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- “Gabriellas sång” by Brahms?
- Rachmaninoff’s Paganini Rhapsody and the treasures in the Library of Congress
- No end to Rachmaninoff in sight: several annotations to opp. 3 and 16
- Something new from the low register: At long last, Koussevitzky’s Double Bass Concerto op. 3 in Urtext
- On the first version of Verdi’s string quartet – interview with Anselm Gerhard
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Author Archives: Annette Oppermann
More than “Ode to Joy” – the whole range of Beethoven’s vocal work
Although the melody of the 9th Symphony’s choral movement, “Freude … Continue reading
“Beethoven Complete” yesterday and today – from the beginnings of the Beethoven complete edition(s) in the 19th century
Only what we have as whole, do we truly have … Continue reading
Posted in Beethoven, Ludwig van, Monday Postings, Sources
Tagged Beethoven, Breitkopf & Härtel, compete edition, Dunst, Haslinger, Zulehner
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The other type of sources: Letters about Max Bruch’s “Kol Nidrei”
An Urtext edition – and not just only from Henle … Continue reading
Posted in Bruch, Max, Kol Nidrei (Bruch), letter, Monday Postings, piano + violoncello
Tagged Bruch, Kol Nidrei
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Bordering on the modern – The Urtext edition of Schumann’s “Myrthen” op. 25
Considering that specifically for 19th-century works the first edition is … Continue reading
A tear for or from Rossini?
November 13 marks the 150th anniversary of Gioacchino Rossini’s death, … Continue reading
The many footnotes of Rosamunde
All good things come in threes – this is also … Continue reading
‘But it says in the autograph…’ – on a frequently posed question about our Urtext editions
Are you also one of those manuscript hunters on the … Continue reading