| Praludium Album Orgue [Conducteur] Universal Edition
Solo Organ SKU: PR.UE000244 Composed by Rudolf Bibl. Edited by Rudolf Bib...(+)
Solo Organ SKU:
PR.UE000244 Composed
by Rudolf Bibl. Edited by
Rudolf Bibl. Full score.
With Standard notation.
Universal Edition
#UE000244. Published by
Universal Edition
(PR.UE000244). ISBN
9783702411312. UPC:
803452008927. $22.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Zwei Adagio, Op. 39 Doblinger
(For Cello and Organ). By Rudolf Bibl. Organ. For cello and organ. 3. Op. 39. 7 ...(+)
(For Cello and Organ). By
Rudolf Bibl. Organ. For
cello and organ. 3. Op.
39. 7 pages
$26.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Sonate Nr. 1 Fur Orgel Doblinger
Composed by Rudolf Bibl. Edited by Otto Biba. Diletto Musicale. Op. 74. 21 pages...(+)
Composed by Rudolf Bibl.
Edited by Otto Biba.
Diletto Musicale. Op. 74.
21 pages pages. Published
by Doblinger Music
Publishers (DB.DM-00675).
$28.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 4 to 6 weeks | | |
| Landesbibliothek Coburg - Theatermusikalien, 2. Halbband G. Henle
SKU: HL.51482325 Catalogues of Music Collections in Bavaria Vol.20, Pa...(+)
SKU: HL.51482325
Catalogues of Music
Collections in Bavaria
Vol.20, Part 2
Paperbound. Edited by
Rudolf Potyra. Book.
Paperbound. Henle Books.
Classical Reference. Book
(paperbound). 288 pages.
G. Henle #HN2325.
Published by G. Henle
(HL.51482325). ISBN
9790201823256. UPC:
884088179939. 8.25x11.5
inches. $174.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Missa "Iste confessor" Breitkopf & Härtel
Chorus a cappella SKU: BR.CHB-3142-02 Urtext. Composed by Giovanni...(+)
Chorus a cappella SKU:
BR.CHB-3142-02
Urtext. Composed
by Giovanni Pierl da
Palestrina. Edited by
Rudolf Ewerhart. Choir;
stapled. Chor-Bibliothek
(Choral Library). Mass;
Renaissance/early
Baroque. Choral score. 20
pages. Breitkopf and
Haertel #ChB 3142-02.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.CHB-3142-02). ISBN
9790004403471. 7.5 x 10.5
inches. Palestrina'
s Missa Iste confessor is
contained in the Missarum
liber quintus, the
composer's fifth book of
masses which was first
printed in Rome in 1590
and reprinted the
following year in Venice.
Palestrina dedicated this
book of masses to the
art-loving Duke Wilhelm V
of Bavaria, the lord and
patron of his famous
contemporary Orlando di
Lasso.The thematic
substance of the mass is
based on the old,
eponymous hymn melody
from the Commune
Confessorum. The various
parts of the hymn not
only constitute the
melodic framework for the
principal themes of the
different movements, but
are also heard in melodic
and rhythmic variations
at a great number of
places within the
movements.The Missa Iste
corifessor had been
published several decades
ago by Breitkopf & Hartel
in a practical edition
prepared by Hermann
Bauerle. Our edition is
based on the print of
1590, a copy of which was
consulted at the
Bayerische
Staatsbibliothek in
Munich. For today's
choral practice, it
seemed preferable to
transpose the mass, which
was originally in the
eighth church mode. The
note values were reduced
by a half and, departing
from the original, the
closing notes are
reproduced uniformly as
longae.The Missa Iste
confessor has long ranked
as one of the most widely
admired masses of the
Roman master. The compact
dimensions, the
simplicity and suaveness
of the melodic lines, the
model vocal declamation
all constitute assets
which elevate this mass
to an exemplary level and
reveal the hand of the
great master in spite of
its brevity.Rudolf
Ewerhart, May 1961
Munster/Westfalen. $7.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 4 weeks | | |
| Missa "Pater noster" Breitkopf & Härtel
Chorus a cappella SKU: BR.CHB-3145-02 Urtext. Composed by Giovanni...(+)
Chorus a cappella SKU:
BR.CHB-3145-02
Urtext. Composed
by Giovanni Pierl da
Palestrina. Edited by
Rudolf Ewerhart. Choir;
stapled. Chor-Bibliothek
(Choral Library). Mass;
Renaissance/early
Baroque. Choral score. 28
pages. Breitkopf and
Haertel #ChB 3145-02.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.CHB-3145-02). ISBN
9790004403501. 7.5 x 10.5
inches. Palestrina'
s Missa Paternoster is
one of the masses by this
composer that were
published neither during
his lifetime nor after
his death. The work has
come down to us in one
single manuscript source
from the collections of
the Cappella Sistina in
Rome, a copy transcribed
by D. Brancadore in
1618.The mass is written
on motifs from the
ancient plainchant Pater
noster melody from the
mass liturgy, which
underlays the movements
in an admirable
multiplicity of melodic
forms. New counterpoints
are repeatedly
intertwined with the
themes of the title
melody over the course of
the mass. Certain
idiosyncrasies in the
voice-leading and the
austere sonorities that
recall the late
Netherlandish tradition
give rise to the
hypothesis that this is a
relatively early work of
Palestrina.Several
decades ago, the Missa
Paternoster was published
by Breitkopf & Hartel in
a performance edition
prepared by Hermann
Bauerle. The present
edition is based on the
copy of the work printed
in the Choirbook 68
(Cappella Sistina) of the
Biblioteca Vaticana in
Rome. The poor condition
of the source made it
necessary to compare it
with Haberl's Complete
Edition as weil, after
which two errors have to
be corrected. Our edition
cannot pretend to offer a
definitive reading of the
accidentals, since they
are difficult to
distinguish in the
original. The work was
transposed, as this
seemed more appropriate
to present-day choral
practice. Finally, the
note values were reduced
by a half and the closing
notes reproduced
uniforrnly as longae.
Palestrina's Missa
,,Pater noster occupies a
distinguished position
next to its better known,
four-part fellow works.
lt deserves this rank
thanks to its dignified
and broadly sweeping
themes, the archaic
loftiness of its sound,
and the wealth of motivic
work contained within it.
We sincerely hope that
this new edition will
stimulate choirs to turn
their attention once
again to this rarely sung
mass by the great Roman
master.Rudolf
Ewerhart,January 1962,
Munster (Westf.). $10.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 4 weeks | | |
| (kraemer) Musikpsych Forsch U Musikunter Schott
(BUCH BR) SKU: HL.49032266 Eine kommentierte Bibliographie zu Forschun...(+)
(BUCH BR) SKU:
HL.49032266 Eine
kommentierte
Bibliographie zu
Forschungsbereichen
musikpadagogischer
Psychologie. Composed
by Kraemer. Edited by
Rudolf-Dieter Kraemer and
Wolfgang Schmidt-Brunner.
This edition:
Paperback/Soft Cover.
Book. Edition Schott. 148
pages. Schott Music #ED
7084. Published by Schott
Music (HL.49032266).
ISBN 9783795717308.
German. Unter
Einbeziehung von
unterrichtspraktischen
Anregungen wird mit
diesem Band eine
bibliographisch-zusammenf
assende Aufarbeitung
padagogisch relevanter
musikpsychologischer
Problemfelder
vorgelegt.Dem
Schulpraktiker soll damit
die Bewaltigung der
Fachliteratur erleichtert
und zugleich ein Einblick
in Fragestellungen,
Methoden und Ergebnisse
musikpsychologischer
Forschung ermoglicht
werden.Die kommentierte
Bibliographie entspricht
mit ihrer Literatur- und
Themenauswahl
wesentlichen Gebieten
psychologischer
Forschung:
Differen-tielle
Psychologie -
Entwicklungspsychologie -
Sozialpsychologieund
gliedert sich demnach
neben den ubergreifenden
Beitragen: Unterricht und
Wissenschaft - Methoden
empirischer Forschung -
in folgende Hauptkapitel:
Musikalische Begabung -
Musikalische Entwicklung
- Musikalisches
Urteil. $20.95 - Voir plus => Acheter | | |
| Musikpaedagogische....germany Schott
SKU: HL.49007756 Dokumentation und Analyse. Edited by Hans Guenthe...(+)
SKU: HL.49007756
Dokumentation und
Analyse. Edited by
Hans Guenther Bastian and
Rudolf-Dieter Kraemer.
This edition:
Hardback/Hard Cover.
Book. Edition Schott.
Classical. 436 pages.
Schott Music #ED 8068.
Published by Schott Music
(HL.49007756). ISBN
9783795702618.
German. Diese
Dokumentation
musikpadagogischer
Forschung eroffnet als
erster Band eine neue
Folge von Schriften, die
kunftig von der
Fachkommission
Musikpadagogische
Forschung in der AGMM des
Deutschen Musikrates
herausgegeben wird. Sie
enthalt - als erste
gesamtdeutsche
Bestandsaufnahme des
Fachs - eine
Bibliographie der
Forschungsvorhaben nach
Kategorien und eine
Ubersicht uber
wissenschaftliche
Hausarbeiten im Rahmen
von
Lehramtsstudiengangen.
Erganzt wird diese
Aufstellung von einer
Analyse zum aktuellen
Stand der
musikpadagogischen
Forschung in Deutschland
sowie von einem
ausfuhrlichen Register
mit
Adressenverzeichnis. $60.00 - Voir plus => Acheter | | |
| Symphony No. 1 Orchestre [Conducteur] Breitkopf & Härtel
Orchestra (4(3picc).4(cor ang).4(clar[Eb],B-clar)3( dble bsn) - 7.4.3.1 - 2timp....(+)
Orchestra (4(3picc).4(cor
ang).4(clar[Eb],B-clar)3(
dble bsn) - 7.4.3.1 -
2timp.perc(3).hp(2nd ad
lib) - str) SKU:
BR.PB-5631 Final
Version 1910 -
Textcritical Edition.
Composed by Gustav
Mahler. Edited by
Christian Rudolf Riedel.
Orchestra; Softbound.
