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Sergei Prokofiev

Prokofiev: Le Pas D'acier, Op. 41a

Symphonic Suite for Orchestra

$93.00
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Boosey & Hawkes  |  SKU: M060150654  |  Barcode: 9790060150654
  • Composer: Sergei Prokofiev (1891-1953)
  • Format: Study Score
  • Instrumentation: Orchestra
  • Work: Suite from "Le pas d'acier", Op. 41a
  • ISMN: 9790060150654
  • Size: 7.3 x 10.3 inches
  • Pages: 100

Description

This suite was made by Prokofiev from the score of his third ballet for Diaghilev. Gerard McBurney comments that the ballet was "a highly entertaining product of that 1920s fashion for making art about the brave new world of machines and heavy industry and strong-muscled men engaged in hard labour. for good measure Prokofiev and his collaborators threw in a light-hearted sub-plot as well, about a sailor and his girl. The result is one of his most poster-paint scores, filled with bright and brittle imagery, breezy optimism and pulsing motor-rhythms." When Prokofiev extracted the symphonic suite he cut and reordered the material and altered quite a few passages, to give the piece more of a symphonic feel and make it more effective in the concert hall. He ends the suite with the most exciting and original music in the score, an apotheosis of the life and sounds of an early 20th-century factory. He makes marvellous use of the orchestra to describe the humming and whirring of machinery, complete with spinning cogs and flywheels and the thunder of hammers and chains.

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Boosey & Hawkes

Prokofiev: Le Pas D'acier, Op. 41a

$93.00

Description

This suite was made by Prokofiev from the score of his third ballet for Diaghilev. Gerard McBurney comments that the ballet was "a highly entertaining product of that 1920s fashion for making art about the brave new world of machines and heavy industry and strong-muscled men engaged in hard labour. for good measure Prokofiev and his collaborators threw in a light-hearted sub-plot as well, about a sailor and his girl. The result is one of his most poster-paint scores, filled with bright and brittle imagery, breezy optimism and pulsing motor-rhythms." When Prokofiev extracted the symphonic suite he cut and reordered the material and altered quite a few passages, to give the piece more of a symphonic feel and make it more effective in the concert hall. He ends the suite with the most exciting and original music in the score, an apotheosis of the life and sounds of an early 20th-century factory. He makes marvellous use of the orchestra to describe the humming and whirring of machinery, complete with spinning cogs and flywheels and the thunder of hammers and chains.

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