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Difficulty (Explanation)
Other titles of this difficulty
Piano Concerto G major
7 difficult

About the Composer

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Maurice Ravel

Together with Satie and Debussy, Ravel numbers among the innovators who had a falling out with academic education and created their own avant-garde tonal languages – inspired, in Ravel’s case, by Russian and Spanish music, but also by exoticism – without abandoning tonality. This master of orchestration begins with piano works, which he orchestrates; songs with piano and piano compositions exist on an equal footing in orchestral versions.

1875Born in Ciboure on March 7; the family moves to Paris that same year.
1882Lessons in piano, theory, and composition.
1889Beginning of his studies at the Conservatoire de Paris, from which he will never graduate.around 1893 Influence of Chabrier and Satie.
1901“Jeux d’eau” for piano, in a new “Impressionist” tonal language, as is “Miroirs” (1904–05).
1903“Shéhérazade” for voice and piano/orchestral accompaniment with orientalist tonal elements.
1905Scandal surrounding Ravel’s third application for the Prix de Rome.
1907Premiere of the “Histoires naturelles” after Jules Renard provokes astonishment in audiences and critics.
1907–08Rhapsodie espagnole for orchestra.
1908/10“Ma mère l’oye” (“Mother Goose”) for piano, four-hands, as a ballet in 1911.
1911Premiere in Paris of his opera “L’Heure espagnole.”
1911/12“Valses nobles et sentimentales” for piano/orchestra. Premiere of the ballet “Daphnis et Chloé” in 1912.
1914/19“Le tombeau de Couperin” for piano/orchestra anticipates the coming neoclassicism.
from 1920Many concert tours through Europe and the United States.
1925Premiere of his opera “L’Enfant et les sortilèges.”
1928Conferral of an honorary doctorate from Oxford University. “Bolero” for orchestra.
1929–31Piano Concerto in G major with elements of jazz.
1937Death in Paris on December 28.

© 2003, 2010 Philipp Reclam jun. GmbH & Co. KG, Stuttgart

About the Authors

Peter Jost (Editor)

Dr. Peter Jost, born in 1960 in Diefflen/Saar, read musicology, German and comparative studies at Saarland University in Saarbrücken. He did his PhD in 1988 with a thesis on Robert Schumann’s Waldszenen.

From November 1991 to April 2009 he was a research associate at the Richard Wagner Complete Edition in Munich, and since May 2009 has been an editor at G. Henle Publishers. His Urtext editions comprise predominantly French music of the 19th and 20th centuries, including works by Lalo, Saint-Saëns and Ravel.

Pascal Rogé (Fingering)

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Johannes Umbreit (Piano reduction)

Prof. Johannes Umbreit studied the piano at the Musikhochschule in Munich. From 1987 onwards he was a regular accompanist at courses given by Wolfgang Schneiderhan, Thomas Brandis, Ljerko Spiller, Igor Ozim, Olga Woitowa, Ernő Sebestyén, Walter Nothas, F. Andrejevsky, Denis Zsigmondy and Zakhar Bron amongst others. He has appeared in numerous radio and TV broadcasts and plays chamber music with members of the Bavarian State Orchestra, the Munich Philharmonic Orchestra and the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra.

He is on the jury of different international competitions and has been invited to several international music festivals. Umbreit was a teacher for almost ten years at the Musikhochschule in Munich and at the same time a lecturer for chamber music and piano accompaniment at the Richard Strauss Conservatory. Since 2008 he has been a lecturer at the Hochschule für Musik und Theater München. As the long-serving managing director of the Richard-Strauss-Gesellschaft, he was made an honorary member of the board in 2009. In May 2011, the Bavarian Minister of Culture appointed Johannes Umbreit an honorary professor of the Hochschule für Musik und Theater München on the suggestion of its academic senate.

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