Camille Saint-Saëns Havanaise op. 83 Editeur: Christiane Strucken-Paland Doigtés: Klaus Schilde Doigtés vl.: Ingolf Turban Edition Urtext, reliure paperback partie de corde avec ou sans indications de doigté Matériel d'orchestre chez Breitkopf and Härtel Pages: 36 (V, 15, 8, 8), Dimension 23,5 x 31,0 cm N° d'article HN 1037 · ISMN M-2018-1037-9 On raconte que le thème principal de sa Havanaise fut inspiré à Saint-Saëns par le crépitement d'un feu de cheminée dans un hôtel, ceci durant une tournée qu'il entreprit avec Rafael Diaz Albertini, le futur dédicataire de l''uvre, à l'automne de l'année 1885. En revanche, on ne peut hélas plus déterminer si le choix qu'il porta sur la Havanaise, cette danse caractéristique à deux temps, lors du remaniement de l''uvre deux ans plus tard est une allusion à l'origine cubaine de son ami violoniste. Quoi qu'il en soit, cette 'uvre connut un grand succès dès sa création, tant dans sa version originale que celle pour orchestre. Nous avons eu la chance de pouvoir compter sur Ingolf Turban pour les doigtés de la brillante partie de violon.
Arrangeur: Joachim Draheim. Par SCHUMANN CLARA. 'You can be rightfully pleased w...(+)
Arrangeur: Joachim Draheim. Par SCHUMANN CLARA. 'You can be rightfully pleased with what is coming!' announced Clara Schumann self-confidently in late 1855 to the 24-year-old Joachim upon sending him a copy of the 'Three Romances' op. 22 for violin and piano that had just been published by Breitkopf and Härtel. There is no doubt that her acquaintance with the young virtuoso had stimulated her to write the pieces already back in 1853. The two remained linked to the Romances after publication as well: Clara Schumann and Joachim often successfully performed them in their concerts in later years. After having temporarily fallen into oblivion, the Romances did not make their way more lastingly into the chamber musicrepertoire until 1983, when a reprint of the first edition was published. With the release of this new edition, today's interpreters can also be 'rightfully pleased' with Clara Schumann's Opus 22./ Répertoire / Violon et Piano
Original for Violin (and Piano). Par REGER MAX. Max Reger’s well-known Romance...(+)
Original for Violin (and Piano). Par REGER MAX. Max Reger’s well-known Romance in G major WoO II/10 was written as a supplement for the Neue Musik-Zeitung, which was the recipient of works - particularly songs and piano pieces - by Reger in the years 1900 and 1901. Reger himself designatedhis Romance shortly after its publication as “an occasional piece of the worst kind - for me!” The work was published in 1910 both in its original scoring for violin (and piano) as well as in its first arrangements for other solo instruments./ Répertoire / Violon et Piano
Par SCHUBERT FRANZ. Franz Schubert's 3 Sonatas D 384, 385, 408, earlier known as...(+)
Par SCHUBERT FRANZ. Franz Schubert's 3 Sonatas D 384, 385, 408, earlier known as Sonatinas Op. 137, for Violin and Piano. Edited by Paul Klengel./ Répertoire / Violon et Piano
Der Werke von Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy. Par MENDELSSOHN-BARTHOLDY FELIX. The ...(+)
Der Werke von Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy. Par MENDELSSOHN-BARTHOLDY FELIX. The Leipziger Ausgabe der Werke von Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy pursues the goal of making accessible to the public in an adequately scholarly form all of Mendelssohn?s accessible compositions, letters and writings, along with all other documents of his artistic oeuvre. A considerable number of Mendelssohn?s works are still waiting to be published; many others have been published in an unsatisfactory manner. Though the new Mendelssohn Complete Edition follows the ten volumes of the Leipziger Mendelssohn Ausgabe (LMA) published by the Deutscher Verlag für Musik (DVfM) in Leipzig since 1961, it sees itself as a fundamentally new conception which reflects the present-day standard of scholarly editions. The first volumes of the new Complete Edition were presented in Leipzig on 3 November 1997 at ?Mendelssohn Festtage? in Leipzig. SON 411 - 413 have been awarded the German Music Edition Prize 2006. / Date parution : 2022-10-12/ Recueil / Violon et Piano
Par CAMPOGRANDE NICOLA. For a long time after Romanticism had come to the fore, ...(+)
Par CAMPOGRANDE NICOLA. For a long time after Romanticism had come to the fore, it was generally agreed that Brahms somehow ?did not get it?: History and Progress ? it was thought - were proceeding along one clear path and Brahms ? who was composing sonatas and symphonies instead of nocturnes and symphonic poems ? had taken the wrong way. Almost one century later, Schönberg wrote an essay, Brahms, der Fortschrittliche ( Brahms, the progressive ), in which he explained that it wasn?t like that at all. Fully assuming the risk to appear somehow irreverent, I have to confess: Over the years, I came to the conclusion that the present ? and the future ? can be created only by loving the past. As Brahms had shown us, it is only by accepting the challenge of taking our heritage into our own hands, that we can create something new. We cannot avoid engaging with the past. Therefore, starting with my Sinfonia n. 1 , I began to flirt with such a strong and effective musical structure like the sonata form. I re-read and freely transformed it, because it is a sturdy and resilient structure, but also a theatrical and colorful one. For me, it is a happy structure. And I think that today more than ever we need something like this: We need to find places ? even imaginary ones ? where we can give happiness a form of its own. Nicola Campogrande, December 2020 / Date parution : 2022-10-12/ Répertoire / Violon et Piano