Jeremy Norris. The Russian Piano Concerto. Volume I: The Nineteenth Century. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1994. xii, 227 pp. $35.00.

1997 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 88-89
Author(s):  
Robert Silverman
2008 ◽  
Vol 31 (3) ◽  
pp. 245-265 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles Fisk

Abstract In two of Rachmaninov's last works, the Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini of 1934 and the first of the Symphonic Dances of 1940, a stylistic contrast between an opulently scored lyrical theme and the more angular, dissonant music that surrounds that theme throws into relief the extent that Rachmaninov's musical language had changed and developed since his first great successes thirty years earlier with the Second Piano Concerto and the Second Symphony. The words that motivate a similar stylistic contrast in the song Son (Sleep), composed in 1917, near the end of his most compositionally productive years, suggest an interpretive reading of such a stylistic contrast: the earlier, lusher style is associated here with dreams, and hence with memories; while the later, sparer, more tonally ambiguous style accompanies an evocation of something more impersonal, in the case of the song the stillness of a dreamless sleep. Some of the developing aspects of Rachmaninov's style revealed in these later examples are already evident even in the more traditional-sounding pieces of the last decade (1907––17) of his Russian period, which is shown in an analysis of the piano Prelude in G## Minor of 1910. Even this seemingly traditional Prelude, but more and more in his later music, Rachmaninov emerges as an indisputably twentieth-century composer.


1980 ◽  
Author(s):  
Johann Nepomuk Hummel

The Piano Concerto in A-flat Major, op. 113, was composed in 1827. This edition presents the first full-score publication of this little-known late work by Hummel, one of the most popular composers of early-nineteenth-century Europe. Opus 113 was one of his last major compositions and can be considered one of the landmarks of late Viennese classicism.


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