Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Claude Debussy c. 1910. This is a complete list of compositions by Claude Debussy initially categorized by genre, and sorted within each genre by "L²" number, according to the 2001 revised catalogue by musicologist François Lesure, [1] which is generally in chronological order of composition date.
1948 Paris-Magie, ballet for orchestra or two pianos; 1949 Quadrille, ballet for orchestra; 1949 Paysages de France, suite for orchestra; 1949 Paris sentimentale, for voice and piano (French text by Marthe Lacloche) 1950 Les marchés du sud, film music; 1951 Deuxième sonate, for violin and piano; 1951 Parfums, musical comedy
for chorus and orchestra Keyboard: organ: 2: 1912: Élévation en si bémol majeur: Elevation in B-flat major: for organ or harmonium Vocal: 3: 1914: Le Glaive: The sword: for soprano and orchestra Vocal: 4: 1914: Psyché: Psyche: for voice and orchestra; cantate du Prix de Rome: Chamber music: 5: 1909: Sonate en sol mineur: Sonata in G minor ...
Her last major work was the Concerto de la fidelité for coloratura soprano and orchestra, which was premièred at the Paris Opera the year before her death. Germaine Tailleferre continued to compose right up until a few weeks before her death, on 7 November 1983 in Paris.
Les filles de Cadix, for solo voice, 1874; Les abeilles, for 3 voices, 1874; Les pifferari, for 3 voices, 1874; L’écheyeau de fil, for 3 voices, 1874; Le pommier, for 3 voices, 1877; La mort d’Orphée, lyrical scene for tenor and orchestra, 1877; Voyage enfantin, for 3 voices, 1884; Bonjour Suzon (Good Morning, Sue)
Aside from Grieg, Scandinavian examples include Ture Rangström's Swedish cycle Häxorna ("The Witches") (1938) Den Utvalda ("The Chosen"), Madetoja's Syksy-sarja (Autumn Song Cycle), Selim Palmgren's En sällsam fågel (a lonely bird) and Aamun autereessa (in the morning mist), Danish composer Peter Lange-Müller's orchestrations of his songs ...
Shéhérazade, ouverture de féerie, written in 1898 but unpublished during the composer's lifetime (it was only published in 1975), is a work for orchestra planned as the overture for an opera of the same name. [1] It was first performed at a concert of the Société Nationale de Musique on 27 May 1899, conducted by the composer. It had a ...
The Five Pieces further develop the notion of "total chromaticism" that Schoenberg introduced in his Three Piano Pieces, Op. 11 (composed earlier that year) and were composed during a time of intense personal and artistic crisis for the composer, this being reflected in the tensions and, at times, extreme violence of the score, mirroring the expressionist movement of the time, in particular ...