Partitur-Bibliothek
(Score Library). final
version 1910
Symphony; Romantic;
Late-romantic. Full
score. 200 pages.
Duration 54'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #PB 5631.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.PB-5631).
ISBN 9790004215289.
10.5 x 14
inches. The
Symphony No. 1
(originally in five
movements) was first
performed in Budapest in
1889, but the premiere as
well as two further
performances in Hamburg
and Weimar turned out to
be a fiasco. After 1894
Mahler removed the
Blumine-movement. Until
the last performance
under his direction in
New York in 1909, Mahler
made revisions again and
again. This edition
strives to present a, for
the performance practice,
reliable music text of
the final extant version
that in 1910 Mahler
corrected and deemed
accurate for the new
print. The Editorial
Report gives detailed
information on the
provenance and evaluation
of the sources as well as
authentic annotations on
performance practice.
Individual comments
document editorial
interventions and
deviations from current
editions.The cloth-bound
volume PB 5661 contains
next to the final version
of the four-movement
Symphony, the Blumine
movement.Le format permet
une lisibilite parfaite;
le materiel a ete realise
en tenant compte des
conseils des
bibliothecaires de grands
orchestres.
Particulierement precieux
pour les non-germanistes,
on trouve en fin de
volume un glossaire
traduisant les
indications de Mahler de
l'allemand vers l'anglais
(ou l'italien). (Alain
Paris, La Lettre du
Musicien). $214.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 4 weeks | | |
| Sinfonische Metamorphosen ueber Gesualdo Orchestre Breitkopf & Härtel
Orchestra (picc.2.2.cor ang.2.B-clar.2.dble bsn - 4.3.3.1. - timp.perc(3) - hp -...(+)
Orchestra (picc.2.2.cor
ang.2.B-clar.2.dble bsn -
4.3.3.1. - timp.perc(3) -
hp - cel - str) SKU:
BR.PB-5105-07
Study score.
Composed by Jurg Baur.
Softbound.
Partitur-Bibliothek
(Score Library). World
premiere: Bremen,
February 1, 1982
Symphony; Music
post-1945. Study Score.
Composed 1981. 68 pages.
Duration 17'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #PB 5105-07.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.PB-5105-07). ISBN
9790004208557. 9 x 12
inches. Gesualdo,
Don Carlo, Furst von
Venosa (1560-1613) gehort
zu den eigenwilligsten
italienischen
Madrigal-Komponisten der
Spatrenaissance. Seine
ungewohnlich kuhne,
selbst fur heutige Ohren
modern klingende
Harmonik, seine
chromatischen
Stimmfortschreitungen,
seine ubersteigerte
expressive Tonsprache
regten mich schon vor
Jahren zu einer grosseren
Orgelkomposition an und
inspirierten mich 1981 zu
den >>Sinfonischen
Metamorphosen<<. Dieses
Werk ist eine
vielgestaltige
weitausgesponnene
Fantasie. Sieben
choralartige typische
Klangbeispiele aus
Gesualdos spaten
funfstimmigen Madrigalen
(4., 5. u. 6. Band)
werden teils streng,
teils frei zitiert und
von Holz- oder
Blechblasern intoniert.
Diese Zitate gliedern,
als formale und
inhaltliche Schwer- und
Ruhepunkte, den Verlauf
des gesamten Werks. Jedes
Zitat steht zu Beginn
eines neuen
Satzabschnitts; die
darauffolgenden
>>Metamorphosen<<
entwickeln sich als
rhapsodische
kontrastreiche
Charakterstucke. Im
>>Preludio<< werden aus
den vertonbaren
Buchstaben vom Namen
>>Gesualdo<< (G - E - Es
- A - D) schwebende
Klangflachen,
rezitativische Gedanken
und ein pragnantes
rhythmisches Paukenthema
gebildet. Diese
,,Grundelemente
(Grundstrukturen) tauchen
im Verlauf des Stucks
immer wieder
leitmotivisch auf. Im
zweiten Abschnitt stehen
sich lineare
Streicher-Episoden und
dichte
Blaser-Klangballungen
kontrastierend gegenuber.
Der dritte Teil lauft als
Passacaglia (Thema ist
der Bass eines
Gesualdo-Zitats) in
mehreren Variationen ab.
Im vierten Abschnitt
dominiert lebhafte
Streicherbewegung,
kontrapunktiert von
tiefen Blaser-Signalen.
Der funfte Teil steigert
sich- nach kantablem
Beginn- zum ekstatischen
Trauermarsch. Abschnitt
sechs stellt sich als
>>Rondello<< dar, mit um
sich selbst kreisenden
Klangfiguren (in
verschiedenen Tongruppen
(zwei, drei, funf). Im
siebten und letzten Teil
wird die
verhalten-resignierende
Stimmung des Anfangs
beschworen, ehe eine
knappe Stretta in den
hymnischen Schluss
mundet. In den Textender
ausgewahlten Zitatstellen
geht es meist um
Todessehnsucht,
Liebesqual und
Verzweiflung. z. B. 1.
und 2. Zitat: Moro lasso,
al mio duolo (Ich sterbe,
matt, an meiner Qual) (6.
Buch) 3. Zitat: Gia
piansi nel dolore; o
dolorosa Sorte (Schon
weinte ich in Schmerzen,
oh schmerzliches
Geschick) (6. Buch) 4.
Zitat: Ahi gia mi
discolero (Ach schon
entfarbte ich mich)
(Wehe, der Tod kommt) (4.
Buch) 5. Zitat:
Dolcissima mia vita (Mein
allerliebstes Leben)
(Dich zu lieben oder zu
sterben) (5. Buch) 6.
Zitat: lo moro (Ich
sterbe) (5. Buch) Dem
Werk liegen zwar eine
Reihe von
dodekaphonischen
Strukturen zugrunde (die
teilweise von Gesualdos
Klangzitaten abgeleitet
wurden), doch sind die
einzelnen Abschnitte
auf,,tonale Pfeiler (G -
E - A - D) gegrundet; das
Stuck beginnt in G und
endet aufD, ist also
ubergeordnet tonal
konzipiert, - der Versuch
einer Synthese moderner
Ausdrucksmittel von
Vergangenheit und
Gegenwart. Die
>>Metamorphosen<< sind
ein Stuck Bekenntnismusik
- Bekenntnis zum Leben
und Schaffen Gesualdos,
eines Mannes, der vom
Schicksal gezeichnet war,
denn der Chronik Neapels
bekannt war durch die
Ermordung seiner ersten
Frau und ihres
Liebhabers. Dieser
eminente Musiker war
zugleich ein Mensch von
ubertriebener
Sensibilitat und wilder
ekstatischer Heftigkeit:
,,Er wurde von einer
Horde von Damonen
heimgesucht, die ihm
keine Ruhe gaben, heisst
es in einem
zeitgenossischen Bericht.
Seine Kunst und sein
Leben stand unter dem
Gesetz der inneren
Zerrissenheit, zwischen
Auflehnung und
Resignation (Verzweiflung
und Hoffnung), zwischen
Zartheit und
Leidenschaft. Davon will
meine Musik etwas
aussagen. (Jurg
Baur)CD:Sinfonieorchester
des Westdeutschen
Rundfunks, cond. Rudolf
BarschaiCD Thorofon CTH
2270Bibliography:Abels,
Robert: Studien zur
Gesualdo-Rezeption durch
Komponisten des 20.
Jahrhunderts (= Studien
zur Musik 20), Leiden u.
a.: Wilhelm Fink 2017,
pp. 277-345,
485-489.Wallerang, Lars:
Die Orchesterwerke Jurg
Baurs als Dialog zwischen
Tradition und Moderne,
Koln: Dohr 2003. $71.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 4 weeks | | |
| Complete Letters, Volume 1 Barenreiter
SKU: BA.BVK02301 1816 to June 1830. Composed by Felix Bartholdy Me...(+)
SKU: BA.BVK02301
1816 to June 1830.
Composed by Felix
Bartholdy Mendelssohn.
Edited by Helmut Loos,
Juliette Appold, and
Wilhelm Seidel. This
edition: 2nd printing
2012 edition. Linen.
Samtliche Briefe in 12
Banden. Only available as
a full subscription to
ISBN 978-3-7618-2300-2.
Book. Baerenreiter Verlag
#BVK02301_00. Published
by Baerenreiter Verlag
(BA.BVK02301). ISBN
9783761823019. 23.5 x 16
cm inches. Preface:
Seidel,
Wilhelm. Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy as
letter-writer: at the
heart of 19th century
European
culture
As one of
the most important
letter-writers of the
19th century, Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy
maintained an extensive
correspondence. With
great style and eloquence
he wrote letters to
friends and family,
letters from his travels
and he also wrote to
leading composers,
musicians, artists as
well as publishers. He
corresponded with famous
contemporaries such as
Robert Schumann, Franz
Liszt and Richard Wagner
as well as Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe, Carl
Friedrich Zelter and
Alexander von
Humboldt.
The
correspondence begins in
1816 and ends in 1847
with the
composer’s death.
These letters are
invaluable documents
shedding light not only
on the genesis,
publication and revision
of his musical works, but
also on a period when
relations between
Christians and Jews still
had a chance to become
harmonious, as Moses
Mendelssohn, the imminent
scholar and grandfather
of the composer had
advocated.
This
edition will therefore be
of great interest far
beyond the circles of
musicologists and music
specialists. It will
appeal to those who are
interested in the history
of culture and ideas and
to those who perceive
Mendelssohn and his
family as representatives
of a unique, diverse
cultural epoch.
The complete
correspondence shows that
Mendelssohn not only went
on to become one of the
leading figures of German
musical culture in the
1840s, but that he also
maintained a network of
musical contacts
throughout
Europe.
The
edition of the complete
letters This
scholarly-critical
complete edition
comprises 5,855 letters
by Felix Mendelssohn
Bartholdy. Previously
only a small part of his
correspondence had been
published and made
accessible to the public.
The complete edition is
based on Mendelssohn
letters which have been
compiled over decades by
Rudolf Elvers as well as
on international research
carried out by an
academic workgroup in
Leipzig spearheaded by
chief editors Helmut Loos
and Wilhelm Seidel. They
determined 500 additional
letters hitherto
unknown. Versions
of the letter texts have
been compiled from a
scholarly-critical
analysis of the sources,
their historical context
has been discussed and
comments on all points in
need of explanation have
been made.
