Frédéric Chopin
Barcarolle en fa dièsis majeur op. 60
for Piano
Frédéric Chopin
Barcarolle en fa dièsis majeur op. 60
for Piano
- Formation Piano
- Compositeur Frédéric Chopin
- Éditeur Hardy Rittner
- Série Bärenreiter Urtext
- Éditeur Wendelin Bitzan
-
Niveau de difficulté
- Édition Partition (Urtext)
- Maison d’Édition Bärenreiter Verlag
- N ° de commande BA11831
TVA incluse,
Hors frais de port
Non disponible dans tous les pays. Apprendre encore plus
Description:
In 1845/46 Chopin composed his bel canto inspired 'Barcarolle' in F-sharp major op. 60, which became a model for subsequent generations of composers.
In his evaluation of the divergent and partly even contradictory sources - due to the different engraving models (Stichvorlagen) for the first editions published almost simultaneously in Paris, London, and Leipzig - the editor obtains new results and readings, especially regarding problematic passages.
Chopin’s pedal indications from the other sources, which differ from the main source, are added in small print. Information on this is provided in the Critical Commentary, which also documents the numerous variants of the sources and editorial decisions. An informative preface (Ger/Eng) discusses the genesis of the work and Chopin’s specific understanding of the final shape of his works.
Hardy Rittner supplements Chopin’s fingering from a historically informed perspective. He gives in-depth advice on central questions of performance practice (including cantilena style, rubato and pedal use) and discusses different interpretational approaches (Ger/Eng).
Practical page turns (with fold-out page) and a reader-friendly engraving round off this new edition.
In his evaluation of the divergent and partly even contradictory sources - due to the different engraving models (Stichvorlagen) for the first editions published almost simultaneously in Paris, London, and Leipzig - the editor obtains new results and readings, especially regarding problematic passages.
Chopin’s pedal indications from the other sources, which differ from the main source, are added in small print. Information on this is provided in the Critical Commentary, which also documents the numerous variants of the sources and editorial decisions. An informative preface (Ger/Eng) discusses the genesis of the work and Chopin’s specific understanding of the final shape of his works.
Hardy Rittner supplements Chopin’s fingering from a historically informed perspective. He gives in-depth advice on central questions of performance practice (including cantilena style, rubato and pedal use) and discusses different interpretational approaches (Ger/Eng).
Practical page turns (with fold-out page) and a reader-friendly engraving round off this new edition.