Format : Set of Parts
SKU: KU.OCT-10208_VA
ISBN 9790206202759. Key: D major.
SKU: KU.OCT-10208_VCKB
ISBN 9790206202766. Key: D major.
SKU: KU.OCT-10208_VL1
ISBN 9790206202735. Key: D major.
SKU: KU.OCT-10208_VL2
ISBN 9790206202742. Key: D major.
SKU: HH.HH580-FSP
ISBN 9790708185949.
Antonio Lotti’s surviving instrumental compositions are very few. Best known is an oboe d’amore concerto in A major, until now his sole identified work in the concerto genre. Now another concerto by him, this time for ordinary oboe, has turned up in Lund, Sweden. The manuscript parts are anonymous, but Lotti’s authorship is proved, first, by the fact that all three movements are arrangements of arias for soprano appearing in two of his operas written for Dresden and, second, by the fact that the use of da capo aria form for all three movements links the new concerto directly to Lotti’s oboe d’amore concerto, which may well be a similar pasticcio. The new G minor concerto, more lyrical than virtuosic in character, is every bit as attractive as its A-major counterpart and deserves to become an essential part of the baroque repertoire for the oboe.
SKU: HL.50156870
UPC: 073999803266. 9.25x12.25x0.02 inches.
SKU: GH.CG-6149P
Also for oboe.Edited by Per-Olof Gillblad.Piano reduction: Eva Nordenfelt.
SKU: HL.49011778
ISBN 9790200215694. UPC: 884088078591. 8.25x11.75x0.023 inches.
SKU: HL.50156880
6.75x10.5 inches.
SKU: HL.50156900
SKU: HL.50156890
SKU: HL.50480693
SKU: HL.50480694
SKU: CA.3116909
ISBN 9790007209315. Text language: German/English. Text: Birkmann, Christoph.
Bach's cantata My God alone this heart possesses BWV 169 is from his third annual cantata cycle in Leipzig; it was first performed on 20 October 1726 for the 18th Sunday after Trinity. As recent research has shown, the text was written by the Leipzig student, Christoph Birkmann. With the exception of the final chorale, this is a cantata for solo alto with, of course, a rich orchestral scoring consisting of three oboes, obbligato organ and strings. The first purely instrumental movement can be traced back to an instrumental concerto, which has been lost, after Bach had also composed the Keyboard Concerto in E major BWV 1053. The lyrical-vocal highpoint of the cantata is the fifth movement, which is also based on the concerto and it shows off Bach's arranging artistry to the highest degree. Among the movements are an aria-like recitative vocal movement, as well as another aria with an almost virtuoso organ accompaniment. Score and parts available separately - see item CA.3116900.
SKU: KU.GM-987
9 x 12 inches. Key: D major.
SKU: CA.3116913
ISBN 9790007209346. Text language: German/English. Text: Birkmann, Christoph.
Bach's cantata My God alone this heart possesses BWV 169 is from his third annual cantata cycle in Leipzig; it was first performed on 20 October 1726 for the 18th Sunday after Trinity. As recent research has shown, the text was written by the Leipzig student, Christoph Birkmann. With the exception of the final chorale, this is a cantata for solo alto with, of course, a rich orchestral scoring consisting of three oboes, obbligato organ and strings. The first purely instrumental movement can be traced back to an instrumental concerto, which has been lost, after Bach had also composed the Keyboard Concerto in E major BWV 1053. The lyrical-vocal highpoint of the cantata is the fifth movement, which is also based on the concerto and it shows off Bach's arranging artistry to the highest degree. Among the movements are an aria-like recitative vocal movement, as well as another aria with an almost virtuoso organ accompaniment. Score and part available separately - see item CA.3116900.
SKU: CA.3116912
ISBN 9790007209339. Text language: German/English. Text: Birkmann, Christoph.
SKU: CA.3116911
ISBN 9790007209322. Text language: German/English. Text: Birkmann, Christoph.
SKU: CA.3116914
ISBN 9790007209353. Text language: German/English. Text: Birkmann, Christoph.
SKU: CA.3116905
ISBN 9790007170752. Text language: German/English. Text: Birkmann, Christoph.
Bach's cantata My God alone this heart possesses BWV 169 is from his third annual cantata cycle in Leipzig; it was first performed on 20 October 1726 for the 18th Sunday after Trinity. As recent research has shown, the text was written by the Leipzig student, Christoph Birkmann. With the exception of the final chorale, this is a cantata for solo alto with, of course, a rich orchestral scoring consisting of three oboes, obbligato organ and strings. The first purely instrumental movement can be traced back to an instrumental concerto, which has been lost, after Bach had also composed the Keyboard Concerto in E major BWV 1053. The lyrical-vocal highpoint of the cantata is the fifth movement, which is also based on the concerto and it shows off Bach's arranging artistry to the highest degree. Among the movements are an aria-like recitative vocal movement, as well as another aria with an almost virtuoso organ accompaniment. Score available separately - see item CA.3116900.