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| Let's Take the Stage! - Rauf auf's Podium! Violin and Piano [Sheet music + CD] - Easy EMB (Editio Musica Budapest)
Violin and Piano - easy SKU: BT.EMBZ14935 Easy repertoire pieces for y...(+)
Violin and Piano - easy SKU: BT.EMBZ14935 Easy repertoire pieces for young violinists with CD. By András Soós. Educational Tool. Book with CD. Composed 2015. 36 pages. Editio Musica Budapest #EMBZ14935. Published by Editio Musica Budapest (BT.EMBZ14935). Hungarian-English-German-French. It's an unforgettable experience to go on stage for the first time and win applause with your playing. This album encourages children to make a first appearance and gives effective help in doing so. It brings together pieces that can be used to achieve real success they comprise easy arrangements of favorite works by Dowland, Vivaldi, Handel, Bach, Haydn, Mozart, Weber, Schubert, Schumann, Liszt, and Brahms. The CD enclosed with the publication includes recordings of the piano accompaniment for each piece and a full performance by noted Hungarian musicians. This CD makes practice at home easier and gives assistance with performance style as well. The publication offers numerouspieces of advice to young violinists, including how to get ready for a concert, how to control stage fright, and how to be confident on stage. In addition, it has features some charming illustrations by Edit Szalma.
It’s an unforgettable experience to go on stage for the first time and win applause with your playing. This album encourages children to make a first appearance and gives effective help in doing so. It brings together pieces that can earn realsuccess: easy arrangements of favorite works by Dowland, Vivaldi, Handel, Bach, Haydn, Mozart, Weber, Schubert, Schumann, Liszt, Anton Rubinstein and Brahms. The CD enclosed with the publication includes recordings of the piano accompaniment for eachpiece and a full performance by noted Hungarian musicians. So the disc makes practice at home easier and gives assistance with performance style as well. The publication offers numerous pieces of advice to young violinists, including: how to getready for a concert, how to control stage fright, and how to be confident on stage. In addition, some charming illustrations by Edit Szalma are included.
Es ist ein unvergessliches Erlebnis, wenn wir zum ersten Mal das Podium betreten und mit unserem Spiel Erfolg ernten. Dieses Album möchte die Kinder zu ihren ersten Auftritten ermuntern und ihnen dazu eine effektive Hilfestellung bieten. Es enthält deshalb lauter Stücke, mit denen man wirklich erfolgreich sein kann: leichte Transkriptionen der beliebtesten Werke von Dowland, Vivaldi, Händel, Bach, Haydn, Mozart, Weber, Schubert, Schumann, Liszt, Anton Rubinstein und Brahms. Auf der CD-Beilage des Albums sind - von namhaften ungarischen Interpreten vorgetragen - die Klavierbegleitung sämtlicher Stücke und deren vollständige Fassung zu hören. $23.95 - See more - Buy onlinePre-shipment lead time: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Sonata 1955 Violin and Piano Sikorski
Violin and Piano. By Alfred Schnittke. Arranged by Daniel Hope, Ivan Sokolov. (V...(+)
Violin and Piano. By Alfred Schnittke. Arranged by Daniel Hope, Ivan Sokolov. (Violin). String. Book only. Published by Sikorski.
