Type of Music Notation: | Standard |
Format: | |
Pages: | 17 |
Created in: | Dorico |
This collection contains these two pieces:
Maria Theresia von Paradis - Sicilienne
In 1924, Schott published a “Sicilienne” credited to the blind eighteenth-century piano virtuoso Maria Theresia von Paradis (1759-1824) as “revised and edited” by violinist Samuel Dushkin. Dushkin claimed that he had discovered this piece as a piano work, and had recast it for violin and piano. However, no such work survives among primary manuscript sources for von Paradis, and it is fairly certain that Dushkin composed this little violin encore himself. The doubtful pedigree of the Sicilienne has hardly prevented its popularity; it has a generous, graceful and arching melodic line which shifts gently from major to minor over a simple, cradle-song rocking accompaniment.
Anton Rubinstein (1829 – 1894) was a Russian pianist, composer and conductor who founded the Saint Petersburg Conservatory, the first high school of music in Russia. As a pianist, he was compared to the most important Franz Liszt of the time, and ranks among the greatest piano virtuosos ever.
"Arranging original piano accompaniments for an instrument like the guitar is not easy at all. It is an effort full of compromises, where at the same time the composer's original idea should not be dishonored. In the interpretation, this composition is based on agogy, therefore not as a dance, as it may seem at first. Enjoy this duet for flute & guitar! (original for cello and piano)"
Flipbook preview - Sicilienne
Flipbook preview - Melody