Compositeur : Bach, Johann Sebastian Instrumentation : Flute and Piano Editeur Musicologique : Eppstein, Hans Couverture Reliée Contenu : Sonata for Flute and Continuo C major BWV 1033 Sonata for Flute and obligato Harpsichord E flat major BWV 1031 Sonata for Flute and obligato Harpsichord g minor BWV 1020
SKU: SU.00220550
This CD Sheet Music� collection makes available fourteen essential flute methods, studies and exercises, as well as over 150 works for flute duos, trios and quartets by over 30 composers from the 18th and 19th centuries. Methods, Studies and Exercises include: Altès (Method for the Boehm Flute, 26 Selected Studies), J.S. Bach (24 Flute Concert Studies), Andersen (24 Etudes, Op. 33), Gariboldi (20 Studies, Op. 132, 30 Easy and Progressive Studies), Hughes (24 Studies, Op. 32/75); Karg-Elert (30 Studies, Op. 107), Köhler (25 Romantic Etudes, Op. 66, 20 Easy Melodic Progressive Exercises, Op. 93), Reichert (7 Daily Exercises, Op. 5), Wagner (Flute Studies in Old and Modern Styles) Duets, Trios and Quartets include: W.F. Bach (6 Duets), de la Barre (Prelude), Beethoven (Allegro and Mineut), Berbiguier (Six Duets, Op. 59), Boismortier (Two Sonatas), Bordet (Timbourins), Briccaldi (Eight Duos, Op. 132), Chinzer/Bordet (The Hunt), Devienne (6 Duets, Op. 82), Dietter(Romance), Finger Fugue); Fürstenau (6 Duets, Op. 137), Gariboldi (Six Easy Duets), Hotteterre (Les Fargis sur les délices), Hugot/Wunderlich (Four Duets), Koechlin (Sonata for Two Flutes), Köhler (Forty Progressive Duets), Kuhlau (Three Brilliant Duos, Op. 81 and 102, Three Grand Duets, Op. 39, Three Grand Trios, Op. 86), Kummer (Trio, Op. 24)), de Lasso (Two Fantasies), Legoux/Bordet (Musette), Le Loup (Sarabande), Loeillet (Sonata in E minor and Sonata in G minor for two flutes and piano), Mozart (3 Duets, Op. 156 and 157), Müller (Theme with Variations), Naudot (Gavotte), Quantz (Three Duets, Op. 2), Reicha (Sinfonico for Four Flutes), Soussman (Twelve Duets, Op. 53), Stamitz (Three Duets, Op. 27), Sweelinck (Duo), Telemann (Sonata in E major, Sonata in A major for two flutes and piano), Tulou (Three Easy Duets, Op. 102 and 103) Also includes composer biographies and relevant articles from the 1911 edition of Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians 1800 pages
Please note, customers using Macintosh computers running macOS Catalina (version 10.5) have reported hardware compatibility issues with this product. If you encounter these issues, we recommend copying the entire contents of the disk to a contained folder on a thumb drive or other storage device for use on your Mac.
SKU: PE.EP4461BB
ISBN 9790014106645. English.
Edition Peters presents the complete Flute Sonatas of J.S. Bach in two volumes. This second volume contains the Sonatas BWV 1033, 1034 and 1035 in an Urtext edition by Konrad Hampe. Cembalo (piano score) and separate flute part included. With a preface in English and German, and critical report.
SKU: MB.97745
ISBN 9780786607730. UPC: 796279036719. 8.75 x 11.75 inches. Transcribed by Bennet Cohen.
While many electric bassists study the Bach cello suites at some point, few attempt the sonatas and partitas for unaccompanied violin BWV 1001-1006 . Composed around 1720, the sonatas and partitas display rich polyphonic writing, unlike the simpler monophonic cello suites. This collection features a challenging but rewarding transcription of the complete A minor Violin Sonata BWV 1002 , which fits particularly well on the bass. Also included are the well-known gavotte en rondeau from the E major violin partita BWV1006 and the complete A minor partita for solo flute BWV 1013 , transposed here to D minor. Finally, an arrangement of the familiar chorale Jesu, Joy of Mans Desiring from BWV 147 takes advantage of the basss natural and artificial harmonics. Performance notes are included. Written in notation and tablature for the 4-string electric bass.
SKU: HH.HH455-FSP
ISBN 9790708146629.
Scheibe’s three sonatas for flute (or violin) and obbligato harpsichord were published by Haffner in the late 1750’s, but were probably composed much earlier; they contain a significant quantity of elaborate imitative writing that is out of character with Scheibe’s later music. Although rooted in the same tradition as the sonatas for flute and obbligato harpsichord by J.S. Bach, C.P.E Bach, and composers at Berlin court of Frederick the Great, these are more substantial works, each having four movements in the traditional slow-fast-slow-fast scheme. For the most part they are trio sonatas, the right hand of the harpsichord acting as the second treble voice, but several movements feature idiomatic writing for the keyboard. Also interesting is the large amount of ornamentation called for, particularly in the harpsichord part. While Scheibe disapproved of the excessive embellishments that Bach actually wrote into his melody lines, these sonatas are nonetheless heavily ornamented, albeit through the insertion of notational symbols; in addition to turns and mordents, Scheibe uses no less than three different trill symbols!