Format : Score and Parts
SKU: FZ.4897
ISBN 9790230648974. 24.00 x 32.50 cm inches.
This facsimile of an original by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart is part of our Dominantes collection. Edition: Vienne, Torricella, (undated=1784). Presentation by Norbert Kaltz: General remarks (Origin of the edition and the dedication Sonatas). Particular remarks (Sonate I, Sonate II, Sonate III). Torricella's original edition is very legible. The violin part of the third sonata is published as a separate part. Collection supervised by the musicologist Jean Saint-Arroman, professor at the Conservatoire National Superieur de Musique et de Danse of Paris and at the CEFEDEM Ile de France (Training Centre for Music Teachers). He is the author of the majority of our prefaces and has also been involved in library searches. Facsimile of copies from:- British Library of London (England). - Library of the University of Basel (Switzerland). Anne Fuzeau Classique propose period copies of classical music scores.
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!