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Complete Shorter Works for Solo Piano

Complete Shorter Works for Solo Piano( )
Editor: Mandyczewski, Eusebius
Author: Brahms, Johannes
Series title:Dover Music for Piano Ser.
ISBN:978-0-486-22651-4
Publication Date:Jun 1971
Publisher:Dover Publications, Incorporated
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:USD $15.95
Book Description:

The entire corpus of Brahms' short piano pieces is featured in this one affordable volume. It includes the familiar Waltzes; the effective Scherzo in E Flat Min∨ the satisfying Eight Pieces; the two Rhapsodies; the Fantasies; and more.

Book Details
Pages:192
Detailed Subjects: Music / Printed Music / Piano & Keyboard Repertoire
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):9 x 12 Inches
Book Weight:1.06 Pounds
Author Biography
Brahms, Johannes (Editor)
A composer, pianist, and conductor, Johannes Brahms was born in Hamburg, Germany. Possessing a talent that could have taken him in any musical direction, he chose the piano and composing. He made his debut as a pianist at the age of 14. In 1853 Brahms met the German composer Robert Schumann, who regarded Brahms as a genius. Schumann and his wife Clara, a noted concert pianist, became Brahms's lifelong friends. In 1862 Brahms moved to Vienna, where his talents as a composer reached full flower. The music of Brahms shows great respect for the form and structure of eighteenth-century classicism, yet it also incorporates the romantic style that was typical of the nineteenth century.

Brahms is considered a giant among nineteenth-century composers of chamber music and symphonies. Among his 24 published chamber-music works are a piano trio in B, opus 8 (1854); two string quartets; two piano quartets; and a piano quintet in F minor, opus 34a (1864). He composed four great symphonies: Symphony in C Minor (completed in1876), Symphony in D Minor (1877), Symphony in F Major (1883), and Symphony in E Minor (1885).

While classic in structure and design, Brahms's symphonies are romantic in their musical language and sound. Nonetheless, they exhibit feelings of repose that illustrate a return to discipline and a revival of order and form, indicative of changes in music to come in the 1900s. Today, many of the works of Brahms are staples of the concert repertoire.

Brahms died in 1897.

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