This
edition of the complete
letters consists of 12
volumes and a CD-ROM.
Each volume contains
indices of mentioned
individuals and
institutions,
compositions by Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy and
Fanny Hensel as well as a
register of place names
and currencies. In this
way one obtains an
all-encompassing view of
this unique historical
cosmos.
The
Complete edition has been
produced to the highest
standards in terms of
layout, cover and
binding. It is an ideal
collector’s item
for bibliophiles,
providing an excellent
means for studying the
composer and the period
in which he
lived.
The CD-ROM
forms a valuable addition
to the printed volumes.
It offers the complete
printed edition in the
form of pdf. files,
thereby making its
approximately 9,500 pages
digitally accessible and
enabling letters and the
corresponding commentary
to be read in parallel.
All terms can be located
quickly and conveniently
via a full text
search. (The 12
volumes as well as the
CD-ROM can only be
purchased
complete).
-
German text
only
The
Editors Helmut Loos is
Professor of Musicology
at the University of
Leipzig. He specialises
in the music of the 19th
and 20th centuries, in
particular the reception
of Beethoven, sacred
music and links between
Germany and Central and
Eastern Europe.
Wilhelm Seidel was
professor at the
universities of
Heidelberg, Marburg and
Leipzig. His publications
are devoted to the
temporal structure of
music, music aesthetics
in the 18th and 19th
centuries and music of
the 16th to 20th
centuries, currently on
Mozart and
Mendelssohn.
$250.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Symphony No. 1 Breitkopf & Härtel
Viola (4(3picc).4(cor ang).4(clar[Eb],B-clar)3( dble bsn) - 7.4.3.1 - 2timp.perc...(+)
Viola (4(3picc).4(cor
ang).4(clar[Eb],B-clar)3(
dble bsn) - 7.4.3.1 -
2timp.perc(3).hp(2nd ad
lib) - str) SKU:
BR.OB-5631-19
Final Version 1910 -
Textcritical Edition.
Composed by Gustav
Mahler. Edited by
Christian Rudolf Riedel.
Orchestra; stapled.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library).
final version 1910
Symphony; Romantic;
Late-romantic. Part. 22
pages. Duration 54'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #OB
5631-19. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.OB-5631-19). ISBN
9790004343630. 10.5 x 14
inches. The
Symphony No. 1
(originally in five
movements) was first
performed in Budapest in
1889, but the premiere as
well as two further
performances in Hamburg
and Weimar turned out to
be a fiasco. After 1894
Mahler removed the
Blumine-movement. Until
the last performance
under his direction in
New York in 1909, Mahler
made revisions again and
again. This edition
strives to present a, for
the performance practice,
reliable music text of
the final extant version
that in 1910 Mahler
corrected and deemed
accurate for the new
print. The Editorial
Report gives detailed
information on the
provenance and evaluation
of the sources as well as
authentic annotations on
performance practice.
Individual comments
document editorial
interventions and
deviations from current
editions.The cloth-bound
volume PB 5661 contains
next to the final version
of the four-movement
Symphony, the Blumine
movement.Le format permet
une lisibilite parfaite;
le materiel a ete realise
en tenant compte des
conseils des
bibliothecaires de grands
orchestres.
Particulierement precieux
pour les non-germanistes,
on trouve en fin de
volume un glossaire
traduisant les
indications de Mahler de
l'allemand vers l'anglais
(ou l'italien). (Alain
Paris, La Lettre du
Musicien). $26.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 4 weeks | | |
| Complete Letters in 12 Volumes Barenreiter
SKU: BA.BVK02300 12 volumes and a CD-ROM. Composed by Felix Bartho...(+)
SKU: BA.BVK02300
12 volumes and a
CD-ROM. Composed by
Felix Bartholdy
Mendelssohn. Edited by
Alexander Staub, Anja
Morgenstern, Benedikt
Leßmann, C Koop,
Helmut Loos, Ingrid Jach,
Juliane
Baumgart-Streibert,
Juliette Appold, Kadja
Grönke, Lucian
Schiwietz, Susanne
Tomkovic, Thomas Kauba,
Wilhelm Seidel, and
Wolfgang Seifert. Linen.
Felix Mendelssohn
Bartholdy. Samtliche
Briefe in 12 Banden.
Book, CD-ROM. 9651 pages.
Baerenreiter Verlag
#BVK02300_00. Published
by Baerenreiter Verlag
(BA.BVK02300). ISBN
9783761823002. 23.7 x
16.5 cm inches. Text
language: German.
Preface: Seidel, Wilhelm
/ Loos,
Helmut. Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy as
letter-writer: at the
heart of 19th century
European
culture
As one of
the most important
letter-writers of the
19th century, Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy
maintained an extensive
correspondence. With
great style and eloquence
he wrote letters to
friends and family,
letters from his travels
and he also wrote to
leading composers,
musicians, artists as
well as publishers. He
corresponded with famous
contemporaries such as
Robert Schumann, Franz
Liszt and Richard Wagner
as well as Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe, Carl
Friedrich Zelter and
Alexander von
Humboldt.
The
correspondence begins in
1816 and ends in 1847
with the composer's
death. These letters are
invaluable documents
shedding light not only
on the genesis,
publication and revision
of his musical works, but
also on a period when
relations between
Christians and Jews still
had a chance to become
harmonious, as Moses
Mendelssohn, the imminent
scholar and grandfather
of the composer had
advocated.
This
edition will therefore be
of great interest far
beyond the circles of
musicologists and music
specialists. It will
appeal to those who are
interested in the history
of culture and ideas and
to those who perceive
Mendelssohn and his
family as representatives
of a unique, diverse
cultural epoch.
The complete
correspondence shows that
Mendelssohn not only went
on to become one of the
leading figures of German
musical culture in the
1840s, but that he also
maintained a network of
musical contacts
throughout
Europe.
The
edition of the complete
letters This
scholarly-critical
complete edition
comprises 5,855 letters
by Felix Mendelssohn
Bartholdy. Previously
only a small part of his
correspondence had been
published and made
accessible to the public.
The complete edition is
based on Mendelssohn
letters which have been
compiled over decades by
Rudolf Elvers as well as
on international research
carried out by an
academic workgroup in
Leipzig spearheaded by
chief editors Helmut Loos
and Wilhelm Seidel. They
determined 500 additional
letters hitherto
unknown. Versions
of the letter texts have
been compiled from a
scholarly-critical
analysis of the sources,
their historical context
has been discussed and
comments on all points in
need of explanation have
been made.
This
edition of the complete
letters consists of 12
volumes and a CD-ROM.
Each volume contains
indices of mentioned
individuals and
institutions,
compositions by Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy and
Fanny Hensel as well as a
register of place names
and currencies. In this
way one obtains an
all-encompassing view of
this unique historical
cosmos.
The
Complete edition has been
produced to the highest
standards in terms of
layout, cover and
binding. It is an ideal
collector's item for
bibliophiles, providing
an excellent means for
studying the composer and
the period in which he
lived.
The CD-ROM
forms a valuable addition
to the printed volumes.
It offers the complete
printed edition in the
form of pdf. files,
thereby making its
approximately 9,500 pages
digitally accessible and
enabling letters and the
corresponding commentary
to be read in parallel.
All terms can be located
quickly and conveniently
via a full text
search. (The 12
volumes as well as the
CD-ROM can only be
purchased
complete).
-
German text
only
The
Editors Helmut Loos is
Professor of Musicology
at the University of
Leipzig. He specialises
in the music of the 19th
and 20th centuries, in
particular the reception
of Beethoven, sacred
music and links between
Germany and Central and
Eastern Europe.
Wilhelm Seidel was
professor at the
universities of
Heidelberg, Marburg and
Leipzig. His publications
are devoted to the
temporal structure of
music, music aesthetics
in the 18th and 19th
centuries and music of
the 16th to 20th
centuries, currently on
Mozart and
Mendelssohn.
$2389.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Complete Letters, Volume 3 Barenreiter
SKU: BA.BVK02303 August 1832 to July 1834. Composed by Felix Barth...(+)
SKU: BA.BVK02303
August 1832 to July
1834. Composed by
Felix Bartholdy
Mendelssohn. Edited by
Helmut Loos, Juliane
Baumgart-Streibert, Uta
Wald, and Wilhelm Seidel.
Linen. Samtliche Briefe
in 12 Banden. Only
available as a full
subscription to ISBN
978-3-7618-2300-2. Book.
With Language: German.
Baerenreiter Verlag
#BVK02303_00. Published
by Baerenreiter Verlag
(BA.BVK02303). ISBN
9783761823033. 23.5 x 16
cm inches. Preface:
Helmut Loos. Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy as
letter-writer: at the
heart of 19th century
European
culture
As one of
the most important
letter-writers of the
19th century, Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy
maintained an extensive
correspondence. With
great style and eloquence
he wrote letters to
friends and family,
letters from his travels
and he also wrote to
leading composers,
musicians, artists as
well as publishers. He
corresponded with famous
contemporaries such as
Robert Schumann, Franz
Liszt and Richard Wagner
as well as Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe, Carl
Friedrich Zelter and
Alexander von
Humboldt.
The
correspondence begins in
1816 and ends in 1847
with the
composer’s death.
These letters are
invaluable documents
shedding light not only
on the genesis,
publication and revision
of his musical works, but
also on a period when
relations between
Christians and Jews still
had a chance to become
harmonious, as Moses
Mendelssohn, the imminent
scholar and grandfather
of the composer had
advocated.
This
edition will therefore be
of great interest far
beyond the circles of
musicologists and music
specialists. It will
appeal to those who are
interested in the history
of culture and ideas and
to those who perceive
Mendelssohn and his
family as representatives
of a unique, diverse
cultural epoch.
The complete
correspondence shows that
Mendelssohn not only went
on to become one of the
leading figures of German
musical culture in the
1840s, but that he also
maintained a network of
musical contacts
throughout
Europe.
The
edition of the complete
letters This
scholarly-critical
complete edition
comprises 5,855 letters
by Felix Mendelssohn
Bartholdy. Previously
only a small part of his
correspondence had been
published and made
accessible to the public.
