
(score/orchestral parts)
and G. Henle Verlag
(piano reduction).
Kaintuck' Piano et Orchestre [Conducteur] Carl Fischer
(Poem for Piano and Orchestra - Full Score). By William Grant Still (1895-1978)....(+)
(Poem for Piano and
Orchestra - Full Score).
By William Grant Still
(1895-1978). Orchestra.
For Flute I, Flute II,
Flute III, Piccolo, Oboe
I, Oboe II, English Horn,
Clarinet I, Clarinet II,
Clarinet III, Bass
Clarinet, Bassoon I,
Bassoon II, Horn I, Horn
II, Horn III, Horn IV,
Trumpet I, Trumpet II,
Trumpet III, Tenor I,
Tenor II, Tenor III,
Tuba, . Full score
(large). Standard
notation. 48 pages.
Published by Carl Fischer
Piano/harpsichord and
orchestra (solo: pno -
3(picc).3(cor ang).2.2 -
4.2.3.1 - timp.perc - hp
- cel - str)
SKU:
BR.PB-15153
Impresiones sinfonicas
- Urtext. Composed by
Manuel de Falla. Edited
by Ullrich Scheideler.
Orchestra; Softbound.
Partitur-Bibliothek
(Score Library).
In
Cooperation with G. Henle
Verlag
Solo concerto;
Symphonic poem;
Late-romantic; Early
modern. Full score. 92
pages. Duration 23'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #PB
15153. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.PB-15153).
ISBN
9790004215586. 10 x 12.5
inches.
Composed by
Manuel de Falla during
his lengthy residence in
Paris, these three
symphonic impressions for
piano and orchestra are
an expressive work
bringing the southern
Spanish gardens, which
are laid out in the
European and
Arabic-Moorish tradition,
to life. The influence of
contemporary French music
is noticeable in this
composition. Despite many
modifications, involving
among other things, the
scoring, number of
movements, as well as
layout and content, the
basic idea of a nocturnal
impression is retained
from the outset. The work
was finished - and
likewise the orchestral
material - only shortly
before its premiere on 9
April 1916, which was a
great success. World War
I prevented its
publication, though
further performances
followed, played then
from manuscript material.
The Urtext edition
presented by Ullrich
Scheideler takes as the
main source the first
edition of the score. The
Critical Report gives
detailed information
about the source
situation.
Composed by F Chopin. Edited by Jan Ekier. 2 PIANOS/4 HANDS. PWM. 120 pages. Pol...(+)
Composed by F Chopin.
Edited by Jan Ekier. 2
PIANOS/4 HANDS. PWM. 120
pages. Polskie
Wydawnictwo Muzyczne
#51600023. Published by
Polskie Wydawnictwo
Muzyczne
(Chopin National Edition). Composed by Frederic Chopin (1810-1849). Edited by Ja...(+)
(Chopin National
Edition). Composed by
Frederic Chopin
(1810-1849). Edited by
Jan Ekier and Pawel
Kaminski. For Orchestra,
Piano (Full Score). PWM.
Polskie Wydawnictwo
Muzyczne #51600026.
Published by Polskie
Wydawnictwo Muzyczne
By Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873-1943). For Piano, Orchestra - [2, 2, 2, 2 - 4, 2, 3...(+)
By Sergei Rachmaninoff
(1873-1943). For Piano,
Orchestra - [2, 2, 2, 2 -
4, 2, 3, 1], timpani,
percussion, strings. This
edition: Paperback.
Original Works,
Concerto/Instrumental
Solo. Romantic Period;
Russian. Study Score. 146
pages. Published by
Serenissima