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Books > Music > Musical instruments & instrumental ensembles > Chamber ensembles
The Op. 50 string quartets contain some of the purest writing Haydn ever accomplished. In this first full account of the six quartets, Dean Sutcliffe evaluates the Op. 50 in relation to Haydn's more frequently performed quartets and considers their relevance to Haydn's wider output. Each quartet is discussed in detail. The background to these works includes a brief history of the string quartet and an assessment of Haydn's earlier works in this genre and of his role at Esterhaza. The description of the composition and publication of the Op. 50 quartets is based on the evidence of Haydn's surviving letters and the recently discovered autograph copies of nos. 3 to 6--a discovery that is vividly documented here for the first time.
We knew from her recordings that Susan Tomes is a superb chamber
player; now we know that she's a superb writer too. Michael Church,
INDEPENDENT In this widely acclaimed volume, Susan Tomes, a rare
example of a leading musicianwho writes about the craft of
performance, describes her experience of twenty years of rehearsal,
concerts and recording. We knew from her recordings that Susan
Tomes is a superb chamber player; now we know that she's a superb
writer too. Michael Church, INDEPENDENT She is as sensitive an
observer and as subtle a writer as she is one of our finest chamber
musicians...This is a book that should be read by practising
musicians and music-lovers alike: here's one performer who really
can communicate in words as well as music. JAMES JOLLY, GRAMOPHONE
Susan Tomes's bookgives you an intensely illuminating picture of
the life of a pianist...she is a brilliant writer...Just as she
magnetises with her playing, so too with her words. EDWARD
GREENFIELD, GUARDIAN In this widely acclaimed volume, Susan Tomes,
a rare example of a leading musician who writes about the craft of
performance, describes her experience of twenty years of rehearsal,
concerts and recording. Her performing life has been centred on
chamber music and the need to communicate it fully to an audience
hungry for meaningful musical experience. She was a founder member
and the pianist of both Domus and the Florestan Trio, award-winning
groups at the top of their field. Part One is a series of diaries
describing their travels and performances: Domus in the 1980s with
its own portable concert hall, struggling to create the conditions
for informal but intense concert performances, and the Florestan
Trio, currently one of the world's finest piano trios. Part Two is
a collection of thought-provoking essays about teachers, making
records, practising and rehearsing, audiences, earning a living,
and the particular challenges of being a concert pianist. Beyond
the Notes gives an unusually candid view of the complexities of a
life in music. SUSAN TOMES, alongside her packed concert schedule,
is a frequent contributor, on music and other subjects, to a number
of publications.
With this revised and enlarged edition of "The String Player's
Guide to Chamber Music, " music lovers learn to play well-known
works by Mozart, and Beethoven, among others. The book evaluates
each piece, identifying problems performers may face and letting
them know the amount of work involved in learning it. Meant chiefly
for string quartets, piano trios, and similar ensembles, the
assortment also includes a few pieces for more unusual
combinations.
Libby Larsen has composed award-winning music performed around the
world. Her works range from chamber pieces and song cycles to
operas to large-scale works for orchestra and chorus. At the same
time, she has advocated for living composers and new music since
cofounding the American Composers Forum in 1973. Denise Von Glahn's
in-depth examination of Larsen merges traditional biography with a
daring scholarly foray: an ethnography of one active artist.
Drawing on musical analysis, the composer's personal archive, and
seven years of interviews with Larsen and those in her orbit, Von
Glahn illuminates the polyphony of achievements that make up
Larsen's public and private lives. In considering Larsen's musical
impact, Von Glahn delves into how elements of the personal-a 1950s
childhood, spiritual seeking, love of nature, and status as an
"important woman artist"-inform her work. The result is a portrait
of a musical pathfinder who continues to defy expectations and
reject labels.
This is a performing edition of Walton's
iano Quartet, first published in 1918 and one of his first
compositions to have survived. The work was later revised by Walton
in 1974-5, and this edition is based on the score published in the
Walton Edition Chamber Music volume for string quartet.
Once Verdi had become Italy's preeminent opera composer, he wrote
only a few instrumental compositions, most notably the "String
Quartet in E Minor" of 1873. He originally wanted to keep this
quartet - first performed in his hotel for a few friends - private,
but he eventually allowed its publication. Following its 1876
public premiere in Paris with the celebrated violinist Camillo
Sivori, it soon became well known all over Europe and the United
States. Though several recordings are available and the piece is
regularly performed, all of these performances use later editions
that do not live up to the composer's intentions. In contrast, this
critical edition is based on his autograph score, preserved at the
Naples conservatory, as well as contemporary manuscript parts,
early editions, and Verdi's own instructions for performance.Verdi
wrote as gifts for admirers the three piano works - "Romance sans
paroles," "Valzer," and an album leaf for Francesco Florimo - also
included here. Editor Gundula Kreuzer traces their origins,
sources, and performance questions - as well as the string
quartet's - in her introduction. Her critical commentary details
editorial problems and solutions.
This is a performing edition of Walton's String Quartet in A minor,
based on the edition published in the Walton Edition Chamber Music
volume. The work was first performed in 1947 and later revised as
the Sonata for String Orchestra.
Piano duets, whether on one piano or two, are great fun to play. Their technical demands range from the very simple to the extremely difficult; every pianist, whether amateur or professional, will always find in the vast repertoire something to suit his or her capabilities. Keyboard Duets describes the chronology of the piano duet and music for two pianos, from their earliest beginnings to the present day, investigates various technical problems, and also provides a selective list of original duets with genuine musical or historical interest.
"This book is a substantial and timely contribution to Brahms
studies. Its strategy is to focus on a single critical work, the
C-Minor Piano Quartet, analyzing and interpreting it in great
detail, but also using it as a stepping-stone to connect it to
other central Brahms works in order to reach a new understanding of
the composer s technical language and expressive intent. It is an
original and worthy contribution on the music of a major composer."
Patrick McCreless
Expressive Forms in Brahms s Instrumental Music integrates a
wide variety of analytical methods into a broader study of
theoretical approaches, using a single work by Brahms as a case
study. On the basis of his findings, Smith considers how Brahms s
approach in this piano quartet informs analyses of similar works by
Brahms as well as by Beethoven and Mozart.
Musical Meaning and Interpretation Robert S. Hatten, editor"
This survey of the string quartet by ten chamber music specialists focuses on four main areas: social and musical background to the genre's development; celebrated ensembles and their significance; and string quartet playing. It reviews aspects of contemporary and historical practice, including "mixed ensembles." Informative appendixes and a full chronology of the mainstream repertory complete this compact guide.
Schoenberg's quartets and trio, composed over a nearly
forty-year period, occupy a central position among
twentieth-century chamber music. This volume, based on papers
presented at a conference in honor of David Lewin, collects a wide
range of approaches to Schoenberg's pieces.
The first part of the book provides a historical context to
these works, examining Viennese quartet culture and traditions,
Webern's reception of Schoenberg's Second Quartet, Schoenberg's
view of the Beethoven quartets, and the early reception of
Schoenberg's First Quartet. The second part examines musical issues
of motive, text setting, meter, imitative counterpoint, and closure
within Schoenberg's quartets and trio.
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