The complete edition is
based on Mendelssohn
letters which have been
compiled over decades by
Rudolf Elvers as well as
on international research
carried out by an
academic workgroup in
Leipzig spearheaded by
chief editors Helmut Loos
and Wilhelm Seidel. They
determined 500 additional
letters hitherto
unknown. Versions
of the letter texts have
been compiled from a
scholarly-critical
analysis of the sources,
their historical context
has been discussed and
comments on all points in
need of explanation have
been made.
This
edition of the complete
letters consists of 12
volumes and a CD-ROM.
Each volume contains
indices of mentioned
individuals and
institutions,
compositions by Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy and
Fanny Hensel as well as a
register of place names
and currencies. In this
way one obtains an
all-encompassing view of
this unique historical
cosmos.
The
Complete edition has been
produced to the highest
standards in terms of
layout, cover and
binding. It is an ideal
collector’s item
for bibliophiles,
providing an excellent
means for studying the
composer and the period
in which he
lived.
The CD-ROM
forms a valuable addition
to the printed volumes.
It offers the complete
printed edition in the
form of pdf. files,
thereby making its
approximately 9,500 pages
digitally accessible and
enabling letters and the
corresponding commentary
to be read in parallel.
All terms can be located
quickly and conveniently
via a full text
search. (The 12
volumes as well as the
CD-ROM can only be
purchased
complete).
-
German text
only
The
Editors Helmut Loos is
Professor of Musicology
at the University of
Leipzig. He specialises
in the music of the 19th
and 20th centuries, in
particular the reception
of Beethoven, sacred
music and links between
Germany and Central and
Eastern Europe.
Wilhelm Seidel was
professor at the
universities of
Heidelberg, Marburg and
Leipzig. His publications
are devoted to the
temporal structure of
music, music aesthetics
in the 18th and 19th
centuries and music of
the 16th to 20th
centuries, currently on
Mozart and
Mendelssohn.
$250.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Complete Letters, Volume 6 Barenreiter
SKU: BA.BVK02306 February 1838 to September 1839. Composed by Feli...(+)
SKU: BA.BVK02306
February 1838 to
September 1839.
Composed by Felix
Bartholdy Mendelssohn.
Edited by Alexander
Staub, Helmut Loos, Kadja
Grönke, and Wilhelm
Seidel. Linen. Samtliche
Briefe in 12 Banden. Only
available as a full
subscription to ISBN
978-3-7618-2300-2. Book.
With Language: German.
Baerenreiter Verlag
#BVK02306_00. Published
by Baerenreiter Verlag
(BA.BVK02306). ISBN
9783761823064. 23.5 x 16
cm inches. Preface:
Seidel,
Wilhelm. Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy as
letter-writer: at the
heart of 19th century
European
culture
As one of
the most important
letter-writers of the
19th century, Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy
maintained an extensive
correspondence. With
great style and eloquence
he wrote letters to
friends and family,
letters from his travels
and he also wrote to
leading composers,
musicians, artists as
well as publishers. He
corresponded with famous
contemporaries such as
Robert Schumann, Franz
Liszt and Richard Wagner
as well as Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe, Carl
Friedrich Zelter and
Alexander von
Humboldt.
The
correspondence begins in
1816 and ends in 1847
with the
composer’s death.
These letters are
invaluable documents
shedding light not only
on the genesis,
publication and revision
of his musical works, but
also on a period when
relations between
Christians and Jews still
had a chance to become
harmonious, as Moses
Mendelssohn, the imminent
scholar and grandfather
of the composer had
advocated.
This
edition will therefore be
of great interest far
beyond the circles of
musicologists and music
specialists. It will
appeal to those who are
interested in the history
of culture and ideas and
to those who perceive
Mendelssohn and his
family as representatives
of a unique, diverse
cultural epoch.
The complete
correspondence shows that
Mendelssohn not only went
on to become one of the
leading figures of German
musical culture in the
1840s, but that he also
maintained a network of
musical contacts
throughout
Europe.
The
edition of the complete
letters This
scholarly-critical
complete edition
comprises 5,855 letters
by Felix Mendelssohn
Bartholdy. Previously
only a small part of his
correspondence had been
published and made
accessible to the public.
The complete edition is
based on Mendelssohn
letters which have been
compiled over decades by
Rudolf Elvers as well as
on international research
carried out by an
academic workgroup in
Leipzig spearheaded by
chief editors Helmut Loos
and Wilhelm Seidel. They
determined 500 additional
letters hitherto
unknown. Versions
of the letter texts have
been compiled from a
scholarly-critical
analysis of the sources,
their historical context
has been discussed and
comments on all points in
need of explanation have
been made.
This
edition of the complete
letters consists of 12
volumes and a CD-ROM.
Each volume contains
indices of mentioned
individuals and
institutions,
compositions by Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy and
Fanny Hensel as well as a
register of place names
and currencies. In this
way one obtains an
all-encompassing view of
this unique historical
cosmos.
The
Complete edition has been
produced to the highest
standards in terms of
layout, cover and
binding. It is an ideal
collector’s item
for bibliophiles,
providing an excellent
means for studying the
composer and the period
in which he
lived.
The CD-ROM
forms a valuable addition
to the printed volumes.
It offers the complete
printed edition in the
form of pdf. files,
thereby making its
approximately 9,500 pages
digitally accessible and
enabling letters and the
corresponding commentary
to be read in parallel.
All terms can be located
quickly and conveniently
via a full text
search. (The 12
volumes as well as the
CD-ROM can only be
purchased
complete).
-
German text
only
The
Editors Helmut Loos is
Professor of Musicology
at the University of
Leipzig. He specialises
in the music of the 19th
and 20th centuries, in
particular the reception
of Beethoven, sacred
music and links between
Germany and Central and
Eastern Europe.
Wilhelm Seidel was
professor at the
universities of
Heidelberg, Marburg and
Leipzig. His publications
are devoted to the
temporal structure of
music, music aesthetics
in the 18th and 19th
centuries and music of
the 16th to 20th
centuries, currently on
Mozart and
Mendelssohn.
$250.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Symphony No. 1 Breitkopf & Härtel
Double bass (4(3picc).4(cor ang).4(clar[Eb],B-clar)3( dble bsn) - 7.4.3.1 - 2tim...(+)
Double bass
(4(3picc).4(cor
ang).4(clar[Eb],B-clar)3(
dble bsn) - 7.4.3.1 -
2timp.perc(3).hp(2nd ad
lib) - str) SKU:
BR.OB-5631-27
Final Version 1910 -
Textcritical Edition.
Composed by Gustav
Mahler. Edited by
Christian Rudolf Riedel.
Orchestra; stapled.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library).
final version 1910
Symphony; Romantic;
Late-romantic. Part. 24
pages. Duration 54'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #OB
5631-27. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.OB-5631-27). ISBN
9790004343654. 10.5 x 14
inches. The
Symphony No. 1
(originally in five
movements) was first
performed in Budapest in
1889, but the premiere as
well as two further
performances in Hamburg
and Weimar turned out to
be a fiasco. After 1894
Mahler removed the
Blumine-movement. Until
the last performance
under his direction in
New York in 1909, Mahler
made revisions again and
again. This edition
strives to present a, for
the performance practice,
reliable music text of
the final extant version
that in 1910 Mahler
corrected and deemed
accurate for the new
print. The Editorial
Report gives detailed
information on the
provenance and evaluation
of the sources as well as
authentic annotations on
performance practice.
Individual comments
document editorial
interventions and
deviations from current
editions.The cloth-bound
volume PB 5661 contains
next to the final version
of the four-movement
Symphony, the Blumine
movement.Le format permet
une lisibilite parfaite;
le materiel a ete realise
en tenant compte des
conseils des
bibliothecaires de grands
orchestres.
Particulierement precieux
pour les non-germanistes,
on trouve en fin de
volume un glossaire
traduisant les
indications de Mahler de
l'allemand vers l'anglais
(ou l'italien). (Alain
Paris, La Lettre du
Musicien). $26.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 4 weeks | | |
| Complete Letters, Volume 4 Barenreiter
SKU: BA.BVK02304 August 1834 to June 1836. Composed by Felix Barth...(+)
SKU: BA.BVK02304
August 1834 to June
1836. Composed by
Felix Bartholdy
Mendelssohn. Edited by
Helmut Loos, Lucian
Schiwietz, Sebastian
Schmideler, and Wilhelm
Seidel. Linen. Samtliche
Briefe in 12 Banden. Only
available as a full
subscription to ISBN
978-3-7618-2300-2. Book.
With Language: German.
Baerenreiter Verlag
#BVK02304_00. Published
by Baerenreiter Verlag
(BA.BVK02304). ISBN
9783761823040. 23.5 x 16
cm inches. Preface:
Seidel,
Wilhelm. Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy as
letter-writer: at the
heart of 19th century
European
culture
As one of
the most important
letter-writers of the
19th century, Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy
maintained an extensive
correspondence. With
great style and eloquence
he wrote letters to
friends and family,
letters from his travels
and he also wrote to
leading composers,
musicians, artists as
well as publishers. He
corresponded with famous
contemporaries such as
Robert Schumann, Franz
Liszt and Richard Wagner
as well as Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe, Carl
Friedrich Zelter and
Alexander von
Humboldt.
The
correspondence begins in
1816 and ends in 1847
with the
composer’s death.
These letters are
invaluable documents
shedding light not only
on the genesis,
publication and revision
of his musical works, but
also on a period when
relations between
Christians and Jews still
had a chance to become
harmonious, as Moses
Mendelssohn, the imminent
scholar and grandfather
of the composer had
advocated.
This
edition will therefore be
of great interest far
beyond the circles of
musicologists and music
specialists. It will
appeal to those who are
interested in the history
of culture and ideas and
to those who perceive
Mendelssohn and his
family as representatives
of a unique, diverse
cultural epoch.
The complete
correspondence shows that
Mendelssohn not only went
on to become one of the
leading figures of German
musical culture in the
1840s, but that he also
maintained a network of
musical contacts
throughout
Europe.