$46.00 - See more - Buy online | | |
| Developing Virtuosity bk. 2 - Violin Violin and Piano - Easy Latham Music Enterprises
Violin and Piano - Grade 2.5 SKU: AP.36-52710599 Composed by Lynne Latham...(+)
Violin and Piano - Grade 2.5 SKU: AP.36-52710599 Composed by Lynne Latham. Arranged by Thom Sharp. This edition: Latham Music. String - Violin and Piano. LudwigMasters - Latham Music. Book. Latham Music Enterprises #36-52710599. Published by Latham Music Enterprises (AP.36-52710599). ISBN 9781633610040. UPC: 679360611654. English. This volume continues the development of playing skills found in Book 1 and progresses to more complex rhythms, left-hand finger patterns and techniques, bowing techniques, and preparation for shifting. Book 2 introduces students to: long and controlled bow strokes, slurred legato and staccato bow strokes, string-crossing slurs, and producing dynamic contrasts; new rhythmic patterns including dotted notes, triplets, sixteenth notes, swinging eighth notes, and syncopated rhythms; new time signatures including 6/8 and 3/8, along with cut time for cello/bass; and major and minor left-hand string patterns, extended fingerings, and beginning octave harmonics and shifting. Online audio available. These products are currently being prepared by a new publisher. While many items are ready and will ship on time, some others may see delays of several months. $16.99 - See more - Buy online | | |
| Romanian Folk Dances, Sz. 56 Violin and Piano LudwigMasters Publications
Violin and Piano SKU: AP.36-60710007 (Rumanische Volkstanze). Arra...(+)
Violin and Piano SKU: AP.36-60710007 (Rumanische Volkstanze). Arranged by Bela Bartok and ed./arr. Zoltan Szekely. Violin. Master String Series. Book. LudwigMasters Publications #36-60710007. Published by LudwigMasters Publications (AP.36-60710007). ISBN 9798888521687. UPC: 676737816278. English. In the years preceding World War I, Hungarian composer, pianist, and ethnomusicologist Béla Bartók (1881-1945) took trips to the Transylvanian region to explore the musical traditions of the Romanian population. Following a two-year depression caused by the war, as well as some professional setbacks, he returned to composition. The Romanian Folk Dances, Sz. 56, emerged in 1915, bearing a strong influence from his experiences as an ethnomusicologist. They comprise 6 dances, all based on folk tunes that Bartók had recorded and transcribed. In 1917, he arranged a version for full orchestra. Hungarian violinist and composer Zoltán Székely (1903-2001) transcribed these six short movements for violin and piano in 1926, which are offered here in this reprint edition. Movements: 1. Joc cu bâta (Stick Dance), 2. Brâul (Sash Dance), 3. Topogó / Pê-loc (In One Spot), 4. Bucsumí tánc / Buciumeana (Dance from Bucsum), 5. Poarga româneasca (Romanian Polka), 6. Aprózó / Maruntel (Fast Dance). These products are currently being prepared by a new publisher. While many items are ready and will ship on time, some others may see delays of several months. $9.99 - See more - Buy online | | |
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| Ludwig van Beethoven:
Violin Concerto In D Op.
61 - Kremer Edition:
Violin: Violin and Piano G. Henle
2 volumes in a slipcase with marked and unmarked string part with orchestra part...(+)
2 volumes in a slipcase with marked and unmarked string part with orchestra parts-On the occasion of the 70th birthday of Gidon Kremer violinist extraordinaire G. Henle Publishers is issuing a special edition of Beethoven?s Violin Concerto in collaboration with the Kronberg Academy. It comprises two editions gathered together in an attractive slipcase: the piano score and violin part without annotations (also available as HN 326) and the ?Kremer part?. The latter includes fingerings and bowings by Gidon Kremer. The musical text isfollowed by an essay by Kremer about recordings of the Beethoven Concerto bearing the attractive title: ?Searching for Ludwig?. And this is not all: the first-movement cadenza by the composer Victor Kissine which Kremer hasalready played numerous times is published here for the very first time. The solo violin is here accompanied by wind and percussion. The edition also includes the corresponding performance materials for the cadenza including thescore and a piano reduction for study purposes. This extraordinary Urtext edition is rounded off with a foreword by Friedemann Eichhorn. Congratulations Maestro Kremer!
45.25 GBP - Sold by Musicroom UK Pre-shipment lead time: In Stock | |
| Wieniawski H. - 2eme
Polonaise Brillante Op.
