Concerto for Violoncello and Orchestra No. 2. op. 126. cello and orchestra. Réduction pour piano avec partie soliste.
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- Nombre de pages80
- Poids0.001 kg
- Dimensions21,0 cm × 29,7 cm × 0,0 cm
- ISBN978-3-68903-022-3
- EAN9783689030223
- Date de parution10/12/2025
- ÉditeurBOOSEY
Résumé
Dmitri Shostakovich composed his second Cello Concerto in Crimea in 1966. The premiere took place at the Moscow Conservatory in September of the same year. As with the first Cello Concerto, Mstislav Rostropovich again took the solo part ; he was accompanied by the USSR State Symphony Orchestra under Yevgeny Svetlanov. Compared to the first Cello Concerto, the three-movement work is more restrained and introspective.
The form is freer, with slow tempi, extended solo sections and chamber-music-like orchestral textures. Particularly striking is the use of percussion instruments such as timpani and woodblock, which lend the work a special tonal color. The concerto is set in the late phase of Shostakovich's work and shows the composer searching for new forms of expression beyond his virtuosity. Instrumentation : cello and orchestra op.
126
The form is freer, with slow tempi, extended solo sections and chamber-music-like orchestral textures. Particularly striking is the use of percussion instruments such as timpani and woodblock, which lend the work a special tonal color. The concerto is set in the late phase of Shostakovich's work and shows the composer searching for new forms of expression beyond his virtuosity. Instrumentation : cello and orchestra op.
126
Dmitri Shostakovich composed his second Cello Concerto in Crimea in 1966. The premiere took place at the Moscow Conservatory in September of the same year. As with the first Cello Concerto, Mstislav Rostropovich again took the solo part ; he was accompanied by the USSR State Symphony Orchestra under Yevgeny Svetlanov. Compared to the first Cello Concerto, the three-movement work is more restrained and introspective.
The form is freer, with slow tempi, extended solo sections and chamber-music-like orchestral textures. Particularly striking is the use of percussion instruments such as timpani and woodblock, which lend the work a special tonal color. The concerto is set in the late phase of Shostakovich's work and shows the composer searching for new forms of expression beyond his virtuosity. Instrumentation : cello and orchestra op.
126
The form is freer, with slow tempi, extended solo sections and chamber-music-like orchestral textures. Particularly striking is the use of percussion instruments such as timpani and woodblock, which lend the work a special tonal color. The concerto is set in the late phase of Shostakovich's work and shows the composer searching for new forms of expression beyond his virtuosity. Instrumentation : cello and orchestra op.
126