For our Urtext edition of the Clarinet Sonata op. 167 we were able to consult the autograph for the first time. “At the moment I am putting my last ounce of energy into giving seldom considered instruments an opportunity to be heard”, Saint-Saëns wrote to a friend in April of the year he died. A sonata for oboe, one for clarinet and one for bassoon were thus composed; yet he was not to hear the premieres. As far as form and infl ection are concerned, the three wind sonatas op. 166 –168 hark back to the gallant style of the 18th century and thus approach the neoclassicism movement around 1920. Humour, wit and fine irony characterise these works for wind.
目录/详情
- Clarinet Sonata op. 167
前言
Camille Saint-Saëns (1835–1921) wrote a number of chamber works in unusual or at least uncommon scorings. Among them are not only the celebrated constellations of the Septet op. 65 (1890) for trumpet, stringed instruments and piano, and the Carnaval des animaux (1886) for stringed instruments, flute, clarinet, harmonica, xylophone and two pianos, but also many duos such as … 更多
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Camille Saint-Saëns
Saint-Saëns was one of the most multifaceted musicians of the second half of the nineteenth century in France. Regarded as a Classicist, he also wrote pieces with an Impressionist character to their sound, and one composition in quarter-tones. As a critic and essayist he was involved in the first complete editions of Rameau’s and Gluck’s works.
1835 | Born in Paris on October 9. Early comprehensive education. |
1848–52 | Studies at the Conservatoire de Paris. |
1853 | Organist at St. Merry Church in Paris. |
1853–59 | First large-scale works: Symphony No. 1, Op. 2 (1853), and No. 2, Op. 55 (1859); Piano Concerto No. 1, Op. 17 (1858); Violin Concerto No. 1, Op. 20 (1859); Mass, Op. 4 (1856); he attempts to arrive at unique forms. |
1857–77 | Organist at La Madeleine in Paris. |
1861–65 | He teaches at the École de Musique Classique et Religieuse Niedermeyer. |
1871 | Founding of the Société Nationale de musique. |
1871–77 | Composition of symphonic poems “Le rouet d’Omphale” (“The Wheel of Omphale,” 1871), “Phaéton” (1873), “Danse macabre” (1874), “La jeunesse d’Hercule” (1877). |
1876 | Attends the performance of the Ring in Bayreuth. |
1877 | Performance in Weimar of his opera “Samson et Dalila.” |
1881 | Member of the Académie des Beaux-Arts. |
1883 | Performance in Paris of his opera “Henry VIII.” |
1885 | Publication of the treatise “Harmonie et mélodie.” |
1886 | Performance in London of his Organ Symphony (Symphony No. 3 in C minor): major work with thematic transformation after Liszt’s model. Composition of “The Carnival of the Animals,” the publication of which he forbade during his lifetime. |
1899 | Publication of the book “Portraits et souvenirs.” |
1900 | Cantata “Le feu celeste” in praise of electricity, for the opening of the Exposition Universelle. |
1921 | Death in Algiers on December 16. |