Many thanks for these Alfor! All I need now is d'Argenton's Etudes poétiques, Op. 12, which someone apparently posted on the old PiPhi!alfor wrote:Ce tout à partir de RSL:
Then I shall be happy!

Many thanks for these Alfor! All I need now is d'Argenton's Etudes poétiques, Op. 12, which someone apparently posted on the old PiPhi!alfor wrote:Ce tout à partir de RSL:
You might try using Google Translate or Google Chrome that will automatically translate for you. Do you know who originally published this? I find no reference to it. Here's Pazdírek's info on d'Argenton.4candles wrote:I'm going to bang on about this again, but if anyone who speaks or reads Russian can access the main library catalogues in Russia, please let me know if the 'Sonate', Op. 15 by Antonin d'Argenton exists there. He lived in Russia for 10 years and his Etudes, Op. 12 were adopted by the Moscow and St Petersburg conservatoires, so there is at least some hope! The Sonate it meant to be an impressive work.
Should I also publish this in the Russian composers threads?
Thanks!
Thanks for this Jim.Jim Faston wrote:
You might try using Google Translate or Google Chrome that will automatically translate for you. Do you know who originally published this? I find no reference to it. Here's Pazdírek's info on d'Argenton.
It was published by LEMOINE. See their catalogue of 1861.Jim Faston wrote:You might try using Google Translate or Google Chrome that will automatically translate for you. Do you know who originally published this? I find no reference to it. Here's Pazdírek's info on d'Argenton.4candles wrote:I'm going to bang on about this again, but if anyone who speaks or reads Russian can access the main library catalogues in Russia, please let me know if the 'Sonate', Op. 15 by Antonin d'Argenton exists there. He lived in Russia for 10 years and his Etudes, Op. 12 were adopted by the Moscow and St Petersburg conservatoires, so there is at least some hope! The Sonate it meant to be an impressive work.
Should I also publish this in the Russian composers threads?
Thanks!
Many thanks Jeab-Séb, I have also dropped an email to them, but you might have more success.Jean-Séb wrote:It was published by LEMOINE. See their catalogue of 1861.Jim Faston wrote:You might try using Google Translate or Google Chrome that will automatically translate for you. Do you know who originally published this? I find no reference to it. Here's Pazdírek's info on d'Argenton.4candles wrote:I'm going to bang on about this again, but if anyone who speaks or reads Russian can access the main library catalogues in Russia, please let me know if the 'Sonate', Op. 15 by Antonin d'Argenton exists there. He lived in Russia for 10 years and his Etudes, Op. 12 were adopted by the Moscow and St Petersburg conservatoires, so there is at least some hope! The Sonate it meant to be an impressive work.
Should I also publish this in the Russian composers threads?
Thanks!
The publisher is still existing, but the sonata is no longer on the current catalogue:
http://www.henry-lemoine.com/fr/
I have dropped an e-mail to them to ask about the sonata. I'let you know if and when I get a reply.
Nice find 4c, thank you!4candles wrote:A link to another score by Martin Lazare - Marguerite au Rouet: Caprice pour piano
I put it in a pdf version:Timtin wrote:Nice find 4c, thank you!4candles wrote:A link to another score by Martin Lazare - Marguerite au Rouet: Caprice pour piano