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Maurice Ravel

Ravel: Gaspard de la nuit

3 Poemes Pour Piano D'Apres Aloysius Bertrand

$41.00
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Wiener Urtext  |  SKU: UT50261  |  Barcode: 9790500572916
  • Composer: Maurice Ravel (1875-1937)
  • Editor: Jochen Reutter
  • Introduction: Theo Hirsbrunner
  • Fingering: Peter Roggenkamp
  • Instrumentation: Piano
  • Work: Gaspard de la nuit, M. 55
  • ISMN: 9790500572916
  • Size: 9.8 x 12.8 inches
  • Pages: 51
  • Urtext / Critical Edition

Description

Maurice Ravel's Gaspard de la nuit ranks among the most important piano works of the 20th century and, as it were, represents the pinnacle of the extension of the piano playing techniques and tonal possibilities which started in the 19th century. Ravel took poems by Aloysius Bertrand as a basis of the three movements Ondine, Le Gibet and Scarbo. Thus, he follows the 19th-century tradition to combine instrumental music with literary works. The new edition of Wiener Urtext not only consulted the first edition, which has been used almost exclusively up to now, but also Ravel's autograph and his personal copy of the first edition on the basis of which numerous passages in the musical text could be corrected. Additional information from personal copies of Ravel pupils are analyzed in the Notes on Interpretation. This edition also features a glossary in three languages of the French performance instructions used by Ravel as well as English and German translations of the three poems by Bertrand.

Wiener Urtext

Ravel: Gaspard de la nuit

$41.00

Description

Maurice Ravel's Gaspard de la nuit ranks among the most important piano works of the 20th century and, as it were, represents the pinnacle of the extension of the piano playing techniques and tonal possibilities which started in the 19th century. Ravel took poems by Aloysius Bertrand as a basis of the three movements Ondine, Le Gibet and Scarbo. Thus, he follows the 19th-century tradition to combine instrumental music with literary works. The new edition of Wiener Urtext not only consulted the first edition, which has been used almost exclusively up to now, but also Ravel's autograph and his personal copy of the first edition on the basis of which numerous passages in the musical text could be corrected. Additional information from personal copies of Ravel pupils are analyzed in the Notes on Interpretation. This edition also features a glossary in three languages of the French performance instructions used by Ravel as well as English and German translations of the three poems by Bertrand.

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