The
edition of the complete
letters This
scholarly-critical
complete edition
comprises 5,855 letters
by Felix Mendelssohn
Bartholdy. Previously
only a small part of his
correspondence had been
published and made
accessible to the public.
The complete edition is
based on Mendelssohn
letters which have been
compiled over decades by
Rudolf Elvers as well as
on international research
carried out by an
academic workgroup in
Leipzig spearheaded by
chief editors Helmut Loos
and Wilhelm Seidel. They
determined 500 additional
letters hitherto
unknown. Versions
of the letter texts have
been compiled from a
scholarly-critical
analysis of the sources,
their historical context
has been discussed and
comments on all points in
need of explanation have
been made.
This
edition of the complete
letters consists of 12
volumes and a CD-ROM.
Each volume contains
indices of mentioned
individuals and
institutions,
compositions by Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy and
Fanny Hensel as well as a
register of place names
and currencies. In this
way one obtains an
all-encompassing view of
this unique historical
cosmos.
The
Complete edition has been
produced to the highest
standards in terms of
layout, cover and
binding. It is an ideal
collector’s item
for bibliophiles,
providing an excellent
means for studying the
composer and the period
in which he
lived.
The CD-ROM
forms a valuable addition
to the printed volumes.
It offers the complete
printed edition in the
form of pdf. files,
thereby making its
approximately 9,500 pages
digitally accessible and
enabling letters and the
corresponding commentary
to be read in parallel.
All terms can be located
quickly and conveniently
via a full text
search. (The 12
volumes as well as the
CD-ROM can only be
purchased
complete).
-
German text
only
The
Editors Helmut Loos is
Professor of Musicology
at the University of
Leipzig. He specialises
in the music of the 19th
and 20th centuries, in
particular the reception
of Beethoven, sacred
music and links between
Germany and Central and
Eastern Europe.
Wilhelm Seidel was
professor at the
universities of
Heidelberg, Marburg and
Leipzig. His publications
are devoted to the
temporal structure of
music, music aesthetics
in the 18th and 19th
centuries and music of
the 16th to 20th
centuries, currently on
Mozart and
Mendelssohn.
$250.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Symphony No. 1 Breitkopf & Härtel
Violin 2 (4(3picc).4(cor ang).4(clar[Eb],B-clar)3( dble bsn) - 7.4.3.1 - 2timp.p...(+)
Violin 2 (4(3picc).4(cor
ang).4(clar[Eb],B-clar)3(
dble bsn) - 7.4.3.1 -
2timp.perc(3).hp(2nd ad
lib) - str) SKU:
BR.OB-5631-16
Final Version 1910 -
Textcritical Edition.
Composed by Gustav
Mahler. Edited by
Christian Rudolf Riedel.
Orchestra; stapled.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library).
final version 1910
Symphony; Romantic;
Late-romantic. Part. 24
pages. Duration 54'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #OB
5631-16. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.OB-5631-16). ISBN
9790004343623. 10.5 x 14
inches. The
Symphony No. 1
(originally in five
movements) was first
performed in Budapest in
1889, but the premiere as
well as two further
performances in Hamburg
and Weimar turned out to
be a fiasco. After 1894
Mahler removed the
Blumine-movement. Until
the last performance
under his direction in
New York in 1909, Mahler
made revisions again and
again. This edition
strives to present a, for
the performance practice,
reliable music text of
the final extant version
that in 1910 Mahler
corrected and deemed
accurate for the new
print. The Editorial
Report gives detailed
information on the
provenance and evaluation
of the sources as well as
authentic annotations on
performance practice.
Individual comments
document editorial
interventions and
deviations from current
editions.The cloth-bound
volume PB 5661 contains
next to the final version
of the four-movement
Symphony, the Blumine
movement.Le format permet
une lisibilite parfaite;
le materiel a ete realise
en tenant compte des
conseils des
bibliothecaires de grands
orchestres.
Particulierement precieux
pour les non-germanistes,
on trouve en fin de
volume un glossaire
traduisant les
indications de Mahler de
l'allemand vers l'anglais
(ou l'italien). (Alain
Paris, La Lettre du
Musicien). $26.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 4 weeks | | |
| Complete Letters, Volume 2 Barenreiter
SKU: BA.BVK02302 July 1830 to July 1832. Composed by Felix Barthol...(+)
SKU: BA.BVK02302
July 1830 to July
1832. Composed by
Felix Bartholdy
Mendelssohn. Edited by
Anja Morgenstern, Helmut
Loos, Uta Wald, and
Wilhelm Seidel. Linen.
Samtliche Briefe in 12
Banden. Only available as
a full subscription to
ISBN 978-3-7618-2300-2.
Book. Baerenreiter Verlag
#BVK02302_00. Published
by Baerenreiter Verlag
(BA.BVK02302). ISBN
9783761823026. 23.5 x 16
cm inches. Preface:
Seidel,
Wilhelm. Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy as
letter-writer: at the
heart of 19th century
European
culture
As one of
the most important
letter-writers of the
19th century, Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy
maintained an extensive
correspondence. With
great style and eloquence
he wrote letters to
friends and family,
letters from his travels
and he also wrote to
leading composers,
musicians, artists as
well as publishers. He
corresponded with famous
contemporaries such as
Robert Schumann, Franz
Liszt and Richard Wagner
as well as Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe, Carl
Friedrich Zelter and
Alexander von
Humboldt.
The
correspondence begins in
1816 and ends in 1847
with the
composer’s death.
These letters are
invaluable documents
shedding light not only
on the genesis,
publication and revision
of his musical works, but
also on a period when
relations between
Christians and Jews still
had a chance to become
harmonious, as Moses
Mendelssohn, the imminent
scholar and grandfather
of the composer had
advocated.
This
edition will therefore be
of great interest far
beyond the circles of
musicologists and music
specialists. It will
appeal to those who are
interested in the history
of culture and ideas and
to those who perceive
Mendelssohn and his
family as representatives
of a unique, diverse
cultural epoch.
The complete
correspondence shows that
Mendelssohn not only went
on to become one of the
leading figures of German
musical culture in the
1840s, but that he also
maintained a network of
musical contacts
throughout
Europe.
The
edition of the complete
letters This
scholarly-critical
complete edition
comprises 5,855 letters
by Felix Mendelssohn
Bartholdy. Previously
only a small part of his
correspondence had been
published and made
accessible to the public.
The complete edition is
based on Mendelssohn
letters which have been
compiled over decades by
Rudolf Elvers as well as
on international research
carried out by an
academic workgroup in
Leipzig spearheaded by
chief editors Helmut Loos
and Wilhelm Seidel. They
determined 500 additional
letters hitherto
unknown. Versions
of the letter texts have
been compiled from a
scholarly-critical
analysis of the sources,
their historical context
has been discussed and
comments on all points in
need of explanation have
been made.
This
edition of the complete
letters consists of 12
volumes and a CD-ROM.
Each volume contains
indices of mentioned
individuals and
institutions,
compositions by Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy and
Fanny Hensel as well as a
register of place names
and currencies. In this
way one obtains an
all-encompassing view of
this unique historical
cosmos.
The
Complete edition has been
produced to the highest
standards in terms of
layout, cover and
binding. It is an ideal
collector’s item
for bibliophiles,
providing an excellent
means for studying the
composer and the period
in which he
lived.
The CD-ROM
forms a valuable addition
to the printed volumes.
It offers the complete
printed edition in the
form of pdf. files,
thereby making its
approximately 9,500 pages
digitally accessible and
enabling letters and the
corresponding commentary
to be read in parallel.
All terms can be located
quickly and conveniently
via a full text
search. (The 12
volumes as well as the
CD-ROM can only be
purchased
complete).
-
German text
only
The
Editors Helmut Loos is
Professor of Musicology
at the University of
Leipzig. He specialises
in the music of the 19th
and 20th centuries, in
particular the reception
of Beethoven, sacred
music and links between
Germany and Central and
Eastern Europe.
Wilhelm Seidel was
professor at the
universities of
Heidelberg, Marburg and
Leipzig. His publications
are devoted to the
temporal structure of
music, music aesthetics
in the 18th and 19th
centuries and music of
the 16th to 20th
centuries, currently on
Mozart and
Mendelssohn.
$250.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Complete Letters in Volumes Barenreiter
SKU: BA.BVK02403 Composed by Felix Bartholdy Mendelssohn. Edited by Alexa...(+)
SKU: BA.BVK02403
Composed by Felix
Bartholdy Mendelssohn.
Edited by Alexander
Staub, Anja Morgenstern,
Benedikt Leßmann, C
Koop, Helmut Loos, Ingrid
Jach, Juliane
Baumgart-Streibert,
Juliette Appold, Kadja
Grönke, Lucian
Schiwietz, Susanne
Tomkovic, Thomas Kauba,
Wilhelm Seidel, and
Wolfgang Seifert. CD-ROM.
Baerenreiter Verlag
#BVK02403_00. Published
by Baerenreiter Verlag
(BA.BVK02403). ISBN
9783761824030. 18.9 x 14
cm inches. Preface:
Seidel, Wilhelm / Loos,
Helmut. Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy as
letter-writer: at the
heart of 19th century
European
culture
As one of
the most important
letter-writers of the
19th century, Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy
maintained an extensive
correspondence. With
great style and eloquence
he wrote letters to
friends and family,
letters from his travels
and he also wrote to
leading composers,
musicians, artists as
well as publishers. He
corresponded with famous
contemporaries such as
Robert Schumann, Franz
Liszt and Richard Wagner
as well as Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe, Carl
Friedrich Zelter and
Alexander von
Humboldt.
The
correspondence begins in
1816 and ends in 1847
with the
composer’s death.
These letters are
invaluable documents
shedding light not only
on the genesis,
publication and revision
of his musical works, but
also on a period when
relations between
Christians and Jews still
had a chance to become
harmonious, as Moses
Mendelssohn, the imminent
scholar and grandfather
of the composer had
advocated.
This
edition will therefore be
of great interest far
beyond the circles of
musicologists and music
specialists. It will
appeal to those who are
interested in the history
of culture and ideas and
to those who perceive
Mendelssohn and his
family as representatives
of a unique, diverse
cultural epoch.
