porilo wrote: ↑Fri Sep 09, 2011 4:54 pm
Hi! Not sure whether this is the correct forum to post this, but I wondered whether anyone might have William Vincent Wallaces transcription of "Va Pensiero" from Verdi's Nabucco, to share please? I heard it on radio this morning and it's a fantastic piece. Thanks.
Hi Everyone,
You might be interested to know of three new first editions that I and my co-editor have published. Harold Darke, now mostly known for his setting of In the bleak midwinter, was a lecturer at the RCM for decades, as well as Organist of St Michael's, Cornhill in London. Products of his student days, these three sets of piano works display all the hallmarks of a composer well on his way to become a master of the craft, displaying a heavy romantic influence in the Three Concert Studies Op. 7. The Characteristic Pieces and Fancies are couched more in the early 20th century British style of Dyson, et al. The works have been edited from manuscripts held in the collection of the Royal College of Music, with the permission of his descendants.
liveforpiano wrote: ↑Wed Jul 13, 2011 2:17 pm
Adam (von Ahn) Carse (May 19, 1878 - 1958) was born in Newcastle upon Tyne. He was educated in Hanover and was a Macfarren scholar at the Royal Academy of Music, London where he studied composition with Frederick Corder.
Duly posted, his Variations in D Major.
Carse A. Variations in D Major.pdf
Peter.
does anyone have Carse's Independence Studies Book II?
I got the hump seeing Kammell's dates incorrectly given as 1740-88 in this English edition! They were in fact 1730-84. Almost everything he composed seemed to be in sets of six.
Kammell - Veaudeville ed. Craxton & Moffat.pdf
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Timtin wrote: ↑Thu Jun 16, 2022 3:39 pm
I got the hump seeing Kammell's dates incorrectly given as 1740-88 in this English edition! They were in fact 1730-84. Almost everything he composed seemed to be in sets of six.
Kammell - Veaudeville ed. Craxton & Moffat.pdf
Not uncommon at the time, of course. JS Bach's Partitas, English and French Suites, CPE Bach's Prussian sonatas to name but a few.
Kammell was by all accounts a very successful composer - he was of course Bohemian but settled in England. It would be good to get an unedited or original publication of these scores. This edition is well meaning but very much overedited and how much has been changed by the editors we don't know.
fredbucket wrote: ↑Fri Jun 17, 2022 12:27 am
Not uncommon at the time, of course. JS Bach's Partitas, English and French Suites, CPE Bach's Prussian sonatas to name but a few.
Kammell was by all accounts a very successful composer - he was of course Bohemian but settled in England. It would be good to get an unedited or original publication of these scores. This edition is well meaning but very much overedited and how much has been changed by the editors we don't know.
Regards
Fred
Recently, I acquired an modern album of easy Mozart pieces for children to play (glossy cover, of course), and several of the headings for the works carried incorrect K numbers. So I gave it away to a charity shop, having 'edited' the duff information with pencilled-in corrections.
Attached you find a scan from the Bavarian State library available at IMSLP reworked in bw. Could be a piano reduction or a work originally written for piano.
Best regards
Paul
Kammell op.17 6 Divertimentos.pdf
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Paul wrote: ↑Fri Jun 17, 2022 10:09 amAttached you find a scan from the Bavarian State library available at IMSLP reworked in bw. Could be a piano reduction or a work originally written for piano.
Thanks for that. Probably originally written for the piano, judging by the style. Also looks to have been written for amateurs and students.