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Of the two sonatas published by Chrysander as Opus 1 Sonata I, this one (Sonata I b) is the one in Walsh's original edition (where it is called Sonata I). 360: Recorder G minor c. 1712 1732 Opus 1 No. 2 361: Violin A major c. 1725–26 1732 Opus 1 No. 3 The only violin sonata to have been published exactly as written by Handel. 362: Recorder A ...
Sonata Instrument Key signature Handel's sonata Sonata I Flute E minor Flute sonata in E minor (HWV 359b). This is the same sonata as Chrysander's Sonata I b. Sonata II Recorder G minor Recorder sonata in G minor (HWV 360). Sonata III Violin A major Violin sonata in A major (HWV 361). Sonata IV Recorder A minor Recorder sonata in A minor (HWV 362).
Rosary Sonatas; George Frideric Handel. Sonata for Violin and Continuo in D major (HWV 371) Élisabeth Jacquet de La Guerre. Sonatas (2), for violin, viola da gamba, and basso continuo (c. 1695) Sonatas (6), for violin and basso continuo (1707) Giuseppe Tartini. Devil's Trill Sonata; Arcangelo Corelli. Trio Sonatas op. 1–4; Domenico Scarlatti
Pages in category "Violin sonatas by George Frideric Handel" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The publication includes all the sonatas as published by Walsh in 1732; and those sonatas, as well as extras included by Chrysander, include the body of work that is known as Handel's "Opus 1". [1] In addition to the 15 sonatas indicated by the title of the publication, Chrysander appended the scores of four additional sonatas, making nineteen ...
The main source of the sonatas is the c. 1730 publication Sonates pour un traversiere un violin ou hautbois con basso continuo composées par G. F. Handel, allegedly by the Amsterdam publisher Jeanne Roger (who had died in December 1722), however the publication was made by the printer John Walsh.
The Sonata in C major (HWV 365), for recorder and basso continuo, was composed (probably before 1712) by George Frideric Handel.The work is also referred to as Opus 1 No. 7, and was first published in or shortly after 1726—in a collection of twelve sonatas titled Sonates pour un Traversiere un Violon ou Hautbois Con Basso Continuo Composées par G. F. Handel —purportedly in Amsterdam by ...
George Frideric Handel's operas comprise 42 musical dramas that were written between 1705 and 1741 in various genres.Though his large scale English language works written for the theatre are technically oratorios and not operas, several of them, such as Semele (1744), have become an important part of the opera repertoire.
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