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Title page of the first edition of the score, Vienna 1799. The three String Trios, Op. 9 were composed by Ludwig van Beethoven in 1797–98. He published them in Vienna in 1799, with a dedication to his patron Count Johann Georg von Browne (1767–1827). [1]
spirito Spirit, con spirito: with spirit, with feeling spiritoso Spirited staccato Making each note brief and detached; the opposite of legato. In musical notation, a small dot under or over the head of the note indicates that it is to be articulated as staccato. stanza A verse of a song stem Vertical line that is directly connected to the ...
Con sordino: with sourdine (mute) With mute applied, esp. to string instruments: Senza sordino: without sourdine (mute) With mute removed Spiccato: separated, distinct; standing out: With a stringed instrument, played by bouncing the bow lightly on the strings Staccato: detached
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"Carta particolare della Brasilia Australe che comincia dala Poro del Spirito Santo e finisce con il capo Bianco" reveals a strip of the southern Brazil coastline and includes São Paulo and the area later to become Rio de Janeiro. Noted for some of the most peculiar representations of mountains near the coastline found on any Dudley map.
Presto • Poco più mosso del • Tempo I; Andante; Allegro con brio • Poco meno mosso • Tempo I • Poco meno mosso • Allegro con brio; The work is highly classical in design as it opens with a sonata movement which is followed by a scherzo, a slow movement, and a finale. The violin part is replete with virtuosic display but is also ...
Con Brio may refer to: Con brio, a musical direction, meaning "with spirit" or "with vigor" Con brio (Widmann), a composition by Jörg Widmann; Con Brio (band), a funk band based in San Francisco; Con Brio, Inc., a defunct synthesizer manufacturer; Con Brio Records, a defunct record label; Con brio, a 1998 novel by Slovenian author Brina ...
Finale: Allegro con spirito Haydn's choice of D major for this quartet, with the second movement in D minor, optimises the use of open strings and allows for the work to be the loudest and most grandiose of the set.