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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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Category Archives: variant reading
A “bad apple” in Camille Saint-Saëns’ 2nd cello sonata?
Saint-Saëns was likely far from the “genius thinking” of romanticism. … Continue reading
“… more or less at the most extreme limit of what can be achieved on the piano”: Busoni arranges Bach
The second edition naming the two composers, Bach · Busoni, … Continue reading
The “parallel passage” – handle with care…
If the ideal goal of a critical Urtext edition may … Continue reading
Posted in articulation, autograph, first edition, Grieg, Edvard, Monday Postings, piano solo, variant reading
Tagged Grieg, Peer Gynt suite, variants
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Tristan at Troldhaugen – interesting finds in Grieg’s “Lyric Pieces”
Among the most popular and successful of Edvard Grieg’s compositions … Continue reading
Posted in autograph, Grieg, Edvard, Lyric Pieces (Grieg), Monday Postings, piano solo, sketches, variant reading
Tagged accidentals, Grieg, piano, variants
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Scarlatti Sonatas, Volume IV – the ultimate choice
Though Domenico Scarlatti (1685–1757) was indeed born the same year … Continue reading
Composing made easy? On Erik Satie’s ‘Nocturnes’
It was not without good reason that the label ‘outsider’ … Continue reading
Posted in autograph, Monday Postings, Nocturnes (Satie), notation, piano solo, Satie, Erik, variant reading
Tagged harmony, Nocturnes, Orledge, Satie
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Where does the key/clef go? About a problematic passage in Schumann’s F-major string quartet
Fans of the humourist Wilhelm Busch will certainly be reminded … Continue reading