Franz Schubert‘s piano music is almost an infinitely magical wonderland. As is well known, he can modulate amazingly to the most harmonically remote regions within a minimum amount of space – and back again. So also in the much-played Impromptu in A-flat major D 935, No. 2. Its middle section in D-flat major has always been one of my absolute favourite Schubert passages. A pleasurable shiver runs down my spine every time the gentle triplet section begins with its hidden melody: Continue reading
Search
Subscribe2
-
Recent Posts
- “My obsession with improvement is a chronic, incurable affliction”. On Liszt’s Piano Concerto No. 2
- New year, new luck: Welcome Sebastian Lee!
- Christmas Blog
- Mozart’s last piano concerto – re-encountering a classic
- Arcis meets Alexander – Glazunov’s saxophone quartet finally in a reliable Urtext edition
Tags
accidentals arrangements autograph Bach Bartók Beethoven Brahms Carnival Chopin Christmas clarinet Complete Edition Debussy Double bass Dvorak Fauré fingering first edition genesis Haydn horn instrumentation Liszt Mendelssohn Mozart notation piano piano concerto piano sonata Rachmaninoff Ravel revision Saint-Saëns Satie Schubert Schumann Scriabin string quartet urtext variant reading variants variations versions viola Violin Sonata




Even though recently the focus of attention owing to their anniversaries has been on composers like Debussy, Beethoven or currently Saint-Saëns, Antonín Dvořák seems to me to be the secret luminary in the Henle programme. Since 2015, no fewer than eleven new Urtext editions of his works have been published by our publishing house, amongst them, many large and central works of his oeuvre such as the late String Quartets opp. 96, 105 und 106, the Piano Quintet op. 81, the Piano Trio op. 65 and the Humoresques for piano op. 101. Our new edition of the Wind Serenade in d minor op. 44 (


