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Sheet music $34.95

Original

Perpetuum Mobile. Grade 4.

Translation

Perpetuum Mobile. Grade 4.

Original

Perpetuum Mobile composed by Johann Strauss. Arranged by M. Carros. For concert band. Catalogue Light Concert Works. Novelties. Arrangements of Classical Compositions. New Year's Concert. Catalogue Chrismas Band Music. Classic Arrangement. Recorded on Charleston Forever. ML.311041720. Grade 4. Score only. Duration 3 minutes, 11 seconds. Published by Molenaar Edition. ML.012311080-S. Johann Strauss Junior wrote this 'Perpetuum Mobile' opus 257 in 1861, inspired by a grand Viennese Ball. This event had been announced as a 'Carnival Perpetuum Mobile' with non-stop dancing and music. The Strauss Brothers conducted alternately, so the music and the dancing never stopped. This composition consists of 24 variations on a theme of 8 bars, allowing a small solopart to almost all instruments. As is often the case with Johann Strauss's compositions, the point comes at the end. This ingenious musical satire, subtitled 'A musical Joke', immediately became the big success of the Summer Concert Season of the Strauss Orchestra in the Russian town of Pavlovsk in 1862.

Translation

Perpetuum Mobile composed by Johann Strauss. Arranged by M. Carros. For concert band. Catalogue Light Concert Works. Novelties. Arrangements of Classical Compositions. New Year's Concert. Catalogue Chrismas Band Music. Classic Arrangement. Recorded on Charleston Forever. ML.311041720. Grade 4. Score only. Duration 3 minutes, 11 seconds. Published by Molenaar Edition. ML.012311080-S. Johann Strauss Junior wrote this 'Perpetuum Mobile' opus 257 in 1861, inspired by a grand Viennese Ball. This event had been announced as a 'Carnival Perpetuum Mobile' with non-stop dancing and music. The Strauss Brothers conducted alternately, so the music and the dancing never stopped. This composition consists of 24 variations on a theme of 8 bars, allowing a small solopart to almost all instruments. As is often the case with Johann Strauss's compositions, the point comes at the end. This ingenious musical satire, subtitled 'A musical Joke', immediately became the big success of the Summer Concert Season of the Strauss Orchestra in the Russian town of Pavlovsk in 1862.