Claude Debussy
Première Rhapsodie
for Orchestra with Solo Clarinet in B-flat
Claude Debussy
Première Rhapsodie
for Orchestra with Solo Clarinet in B-flat
- Formación Clarinete y orquesta
- Compositor Claude Debussy
- Serie Bärenreiter Urtext
- Editor Douglas Woodfull-Harris
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Dificultad
- Edición Partichela de violín 1 (Urtext)
- Editorial Bärenreiter Verlag
- Nº de pedido BA7897-74
IVA incluido.,
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Descripción de la:
> First Urtext edition of the orchestral version
> First scholarly-critical edition of a pioneering work for clarinet
> Trilingual Foreword (Eng/Fr/Ger) with Critical Commentary (Eng)
Debussy's Première Rhapsodie is one of two concertante works completed, premiered and published during his lifetime. He was commissioned to write it in 1909 for the final examination at the Paris Conservatoire in 1910. Debussy orchestrated it in the summer of 1911. While transferring the clarinet part from the already published version for clarinet and piano, he made a few subtle changes, particularly in m. 201, which has been a bone of contention among clarinettists for over a century.
The present scholarly-critical publication is the first Urtext edition of the orchestral version. It draws on every known source and takes into account a previously ignored source that sheds new light on the piece.
> First scholarly-critical edition of a pioneering work for clarinet
> Trilingual Foreword (Eng/Fr/Ger) with Critical Commentary (Eng)
Debussy's Première Rhapsodie is one of two concertante works completed, premiered and published during his lifetime. He was commissioned to write it in 1909 for the final examination at the Paris Conservatoire in 1910. Debussy orchestrated it in the summer of 1911. While transferring the clarinet part from the already published version for clarinet and piano, he made a few subtle changes, particularly in m. 201, which has been a bone of contention among clarinettists for over a century.
The present scholarly-critical publication is the first Urtext edition of the orchestral version. It draws on every known source and takes into account a previously ignored source that sheds new light on the piece.