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Unfortunately I can't read Polish and until there is clarity here, with an explanation why the use of the piano is notable, then I have to oppose. Major Bloodnok 19:09, 26 February 2011 (UTC) Info - this piano is last one made by pl:Józef Jan Budynowicz which was reconstructed and is able to play (remaining ones are broken beyond repair).
Étude No. 3 in G ♯ minor "La Campanella", marked Allegretto, which is after the final movement of Paganini's Violin Concerto No. 2 in B minor. Étude No. 4 in E major "Arpeggio", marked Andante quasi allegretto, which is after Caprice No. 1 in E major. It was written on one line only, omitting the usual separate line for the left hand, this ...
Incipit for "La campanella" by Franz Liszt (Grandes études de Paganini S. 141 no. 3) The étude is played at a gentle, brisk allegretto tempo and features constant octave hand jumps between intervals larger than one octave, sometimes even stretching for two whole octaves within the time of a sixteenth note. As a whole, the étude can be ...
La Campanella, Rondo a la clochette: 1826 c. 49: Adagio [2] E: Violin / Orch. Alternative Adagio for Violin Concerto No.2 [citation needed] 1826: 50: Violin Concerto No.3: E: Violin / Orch. 1828: 51: Maestosa Sonata Sentimentale: Violin / Orch. Variations for the fourth string on the theme "Gott erhalte Franz den Kaiser" (Austrian national ...
"Grande Fantaisie de Bravoure sur La Clochette de Paganini [Large Bravura Fantasy on Paganini's La Campanella], Op. 2 (1832)", pp. 1–30. Etudes d'Exécution Transcendante d'après Paganini [Etudes for Transcendental Technique after Paganini] (1838) (dedicated to Clara Schumann), pp. 31–90.
Campanella (plural campanelle) is Italian for 'little bell', and may refer to: Campanella (surname) Campanella, a genus in family Marasmiaceae; The third movement of Violin Concerto No. 2 by Paganini; La Campanella, a piano étude by Franz Liszt; A song by Kenshi Yonezu from Stray Sheep
The Violin Concerto No. 2 in B minor, Op. 7, was composed by Niccolò Paganini in Italy in 1826. [1] The third movement owes its nickname "La Campanella" or "La Clochette" to the little bell which Paganini uses to presage each recurrence of the rondo theme.
Leopold Auer – arranged it for violin with piano accompaniment, and added some variations of his own; Rafał Augustyn – Paganini Variations, for solo piano (1987–1989) (reference: www.polmic.pl) Luc Baiwir – Variations on a Theme by Paganini, for solo piano (2007) David Baker – Ethnic Variations on a Theme of Paganini, for violin and ...