21 - Violon Et Piano Violin and Piano PWM (Polskie Wydawnictwo Muzyczne)
2me Polonaise brillante pour violon avec acompagnement de piano op.21 Henryk Wi...(+)
2me Polonaise brillante pour violon avec acompagnement de piano op.21 Henryk Wieniawski wrote only two polonaises. The first one, op. 4 in D minor, is one of his youthful works; the other, op. 21 in A major, is one of the last works he composed. Moreover, H. Wieniawski is the co-author of another polonaise, op. 8, for violin and piano, which he wrote with his brother Józef Wieniawski, a pianist. The latter polonaise, like the Polonaise in D minor op. 4, is also a youthful composition (1852). The polonaise as a genre, therefore, does not occupy much space in Wieniawskis heritage. Nonetheless, both polonaises, in D minor and A major, constitute an essential part of his artistic inheritance. Likewise, both polonaises had been composed in two versions: for violin and orchestra, and for violin and piano. The Polonaise in A major was completed in 1870. It is not known precisely which of the versions, the one with the piano, or the one with the orchestra first came into being. It was the version with orchestra that the composer performed for the first time on 17 March 1870, in the Grand Theatre in St. Petersburg. But merely two months later he performed the Polonaise in Warsaw, accompanied by his brother Józef at the piano. It is quite possible that Wieniawski had already performed this version of the Polonaise. It is certain, nonetheless, that both versions either appeared simultaneously, or one was composed shortly after the other. From its first public performance until the end of his concert career, Wieniawski often included this Polonaise in his concert repertoire, playing one version or another, the choice depending on the needs and circumstances. Just to mention one occasion, he played the orchestral version during a concert tour of Sweden in 1870, when he dedicated and presented a manuscript of this piece to King Charles XV of Sweden. The dedication, however, was changed in print, and both versions were eventually dedicated to François van Hal. Both versions were published simultaneously, by Schott Publishers in Mainz, with the same plate number, though the orchestral version appeared only in parts, which was a common practice in those days. The piece was most probably not published earlier than 18751. The Polonaise was praised by the critics. The reviews reported that it was a magnificent piece2, and this opinion was shared by later critical reviews, both Russian and West European. The Polonaise remained popular after the composer had died, which is evident from the number of later editions of the piece (more than ten) issued by different publishers, mostly German, and prepared by different editors. In Poland, the Polonaise was published twice after the Second World War. All the editions introduced some more or less significant changes into the text, mostly concerning performance indications, but in a sense blurring the composers intentions. All those changes were pertinent to the violin and piano version, and it was mostly in this form that the piece appeared in concert and teaching repertoires. The performances with an orchestra were much more seldom which was, among other factors, due to limited availability of the orchestral version, as it had never been published again after the first edition, until now. The Polonaise in A major was composed approximately at the same time as the Violin Concerto No. 2 in D minor3. This convergence in time had influenced a certain similarity with regard to both composition and technical means, and also to the themes. In particular, the similarity becomes quite obvious in the second theme of the Allegro in the Concerto, and in the theme of the Polonaise. The Polonaise in A major is also in a certain way similar to the first Polonaise (in D minor), the motifs of the themes in both polonaises are alike. However, both pieces differ in style. The Polonaise in D minor shows the composers fascination with technical writing. Wieniawski makes the most of double-stops, chords, and all other sophisticated virtuoso techniques. The Polonaise in A major, written 18 years later, is much more mature. Although it is a virtuosic piece as well, the techniques used are somewhat more limited and subordinated to the expression. The virtuoso character of this piece is more fragile, much closer to the brillant style. At the same time, the Polonaise is typical of Wieniawskis violin playing technique. Here the composer uses the means regarded by his contemporaries to be typical of him, e.g., long staccato fragments played with one bow. The Polonaise is a concert piece in one movement extended form with a considerably abbreviated return of the first section at the end. The middle section is contrasting in character, due to the modulation to F major, change of tempo (meno mosso) and the reduction in the number of instruments (in the orchestral version). All the sections show thematic similarity. The first section, too, consists of three subsections, including a contrasting middle subsection (in E major). Zofia Chechlińska Footnotes 1. See The Critical Commentary, p. ? and onward. 2. See V. Grigoriev, Henryk Wieniawski. Życie i twórczość. [Life and Work] Warszawa - Poznań 1986, p. 184. 3. The first version of the Concerto No. 2 in D minor was completed in 1862, but in 1870, i.e., not until the Polonaise in A major was completed, Wieniawski had been working on the Concerto and implemented quite a few changes. Publisher: PWM/Towarzystwo Muzyczne im. Henryka Wieniawskiego w Poznaniu Series: Henryk Wieniawski - Complete Works Cover: softback Nr ISMN: 979-0-2740-0753-9 Number of pages: 34+8 Format: N4 stoj. 235x305 Language version of text: pol., Eng.
21.10 EUR - Sold by Woodbrass Pre-shipment lead time: On order | |
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