The complete
correspondence shows that
Mendelssohn not only went
on to become one of the
leading figures of German
musical culture in the
1840s, but that he also
maintained a network of
musical contacts
throughout
Europe.
The
edition of the complete
letters This
scholarly-critical
complete edition
comprises 5,855 letters
by Felix Mendelssohn
Bartholdy. Previously
only a small part of his
correspondence had been
published and made
accessible to the public.
The complete edition is
based on Mendelssohn
letters which have been
compiled over decades by
Rudolf Elvers as well as
on international research
carried out by an
academic workgroup in
Leipzig spearheaded by
chief editors Helmut Loos
and Wilhelm Seidel. They
determined 500 additional
letters hitherto
unknown. Versions
of the letter texts have
been compiled from a
scholarly-critical
analysis of the sources,
their historical context
has been discussed and
comments on all points in
need of explanation have
been made.
This
edition of the complete
letters consists of 12
volumes and a CD-ROM.
Each volume contains
indices of mentioned
individuals and
institutions,
compositions by Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy and
Fanny Hensel as well as a
register of place names
and currencies. In this
way one obtains an
all-encompassing view of
this unique historical
cosmos.
The
Complete edition has been
produced to the highest
standards in terms of
layout, cover and
binding. It is an ideal
collector’s item
for bibliophiles,
providing an excellent
means for studying the
composer and the period
in which he
lived.
The CD-ROM
forms a valuable addition
to the printed volumes.
It offers the complete
printed edition in the
form of pdf. files,
thereby making its
approximately 9,500 pages
digitally accessible and
enabling letters and the
corresponding commentary
to be read in parallel.
All terms can be located
quickly and conveniently
via a full text
search. (The 12
volumes as well as the
CD-ROM can only be
purchased
complete).
-
German text
only
The
Editors Helmut Loos is
Professor of Musicology
at the University of
Leipzig. He specialises
in the music of the 19th
and 20th centuries, in
particular the reception
of Beethoven, sacred
music and links between
Germany and Central and
Eastern Europe.
Wilhelm Seidel was
professor at the
universities of
Heidelberg, Marburg and
Leipzig. His publications
are devoted to the
temporal structure of
music, music aesthetics
in the 18th and 19th
centuries and music of
the 16th to 20th
centuries, currently on
Mozart and
Mendelssohn.
$384.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Symphony No. 1 Breitkopf & Härtel
Violoncello (4(3picc).4(cor ang).4(clar[Eb],B-clar)3( dble bsn) - 7.4.3.1 - 2tim...(+)
Violoncello
(4(3picc).4(cor
ang).4(clar[Eb],B-clar)3(
dble bsn) - 7.4.3.1 -
2timp.perc(3).hp(2nd ad
lib) - str) SKU:
BR.OB-5631-23
Final Version 1910 -
Textcritical Edition.
Composed by Gustav
Mahler. Edited by
Christian Rudolf Riedel.
Orchestra; stapled.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library).
final version 1910
Symphony; Romantic;
Late-romantic. Part. 28
pages. Duration 54'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #OB
5631-23. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.OB-5631-23). ISBN
9790004343647. 10.5 x 14
inches. The
Symphony No. 1
(originally in five
movements) was first
performed in Budapest in
1889, but the premiere as
well as two further
performances in Hamburg
and Weimar turned out to
be a fiasco. After 1894
Mahler removed the
Blumine-movement. Until
the last performance
under his direction in
New York in 1909, Mahler
made revisions again and
again. This edition
strives to present a, for
the performance practice,
reliable music text of
the final extant version
that in 1910 Mahler
corrected and deemed
accurate for the new
print. The Editorial
Report gives detailed
information on the
provenance and evaluation
of the sources as well as
authentic annotations on
performance practice.
Individual comments
document editorial
interventions and
deviations from current
editions.The cloth-bound
volume PB 5661 contains
next to the final version
of the four-movement
Symphony, the Blumine
movement.Le format permet
une lisibilite parfaite;
le materiel a ete realise
en tenant compte des
conseils des
bibliothecaires de grands
orchestres.
Particulierement precieux
pour les non-germanistes,
on trouve en fin de
volume un glossaire
traduisant les
indications de Mahler de
l'allemand vers l'anglais
(ou l'italien). (Alain
Paris, La Lettre du
Musicien). $26.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 4 weeks | | |
| Complete Letters, Volume 10 Barenreiter
SKU: BA.BVK02310 January 1844 to June 1845. Composed by Felix Bart...(+)
SKU: BA.BVK02310
January 1844 to June
1845. Composed by
Felix Bartholdy
Mendelssohn. Edited by
Helmut Loos, Uta Wald,
and Wilhelm Seidel.
Linen. Felix Mendelssohn
Bartholdy. Samtliche
Briefe in 12 Banden.
Book. Baerenreiter Verlag
#BVK02310_00. Published
by Baerenreiter Verlag
(BA.BVK02310). ISBN
9783761823101. 23.7 x
16.5 cm inches. Preface:
Seidel,
Wilhelm. Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy as
letter-writer: at the
heart of 19th century
European
culture
As one of
the most important
letter-writers of the
19th century, Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy
maintained an extensive
correspondence. With
great style and eloquence
he wrote letters to
friends and family,
letters from his travels
and he also wrote to
leading composers,
musicians, artists as
well as publishers. He
corresponded with famous
contemporaries such as
Robert Schumann, Franz
Liszt and Richard Wagner
as well as Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe, Carl
Friedrich Zelter and
Alexander von
Humboldt.
The
correspondence begins in
1816 and ends in 1847
with the
composer’s death.
These letters are
invaluable documents
shedding light not only
on the genesis,
publication and revision
of his musical works, but
also on a period when
relations between
Christians and Jews still
had a chance to become
harmonious, as Moses
Mendelssohn, the imminent
scholar and grandfather
of the composer had
advocated.
This
edition will therefore be
of great interest far
beyond the circles of
musicologists and music
specialists. It will
appeal to those who are
interested in the history
of culture and ideas and
to those who perceive
Mendelssohn and his
family as representatives
of a unique, diverse
cultural epoch.
The complete
correspondence shows that
Mendelssohn not only went
on to become one of the
leading figures of German
musical culture in the
1840s, but that he also
maintained a network of
musical contacts
throughout
Europe.
The
edition of the complete
letters This
scholarly-critical
complete edition
comprises 5,855 letters
by Felix Mendelssohn
Bartholdy. Previously
only a small part of his
correspondence had been
published and made
accessible to the public.
The complete edition is
based on Mendelssohn
letters which have been
compiled over decades by
Rudolf Elvers as well as
on international research
carried out by an
academic workgroup in
Leipzig spearheaded by
chief editors Helmut Loos
and Wilhelm Seidel. They
determined 500 additional
letters hitherto
unknown. Versions
of the letter texts have
been compiled from a
scholarly-critical
analysis of the sources,
their historical context
has been discussed and
comments on all points in
need of explanation have
been made.
This
edition of the complete
letters consists of 12
volumes and a CD-ROM.
Each volume contains
indices of mentioned
individuals and
institutions,
compositions by Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy and
Fanny Hensel as well as a
register of place names
and currencies. In this
way one obtains an
all-encompassing view of
this unique historical
cosmos.
The
Complete edition has been
produced to the highest
standards in terms of
layout, cover and
binding. It is an ideal
collector’s item
for bibliophiles,
providing an excellent
means for studying the
composer and the period
in which he
lived.
The CD-ROM
forms a valuable addition
to the printed volumes.
It offers the complete
printed edition in the
form of pdf. files,
thereby making its
approximately 9,500 pages
digitally accessible and
enabling letters and the
corresponding commentary
to be read in parallel.
All terms can be located
quickly and conveniently
via a full text
search. (The 12
volumes as well as the
CD-ROM can only be
purchased
complete).
-
German text
only
The
Editors Helmut Loos is
Professor of Musicology
at the University of
Leipzig. He specialises
in the music of the 19th
and 20th centuries, in
particular the reception
of Beethoven, sacred
music and links between
Germany and Central and
Eastern Europe.
Wilhelm Seidel was
professor at the
universities of
Heidelberg, Marburg and
Leipzig. His publications
are devoted to the
temporal structure of
music, music aesthetics
in the 18th and 19th
centuries and music of
the 16th to 20th
centuries, currently on
Mozart and
Mendelssohn.
$250.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Complete Letters, Volume 8 Barenreiter
SKU: BA.BVK02308 March 1841 to August 1842. Composed by Felix Bart...(+)
SKU: BA.BVK02308
March 1841 to August
1842. Composed by
Felix Bartholdy
Mendelssohn. Edited by
Christoph Koop, Helmut
Loos, Sebastian
Schmideler, Susanne
Tomkovic, and Wilhelm
Seidel. Linen. Book.
Baerenreiter Verlag
#BVK02308_00. Published
by Baerenreiter Verlag
(BA.BVK02308). ISBN
9783761823088. 23.5 x 16
cm inches. Preface:
Seidel,
Wilhelm. Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy as
letter-writer: at the
heart of 19th century
European
culture
As one of
the most important
letter-writers of the
19th century, Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy
maintained an extensive
correspondence. With
great style and eloquence
he wrote letters to
friends and family,
letters from his travels
and he also wrote to
leading composers,
musicians, artists as
well as publishers. He
corresponded with famous
contemporaries such as
Robert Schumann, Franz
Liszt and Richard Wagner
as well as Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe, Carl
Friedrich Zelter and
Alexander von
Humboldt.
The
correspondence begins in
1816 and ends in 1847
with the
composer’s death.
These letters are
invaluable documents
shedding light not only
on the genesis,
publication and revision
of his musical works, but
also on a period when
relations between
Christians and Jews still
had a chance to become
harmonious, as Moses
Mendelssohn, the imminent
scholar and grandfather
of the composer had
advocated.
This
edition will therefore be
of great interest far
beyond the circles of
musicologists and music
specialists. It will
appeal to those who are
interested in the history
of culture and ideas and
to those who perceive
Mendelssohn and his
family as representatives
of a unique, diverse
cultural epoch.
The complete
correspondence shows that
Mendelssohn not only went
on to become one of the
leading figures of German
musical culture in the
1840s, but that he also
maintained a network of
musical contacts
throughout
Europe.
