Instruments
Ensembles
Opera
Composers
Performers

Sheet music $14.95

Original

Fantasy C major op. 17. Robert Schumann. Harpsichord sheet music. Piano Solo sheet music. Advanced.

Translation

Fantasy C major op. 17. Robert Schumann. Harpsichord sheet music. Piano Solo sheet music. Advanced.

Original

Fantasy C major op. 17. Piano Solo. Composed by Robert Schumann. Edited by W. Boetticher. For Piano. Piano. Harpsichord. , 2-hands. Henle Music Folios. Urtext edition-paper bound. Classical Period. SMP Level 10. Advanced. Single piece. Introductory text, fingerings and performance notes. 45 pages. G. Henle #HN276. Published by G. Henle. HL.51480276. With introductory text, fingerings and performance notes. Classical Period. 9x12 inches. Schumann's great C-major Fantasy, Op. 17, was originally intended to be published as a “Sonata for Beethoven” entitled “Ruins, Trophies, Palms. Grand Sonata. ” Although he eventually abandoned this plan, he maintained the Fantasy's mighty design. Writing to his fiancée Clara Wieck in March 1838, he called the first movement “perhaps the most impassioned music I have ever written. ” Accordingly, it marks a point of culmination in his piano music, forming an exemplary combination of passion, delicacy, and virtuosity – a demanding, highly romantic work for ambitious pianists. Our volume presents a thorough revision of the musical text as well as an informative preface and text-critical commentary. Very advanced level, very difficult note reading, frequent time signature changes, virtuosic level technical facility needed.

Translation

Fantasy C major op. 17. Piano Solo. Composed by Robert Schumann. Edited by W. Boetticher. For Piano. Plan. Harpsichord. , 2-hands. Henle Music Folios. Urtext edition-paper bound. Classical Period. SMP Level 10. Advanced. Single piece. Introductory text, fingerings and performance notes. 45 pages. Г. Хенле. Published by G. Henle. HL.51480276. With introductory text, fingerings and performance notes. Classical Period. 9x12 inches. Schumann's great C-major Fantasy, Op. 17, was originally intended to be published as a “Sonata for Beethoven” entitled “Ruins, Trophies, Palms. Grand Sonata. ” Although he eventually abandoned this plan, he maintained the Fantasy's mighty design. Writing to his fiancée Clara Wieck in March 1838, he called the first movement “perhaps the most impassioned music I have ever written. ” Accordingly, it marks a point of culmination in his piano music, forming an exemplary combination of passion, delicacy, and virtuosity – a demanding, highly romantic work for ambitious pianists. Our volume presents a thorough revision of the musical text as well as an informative preface and text-critical commentary. Very advanced level, very difficult note reading, frequent time signature changes, virtuosic level technical facility needed.