Titre : | Sonate pour violon solo | Titre original : | Sonata for Violin Solo | Type de document : | partition musicale imprimée | Auteurs : | Béla Bartok (1881-1945), Compositeur ; Peter Bartòk, Editeur scientifique | Editeur : | Londres : Boosey & Hawkes | Année de publication : | cop. 1994 | Collection : | Urtext edition | Importance : | 1 partition (21 p.) | Format : | 31 cm | ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 979-0-06-009183-4 | Prix : | 24,80€ | Note générale : | Durée : 23'35"
First performed by Yehudi Menuhin on 26/11/1944 in New York | Langues : | Français (fre) Anglais (eng) Allemand (ger) | Catégories : | Violon
| Résumé : | Inspired by Yehudi Menuhin’s playing of Bach’s solo violin sonatas, Bartók’s blend of baroque and folk influences is most evident in the first movement Tempo di ciaccona and the second-movement Fuga. Interesting companion or contrast pieces, in addition to Bach’s masterpieces, are the solo violin sonata of 1919/20 by Bartók’s colleague, Zoltán Székely, and that of 1935 by his pupil Sándor Veress. Bartók’s quarter-tone and third-tone variants to the final movement were excluded from the original edition, but are included in the latest ‘Urtext’ edition. | Note de contenu : | First published in 1994, this authentic edition restores to print many of the details from the composer's original manuscript, most significantly his famous passage in quarter-tones. An introduction and letters from the composer to Yehudi Menuhin, for whom the work was written, are also included. |
Sonate pour violon solo = Sonata for Violin Solo [partition musicale imprimée] / Béla Bartok (1881-1945), Compositeur ; Peter Bartòk, Editeur scientifique . - Boosey & Hawkes, cop. 1994 . - 1 partition (21 p.) ; 31 cm. - ( Urtext edition) . ISBN : 979-0-06-009183-4 : 24,80€ Durée : 23'35"
First performed by Yehudi Menuhin on 26/11/1944 in New York Langues : Français ( fre) Anglais ( eng) Allemand ( ger) Catégories : | Violon
| Résumé : | Inspired by Yehudi Menuhin’s playing of Bach’s solo violin sonatas, Bartók’s blend of baroque and folk influences is most evident in the first movement Tempo di ciaccona and the second-movement Fuga. Interesting companion or contrast pieces, in addition to Bach’s masterpieces, are the solo violin sonata of 1919/20 by Bartók’s colleague, Zoltán Székely, and that of 1935 by his pupil Sándor Veress. Bartók’s quarter-tone and third-tone variants to the final movement were excluded from the original edition, but are included in the latest ‘Urtext’ edition. | Note de contenu : | First published in 1994, this authentic edition restores to print many of the details from the composer's original manuscript, most significantly his famous passage in quarter-tones. An introduction and letters from the composer to Yehudi Menuhin, for whom the work was written, are also included. |
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