The
edition of the complete
letters This
scholarly-critical
complete edition
comprises 5,855 letters
by Felix Mendelssohn
Bartholdy. Previously
only a small part of his
correspondence had been
published and made
accessible to the public.
The complete edition is
based on Mendelssohn
letters which have been
compiled over decades by
Rudolf Elvers as well as
on international research
carried out by an
academic workgroup in
Leipzig spearheaded by
chief editors Helmut Loos
and Wilhelm Seidel. They
determined 500 additional
letters hitherto
unknown. Versions
of the letter texts have
been compiled from a
scholarly-critical
analysis of the sources,
their historical context
has been discussed and
comments on all points in
need of explanation have
been made.
This
edition of the complete
letters consists of 12
volumes and a CD-ROM.
Each volume contains
indices of mentioned
individuals and
institutions,
compositions by Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy and
Fanny Hensel as well as a
register of place names
and currencies. In this
way one obtains an
all-encompassing view of
this unique historical
cosmos.
The
Complete edition has been
produced to the highest
standards in terms of
layout, cover and
binding. It is an ideal
collector’s item
for bibliophiles,
providing an excellent
means for studying the
composer and the period
in which he
lived.
The CD-ROM
forms a valuable addition
to the printed volumes.
It offers the complete
printed edition in the
form of pdf. files,
thereby making its
approximately 9,500 pages
digitally accessible and
enabling letters and the
corresponding commentary
to be read in parallel.
All terms can be located
quickly and conveniently
via a full text
search. (The 12
volumes as well as the
CD-ROM can only be
purchased
complete).
-
German text
only
The
Editors Helmut Loos is
Professor of Musicology
at the University of
Leipzig. He specialises
in the music of the 19th
and 20th centuries, in
particular the reception
of Beethoven, sacred
music and links between
Germany and Central and
Eastern Europe.
Wilhelm Seidel was
professor at the
universities of
Heidelberg, Marburg and
Leipzig. His publications
are devoted to the
temporal structure of
music, music aesthetics
in the 18th and 19th
centuries and music of
the 16th to 20th
centuries, currently on
Mozart and
Mendelssohn.
$250.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Complete Letters, Volume 12 Barenreiter
SKU: BA.BVK02312 February 1847 to November 1847. Composed by Felix...(+)
SKU: BA.BVK02312
February 1847 to
November 1847.
Composed by Felix
Bartholdy Mendelssohn.
Edited by Helmut Loos,
Lucian Schiwietz, Stefan
Münnich, Uta Wald, and
Wilhelm Seidel. Linen.
Book. Baerenreiter Verlag
#BVK02312_00. Published
by Baerenreiter Verlag
(BA.BVK02312). ISBN
9783761823125. 23.7 x
16.5 cm inches. Preface:
Seidel,
Wilhelm. Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy as
letter-writer: at the
heart of 19th century
European
culture
As one of
the most important
letter-writers of the
19th century, Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy
maintained an extensive
correspondence. With
great style and eloquence
he wrote letters to
friends and family,
letters from his travels
and he also wrote to
leading composers,
musicians, artists as
well as publishers. He
corresponded with famous
contemporaries such as
Robert Schumann, Franz
Liszt and Richard Wagner
as well as Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe, Carl
Friedrich Zelter and
Alexander von
Humboldt.
The
correspondence begins in
1816 and ends in 1847
with the
composer’s death.
These letters are
invaluable documents
shedding light not only
on the genesis,
publication and revision
of his musical works, but
also on a period when
relations between
Christians and Jews still
had a chance to become
harmonious, as Moses
Mendelssohn, the imminent
scholar and grandfather
of the composer had
advocated.
This
edition will therefore be
of great interest far
beyond the circles of
musicologists and music
specialists. It will
appeal to those who are
interested in the history
of culture and ideas and
to those who perceive
Mendelssohn and his
family as representatives
of a unique, diverse
cultural epoch.
The complete
correspondence shows that
Mendelssohn not only went
on to become one of the
leading figures of German
musical culture in the
1840s, but that he also
maintained a network of
musical contacts
throughout
Europe.
The
edition of the complete
letters This
scholarly-critical
complete edition
comprises 5,855 letters
by Felix Mendelssohn
Bartholdy. Previously
only a small part of his
correspondence had been
published and made
accessible to the public.
The complete edition is
based on Mendelssohn
letters which have been
compiled over decades by
Rudolf Elvers as well as
on international research
carried out by an
academic workgroup in
Leipzig spearheaded by
chief editors Helmut Loos
and Wilhelm Seidel. They
determined 500 additional
letters hitherto
unknown. Versions
of the letter texts have
been compiled from a
scholarly-critical
analysis of the sources,
their historical context
has been discussed and
comments on all points in
need of explanation have
been made.
This
edition of the complete
letters consists of 12
volumes and a CD-ROM.
Each volume contains
indices of mentioned
individuals and
institutions,
compositions by Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy and
Fanny Hensel as well as a
register of place names
and currencies. In this
way one obtains an
all-encompassing view of
this unique historical
cosmos.
The
Complete edition has been
produced to the highest
standards in terms of
layout, cover and
binding. It is an ideal
collector’s item
for bibliophiles,
providing an excellent
means for studying the
composer and the period
in which he
lived.
The CD-ROM
forms a valuable addition
to the printed volumes.
It offers the complete
printed edition in the
form of pdf. files,
thereby making its
approximately 9,500 pages
digitally accessible and
enabling letters and the
corresponding commentary
to be read in parallel.
All terms can be located
quickly and conveniently
via a full text
search. (The 12
volumes as well as the
CD-ROM can only be
purchased
complete).
-
German text
only
The
Editors Helmut Loos is
Professor of Musicology
at the University of
Leipzig. He specialises
in the music of the 19th
and 20th centuries, in
particular the reception
of Beethoven, sacred
music and links between
Germany and Central and
Eastern Europe.
Wilhelm Seidel was
professor at the
universities of
Heidelberg, Marburg and
Leipzig. His publications
are devoted to the
temporal structure of
music, music aesthetics
in the 18th and 19th
centuries and music of
the 16th to 20th
centuries, currently on
Mozart and
Mendelssohn.
$250.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Symphony No. 1 Breitkopf & Härtel
Violin 1 (4(3picc).4(cor ang).4(clar[Eb],B-clar)3( dble bsn) - 7.4.3.1 - 2timp.p...(+)
Violin 1 (4(3picc).4(cor
ang).4(clar[Eb],B-clar)3(
dble bsn) - 7.4.3.1 -
2timp.perc(3).hp(2nd ad
lib) - str) SKU:
BR.OB-5631-15
Final Version 1910 -
Textcritical Edition.
Composed by Gustav
Mahler. Edited by
Christian Rudolf Riedel.
Orchestra; stapled.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library).
final version 1910
Symphony; Romantic;
Late-romantic. Part. 26
pages. Duration 54'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #OB
5631-15. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.OB-5631-15). ISBN
9790004343616. 10.5 x 14
inches. The
Symphony No. 1
(originally in five
movements) was first
performed in Budapest in
1889, but the premiere as
well as two further
performances in Hamburg
and Weimar turned out to
be a fiasco. After 1894
Mahler removed the
Blumine-movement. Until
the last performance
under his direction in
New York in 1909, Mahler
made revisions again and
again. This edition
strives to present a, for
the performance practice,
reliable music text of
the final extant version
that in 1910 Mahler
corrected and deemed
accurate for the new
print. The Editorial
Report gives detailed
information on the
provenance and evaluation
of the sources as well as
authentic annotations on
performance practice.
Individual comments
document editorial
interventions and
deviations from current
editions.The cloth-bound
volume PB 5661 contains
next to the final version
of the four-movement
Symphony, the Blumine
movement.Le format permet
une lisibilite parfaite;
le materiel a ete realise
en tenant compte des
conseils des
bibliothecaires de grands
orchestres.
Particulierement precieux
pour les non-germanistes,
on trouve en fin de
volume un glossaire
traduisant les
indications de Mahler de
l'allemand vers l'anglais
(ou l'italien). (Alain
Paris, La Lettre du
Musicien). $26.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 4 weeks | | |
| Complete Letters, Volume 5 Barenreiter
SKU: BA.BVK02305 July 1836 to January 1838. Composed by Felix Bart...(+)
SKU: BA.BVK02305
July 1836 to January
1838. Composed by
Felix Bartholdy
Mendelssohn. Edited by
Helmut Loos, Thomas
Kauba, Uta Wald, and
Wilhelm Seidel. Linen.
Samtliche Briefe in 12
Banden. Only available as
a full subscription to
ISBN 978-3-7618-2300-2.
Book. With Language:
German. Baerenreiter
Verlag #BVK02305_00.
Published by Baerenreiter
Verlag (BA.BVK02305).
ISBN 9783761823057.
23.5 x 16 cm inches.
Preface: Helmut
Loos. Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy as
letter-writer: at the
heart of 19th century
European
culture
As one of
the most important
letter-writers of the
19th century, Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy
maintained an extensive
correspondence. With
great style and eloquence
he wrote letters to
friends and family,
letters from his travels
and he also wrote to
leading composers,
musicians, artists as
well as publishers. He
corresponded with famous
contemporaries such as
Robert Schumann, Franz
Liszt and Richard Wagner
as well as Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe, Carl
Friedrich Zelter and
Alexander von
Humboldt.
The
correspondence begins in
1816 and ends in 1847
with the
composer’s death.
These letters are
invaluable documents
shedding light not only
on the genesis,
publication and revision
of his musical works, but
also on a period when
relations between
Christians and Jews still
had a chance to become
harmonious, as Moses
Mendelssohn, the imminent
scholar and grandfather
of the composer had
advocated.
This
edition will therefore be
of great interest far
beyond the circles of
musicologists and music
specialists. It will
appeal to those who are
interested in the history
of culture and ideas and
to those who perceive
Mendelssohn and his
family as representatives
of a unique, diverse
cultural epoch.
The complete
correspondence shows that
Mendelssohn not only went
on to become one of the
leading figures of German
musical culture in the
1840s, but that he also
maintained a network of
musical contacts
throughout
Europe.
