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Arabic Melody for cello and piano, Op. 4 No. 5; from Five Romances (songs) (1882–85) Elegy in D flat major for cello and piano (Une Pensee a F. Liszt), Op. 17 (1888) Two Pieces for cello and piano, Op. 20A (1888) (Melodie; Spanish Serenade) Chant du Ménestrel for cello and piano, Op. 71 (1900) Reinhold Glière. Ballade
According to the review aggregator Metacritic, Romantic Piano received "universal acclaim" based on a weighted average score of 85 out of 100 from seven critic scores. [3] Clash Music ' s Rae Niwa called this release "an experience of delicate beauty" that "seizes the undercurrents of our being to remember we are love" and scored this album an ...
12 Variations in E♭ major on the Romance "Je suis Lindor" from "Le Barbier de Seville" by Pierre Beaumarchais, music by Antoine-Laurent Baudron, K. 354 (Paris, 1778) 6 Variations in F major on the aria "Salve tu, Domine" from the opera "I filosofi immaginarii" by Giovanni Paisiello , K. 398 (Vienna, 1783)
The Ten Pieces (Finnish: Kymmenen kappaletta; in German: Zehn Stücke), [2] Op. 24, is a collection of compositions for piano written by the Finnish composer Jean Sibelius around the turn of the twentieth century, variously from 1895 to 1903. The most famous piece of the set is by far No. 9, the Romance in D-flat major.
This article lists compositions written for piano duo. The list includes works for piano four-hands and works for two pianos. Catalogue number and date of composition are also included. Ordering is by composer surname. A list of notable performers who played and recorded these works is at List of classical piano duos (performers).
Quel est, hélas! la tourmente que j’endure!, romance for voice and piano (Paris, c. 1800) Das Andenken (Matthison) for soprano soloist and piano (c. 1801–9) Der Brüder Graürock und die Pilgerin , cantata (?) for soprano soloist and piano (c. 1801–9)
In stark contrast to the Romance, the Danse hongroise, marked Vivace, is a brilliant and virtuosic show piece. At one point, the piano seems to echo an idea from the main theme of the Romance. [2] A performance takes approximately 11 minutes.
The Three Romances for Oboe and Piano, Op. 94 (German: Drei Romanzen) is a composition by Robert Schumann, his only composition for oboe. [1] It was composed in December 1849. The work consists of three short pieces in A-B-A form, and it was written during what was speculated to be one of Schumann's manic episodes .