Instruments
Ensembles
Opera
Composers
Performers

Sheet music $33.95

Original

Rondo for Cello and Piano, Opus 2. Cello Solo sheet music. Piano Accompaniment sheet music.

Translation

Rondo for Cello and Piano, Opus 2. Cello Solo sheet music. Piano Accompaniment sheet music.

Original

Rondo for Cello and Piano, Opus 2 composed by Jan Vaclav Hugo Vorisek. Edited by Slavy Dimoff. For cello and piano. This edition. softcover. Bisel Classics. Score. Text Language. English. German. Opus 2. 41 pages. Published by Bisel Classics. BI.979-0-50179-192-7. ISBN 9790501791927. With Text Language. English. German. A4 inches. The Rondo op. 2 was composed in a phase in Vorisek's life, when everything indicated, that his career as musician and composer was going to be outstanding. He had been newly appointed first conductor of the recently founded ''Musikverein'' and stood at the center of the development of that kind of chamber-music euphoria that defined Viennese music culture of the period. As a pianistic bravura piece the composition invites to join in for a feast of chamber music, optionally with violin or cello as partner. The vocal-like coloratura passages of the theme bring in an atmosphere of ''Italianita'', inspired by a famous ''Arietta da camera'', the Bolero of Gaetano Piantanida, that was often performed in music salons of Vienna.

Translation

Rondo for Cello and Piano, Opus 2 composed by Jan Vaclav Hugo Vorisek. Edited by Slavy Dimoff. For cello and piano. This edition. softcover. Bisel Classics. Score. Text Language. English. German. Opus 2. 41 pages. Published by Bisel Classics. BI.979-0-50179-192-7. ISBN 9790501791927. With Text Language. English. German. A4 inches. The Rondo op. 2 was composed in a phase in Vorisek's life, when everything indicated, that his career as musician and composer was going to be outstanding. He had been newly appointed first conductor of the recently founded ''Musikverein'' and stood at the center of the development of that kind of chamber-music euphoria that defined Viennese music culture of the period. As a pianistic bravura piece the composition invites to join in for a feast of chamber music, optionally with violin or cello as partner. The vocal-like coloratura passages of the theme bring in an atmosphere of ''Italianita'', inspired by a famous ''Arietta da camera'', the Bolero of Gaetano Piantanida, that was often performed in music salons of Vienna.