The
edition of the complete
letters This
scholarly-critical
complete edition
comprises 5,855 letters
by Felix Mendelssohn
Bartholdy. Previously
only a small part of his
correspondence had been
published and made
accessible to the public.
The complete edition is
based on Mendelssohn
letters which have been
compiled over decades by
Rudolf Elvers as well as
on international research
carried out by an
academic workgroup in
Leipzig spearheaded by
chief editors Helmut Loos
and Wilhelm Seidel. They
determined 500 additional
letters hitherto
unknown. Versions
of the letter texts have
been compiled from a
scholarly-critical
analysis of the sources,
their historical context
has been discussed and
comments on all points in
need of explanation have
been made.
This
edition of the complete
letters consists of 12
volumes and a CD-ROM.
Each volume contains
indices of mentioned
individuals and
institutions,
compositions by Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy and
Fanny Hensel as well as a
register of place names
and currencies. In this
way one obtains an
all-encompassing view of
this unique historical
cosmos.
The
Complete edition has been
produced to the highest
standards in terms of
layout, cover and
binding. It is an ideal
collector’s item
for bibliophiles,
providing an excellent
means for studying the
composer and the period
in which he
lived.
The CD-ROM
forms a valuable addition
to the printed volumes.
It offers the complete
printed edition in the
form of pdf. files,
thereby making its
approximately 9,500 pages
digitally accessible and
enabling letters and the
corresponding commentary
to be read in parallel.
All terms can be located
quickly and conveniently
via a full text
search. (The 12
volumes as well as the
CD-ROM can only be
purchased
complete).
-
German text
only
The
Editors Helmut Loos is
Professor of Musicology
at the University of
Leipzig. He specialises
in the music of the 19th
and 20th centuries, in
particular the reception
of Beethoven, sacred
music and links between
Germany and Central and
Eastern Europe.
Wilhelm Seidel was
professor at the
universities of
Heidelberg, Marburg and
Leipzig. His publications
are devoted to the
temporal structure of
music, music aesthetics
in the 18th and 19th
centuries and music of
the 16th to 20th
centuries, currently on
Mozart and
Mendelssohn.
$250.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Symphony No. 1 Orchestre Breitkopf & Härtel
Orchestra (4(3picc).4(cor ang).4(clar[Eb],B-clar)3( dble bsn) - 7.4.3.1 - 2timp....(+)
Orchestra (4(3picc).4(cor
ang).4(clar[Eb],B-clar)3(
dble bsn) - 7.4.3.1 -
2timp.perc(3).hp(2nd ad
lib) - str) SKU:
BR.OB-5631-60
Final Version 1910 -
Textcritical Edition.
Composed by Gustav
Mahler. Edited by
Christian Rudolf Riedel.
Orchestra; Folder.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library).
final version 1910
Symphony; Romantic;
Late-romantic. Set of
parts. 1674 pages.
Duration 54'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #OB 5631-60.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.OB-5631-60). ISBN
9790004343661. 10.5 x 14
inches. The
Symphony No. 1
(originally in five
movements) was first
performed in Budapest in
1889, but the premiere as
well as two further
performances in Hamburg
and Weimar turned out to
be a fiasco. After 1894
Mahler removed the
Blumine-movement. Until
the last performance
under his direction in
New York in 1909, Mahler
made revisions again and
again. This edition
strives to present a, for
the performance practice,
reliable music text of
the final extant version
that in 1910 Mahler
corrected and deemed
accurate for the new
print. The Editorial
Report gives detailed
information on the
provenance and evaluation
of the sources as well as
authentic annotations on
performance practice.
Individual comments
document editorial
interventions and
deviations from current
editions.The cloth-bound
volume PB 5661 contains
next to the final version
of the four-movement
Symphony, the Blumine
movement.Le format permet
une lisibilite parfaite;
le materiel a ete realise
en tenant compte des
conseils des
bibliothecaires de grands
orchestres.
Particulierement precieux
pour les non-germanistes,
on trouve en fin de
volume un glossaire
traduisant les
indications de Mahler de
l'allemand vers l'anglais
(ou l'italien). (Alain
Paris, La Lettre du
Musicien). $3321.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 4 weeks | | |
| Symphony No. 1 Orchestre [Conducteur] Breitkopf & Härtel
Orchestra (4(3picc).4(cor ang).4(clar[Eb],B-clar)3( dble bsn) - 7.4.3.1 - 2timp....(+)
Orchestra (4(3picc).4(cor
ang).4(clar[Eb],B-clar)3(
dble bsn) - 7.4.3.1 -
2timp.perc(3).hp(2nd ad
lib) - str) SKU:
BR.PB-5661 Final
Version 1910 -
Textcritical Edition.
Composed by Gustav
Mahler. Edited by
Christian Rudolf Riedel.
Orchestra; Linen.
Partitur-Bibliothek
(Score Library). final
version 1910
Symphony; Romantic;
Late-romantic. Full
score. 212 pages.
Duration 54'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #PB 5661.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.PB-5661).
ISBN 9790004215982.
10.5 x 14
inches. The
Symphony No. 1
(originally in five
movements) was first
performed in Budapest in
1889, but the premiere as
well as two further
performances in Hamburg
and Weimar turned out to
be a fiasco. After 1894
Mahler removed the
Blumine-movement. Until
the last performance
under his direction in
New York in 1909, Mahler
made revisions again and
again. This edition
strives to present a, for
the performance practice,
reliable music text of
the final extant version
that in 1910 Mahler
corrected and deemed
accurate for the new
print. The Editorial
Report gives detailed
information on the
provenance and evaluation
of the sources as well as
authentic annotations on
performance practice.
Individual comments
document editorial
interventions and
deviations from current
editions.The cloth-bound
volume PB 5661 contains
next to the final version
of the four-movement
Symphony, the Blumine
movement.Le format permet
une lisibilite parfaite;
le materiel a ete realise
en tenant compte des
conseils des
bibliothecaires de grands
orchestres.
Particulierement precieux
pour les non-germanistes,
on trouve en fin de
volume un glossaire
traduisant les
indications de Mahler de
l'allemand vers l'anglais
(ou l'italien). (Alain
Paris, La Lettre du
Musicien). $362.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 4 weeks | | |
| Complete Letters, Volume 7 Barenreiter
SKU: BA.BVK02307 October 1839 to February 1841. Composed by Felix ...(+)
SKU: BA.BVK02307
October 1839 to
February 1841.
Composed by Felix
Bartholdy Mendelssohn.
Edited by Benedikt
Leßmann, Helmut Loos,
Ingrid Jach, Lucian
Schiwietz, Wilhelm
Seidel, and Wolfgang
Seifert. Linen. Book.
Baerenreiter Verlag
#BVK02307_00. Published
by Baerenreiter Verlag
(BA.BVK02307). ISBN
9783761823071. 23.5 x 16
cm inches. Preface:
Helmut Loos. Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy as
letter-writer: at the
heart of 19th century
European
culture
As one of
the most important
letter-writers of the
19th century, Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy
maintained an extensive
correspondence. With
great style and eloquence
he wrote letters to
friends and family,
letters from his travels
and he also wrote to
leading composers,
musicians, artists as
well as publishers. He
corresponded with famous
contemporaries such as
Robert Schumann, Franz
Liszt and Richard Wagner
as well as Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe, Carl
Friedrich Zelter and
Alexander von
Humboldt.
The
correspondence begins in
1816 and ends in 1847
with the
composer’s death.
These letters are
invaluable documents
shedding light not only
on the genesis,
publication and revision
of his musical works, but
also on a period when
relations between
Christians and Jews still
had a chance to become
harmonious, as Moses
Mendelssohn, the imminent
scholar and grandfather
of the composer had
advocated.
This
edition will therefore be
of great interest far
beyond the circles of
musicologists and music
specialists. It will
appeal to those who are
interested in the history
of culture and ideas and
to those who perceive
Mendelssohn and his
family as representatives
of a unique, diverse
cultural epoch.
The complete
correspondence shows that
Mendelssohn not only went
on to become one of the
leading figures of German
musical culture in the
1840s, but that he also
maintained a network of
musical contacts
throughout
Europe.
The
edition of the complete
letters This
scholarly-critical
complete edition
comprises 5,855 letters
by Felix Mendelssohn
Bartholdy. Previously
only a small part of his
correspondence had been
published and made
accessible to the public.
The complete edition is
based on Mendelssohn
letters which have been
compiled over decades by
Rudolf Elvers as well as
on international research
carried out by an
academic workgroup in
Leipzig spearheaded by
chief editors Helmut Loos
and Wilhelm Seidel. They
determined 500 additional
letters hitherto
unknown. Versions
of the letter texts have
been compiled from a
scholarly-critical
analysis of the sources,
their historical context
has been discussed and
comments on all points in
need of explanation have
been made.
This
edition of the complete
letters consists of 12
volumes and a CD-ROM.
Each volume contains
indices of mentioned
individuals and
institutions,
compositions by Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy and
Fanny Hensel as well as a
register of place names
and currencies. In this
way one obtains an
all-encompassing view of
this unique historical
cosmos.
The
Complete edition has been
produced to the highest
standards in terms of
layout, cover and
binding. It is an ideal
collector’s item
for bibliophiles,
providing an excellent
means for studying the
composer and the period
in which he
lived.
The CD-ROM
forms a valuable addition
to the printed volumes.
It offers the complete
printed edition in the
form of pdf. files,
thereby making its
approximately 9,500 pages
digitally accessible and
enabling letters and the
corresponding commentary
to be read in parallel.
All terms can be located
quickly and conveniently
via a full text
search. (The 12
volumes as well as the
CD-ROM can only be
purchased
complete).
-
German text
only
The
Editors Helmut Loos is
Professor of Musicology
at the University of
Leipzig. He specialises
in the music of the 19th
and 20th centuries, in
particular the reception
of Beethoven, sacred
music and links between
Germany and Central and
Eastern Europe.
Wilhelm Seidel was
professor at the
universities of
Heidelberg, Marburg and
Leipzig. His publications
are devoted to the
temporal structure of
music, music aesthetics
in the 18th and 19th
centuries and music of
the 16th to 20th
centuries, currently on
Mozart and
Mendelssohn.
$250.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
1 |