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Chronologically, this A composed a symphony, a concerto and an overture, plus a theme and twenty-five variation disquisition from ancient Greece, all under the same opus number
Last edited by Guest; 29-01-13, 11:33.
Reason: statement
Do you mean the 25 variations were all under the same opus number ? Or the symphony, concerto etc were ?
All these pieces referred to are under the same opus number, RM
The reference to a disquisition is an exaggeration, a joke, a merriment, a moment of levity Stick with a theme & variations, you're after the over-arching theme
Chronologically, this A composed a symphony, a concerto and an overture, plus a theme and twenty-five variation disquisition from ancient Greece, all under the same opus number
Met lots of minors, Op 39-ers?
Or have I been foiled?
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Charles-Valentin Alkan's Twelve Etudes in the minor Keys Op39 contains, the (four movement) Symphony, (three movement) Concerto, Overture and set of 25 variations (grouped under the title Aesop's Feast) and three other pieces (Like the Wind - titter ye not, missus - In Molossian Rhythm and Scherzo Diabolique). ALL for solo Piano!
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Charles-Valentin Alkan's Twelve Etudes in the minor Keys Op39 contains, the (four movement) Symphony, (three movement) Concerto, Overture and set of 25 variations (grouped under the title Aesop's Feast) and three other pieces (Like the Wind - titter ye not, missus - In Molossian Rhythm and Scherzo Diabolique). ALL for solo Piano!
Wonderfully mad pieces, fabulous answer ferney
I was hoping that our resident Alkan-o-phile throppers was going to leap on this.
A 14th Season; Dali takes us to his Leda; A prepared original. What the B?
That's a Bacchanale innit - Glazounov The Seasons no 14 is Bacchanale; Cage (1940) Bacchanale for prepared piano; Dali (1939) based on Leda and the Swan myth and Wagner's Tannhäuser
That's a Bacchanale innit - Glazounov The Seasons no 14 is Bacchanale; Cage (1940) Bacchanale for prepared piano; Dali (1939) based on Leda and the Swan myth and Wagner's Tannhäuser
That's a Bacchanale innit - Glazounov The Seasons no 14 is Bacchanale; Cage (1940) Bacchanale for prepared piano; Dali (1939) based on Leda and the Swan myth and Wagner's Tannhäuser
Had an extra Shredded Wheat this morning, ams?
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
The Cage piece was the first he ever wrote for Prepared Piano.
C us later, please.
Aw shucks, you guys
What C would appear to link an opera containing a chub and two cronies and a smith and his daughter, a British film about footwear (in translation) apparently, and an American fillum beloved of gay men, allegedly?
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