339 resultados para Concerto


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For a detailed list of contents cf. Heyer. Historical sets, collected editions, and monuments of music.

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Pl. no.: 7166-7169, 5780, 7171, 7172, 6499, 6726, 6821.

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[v.1.] B flat major, K. 207; D major, K. 211; G major, K. 216; D major, K. 218 -- [v.2.] Concerto, A major, K. 219; Adagio for violin, K. 261; Rondo concertante, K. 269; Rondo, K. 373; Concertante for 2 solo violins, K. 186e (190).

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book 1. Waltzes.--book 2. Mazurkas.--book 3. Polonaises.--book 4. Nocturnes.--book 5. Ballades.--book 6. Impromptus.--book 7. Scherzi and Fantasy.--book 8. Etudes.--book 9. Preludes.--book 10. Rondos.--book 11. Sonatas.--book 12. Miscel. compositions.--book 13. Four concert pieces (solo).--book 14. Concerto in E minor (solo).--book 15. Concerto in F minor (solo).

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Principally arrangements.

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On t.p. of vols. 1 and 2: in two volumes.

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Vol. 4 has imprint: Bologna, Regia tip. Fratelli Merliani; v.5: Bologna, Cooperativa tip. Azzoguidi.

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Bound with: Choral fantasy, op. 80.

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(cont.): Cradle song : berceuse / Walter Spinney -- Andantino from Fantasia in C minor / W.A. Mozart -- Marche de fête / Edgar A. Barrell -- Minster march : from Lohengrin / R. Wagner -- Sunrise : op. 7, no. 1 / Sigfrid Karg-Elert -- Song without words = Chant sans paroles : op. 2, no. 3 / P. Tschaikowsky -- Prayer on motives from R. Wagner's Lohengrin : op. 54 / B. Sulze -- Festal march : op. 67, no. 8 / E.R. Kroeger -- Christmas march / G. Merkel -- Duke Street : postlude II / Geo. E. Whiting -- Canzonetta from the Raymond overture / A. Thomas -- Anniversary march : introducing Auld lang syne : op. 10 / J. Lawrence Ebb -- Two cradle songs = Zwei Wiegenliedchen / Herbert Botting -- Minuet from the overture to Berenice / G.F. Handel -- Funeral march = Marche funèbre : op. 35 / Franz Chopin -- March in B♭ / Wm. Faulkes -- The Son of God goes forth to war : postlude VI / Geo. E. Whiting -- Nocturne des anges : op. 18, no. 1 / George F. Vincent -- Hosanna! / Paul Wachs -- Roumanian bridal march / Herbert W. Wareing.

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The extended program notes include historical background on the composers and pieces being performed, as well as the analytical form regarding the works. Chapter One includes Piano and Violin Sonata in B flat Major, K 454 by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso, Opus 28 by Camille Saint-Saens, Nocturne by Aaron Copland, Violin Concerto No. 2 in D minor, Opus 22 by Henryk Wieniawski. Chapter Two includes selected songs from Die Schone Mullerin D. 759 by Franz Schubert, La Regata Veneziana by Gioacchino Rossini, selected songs by Henri Duparc, Cowboy Songs by Libby Larsen, Poema enforma de canciones by Joaquin Turina.

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Program: Passacaglia for Violin and Cello ........... Johan Halvorsen (1864-1935) Cello Concerto in E minor Op. 85 .............. Edward Elgar (1857-1934) Sonata for Cello and Piano Op. 38 .......... Johannes Brahms (1833-1897)

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The extended program notes include historical facts of the composers and characteristics of the pieces being performed. The graduate viola recital will include the following works: Concerto in D-Major by Franz Anton Hoffmeister, Suite No. I in G-Major by Johann Sebastian Bach, and Sonata in A-Minor (Arpeggione) by Franz Schubert.

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This dissertation deals with the use of extended techniques for the saxophone in the piece Minus (for solo saxophone in Bb), composed through a composer-performer collaboration between Agamenon de Morais and the saxophonist Kleber Dessoles. The text is organized in the following manner: the first part brings the historical background of the concert music written for the saxophone since the beginning of the 20th-century, exploring the use of extended tehcniques and the main characters and historical facts of this period, with data obtained through a literature review; the second part deals with the issue of the composer-performer collaboration, since cases documented in the 18th and 19th centuries until nowadays, exploring in which different ways collaborations may happen and the motivations behind them; the third and final part is about the specific work, followed by a detailed description of the collaboration between the composer and the interpreter, as well as detailed explanations about the extended techniques present in the work (multiphonics and flatterzunge), through bibliographic and documental research, as well as descriptions of the meetings between composer and interpreter. At the end of the collaborative process, one may say that the final result was created from a sum of the composer's knowledge with the interpreter's, almost as if the composition had double authorship. The document describing this process may help composers and interpreters in composing for the saxophone, as well as guide future collaborative experiences.

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von Joseph Joachim

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One must only glance upon Franz Zeyringer’s 400-page, exhaustive Literatur für Viola to understand the error of the familiar but casual criticism of the paucity of the viola catalogue. Examining Zeyringer’s resource, however, we find a trend: while the viola repertoire contains many pieces (over 14,000 works) and does lay claim to many masterworks (Bartok’s Viola Concerto, Hindemith’s Sonatas, Mozart’s Sinfonia Concertante, etc.), many of the pieces originally written for the instrument are not widely recognized compositions and not often considered outstanding achievements. The violist, much like the double-bassist, bassoonist, and hornist, faces a certain challenge when selecting repertoire for a recital: a lack of large, important works that both fit the instrument and challenge the recitalist. This project will aim to expand recital repertoire for the viola through the development of new transcriptions, using the previously transcribed Fantasy Pieces by Schumann (trans. Leonard Davis) and Sonata No. 2 in E-flat, Op. 120 by Brahms (trans. Brahms) as an inspiration and guide. As a result, the catalogue of viola repertoire will not only be increased but the difference in tone and depth of the instrument may unveil previously unnoticed perspectives on the works. With a primary aim to expand the literature of the viola through the development of new transcriptions, this project will also strive to offer new, previously unnoticed perspectives on preexisting works. Through the changing of the instrumentation, listeners and performers will have the opportunity to explore the character of the compositions in a fresh and possibly illuminating way. Perhaps this project will encourage previously unexplored transcriptions to be realized and performed. While the recital repertoire for the viola boasts many and great works, the original transcriptions of this project attempt to infuse the collection with new and interesting possibilities for both study and performance. This dissertation project is comprised of three recitals featuring works transcribed for viola and, in most cases, newly transcribed by myself. All events took place on the campus of University of Maryland, College Park: Recital #1 on November 9, 2014 in the Gildenhorn Recital Hall of the Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center; Recital #2 on May 9, 2015, in Ulrich Recital Hall; and Recital #3 on November 6, 2015, in the Gildenhorn Recital Hall.