Busoni’s father was a clarinettist who had published a clarinet method in 1883; his mother was a pianist. Thus it is no coincidence that child prodigy Ferruccio Busoni, born in 1866, composed a series of works for clarinet, usually with piano accompaniment, between 1877 and 1879. They include the Early Character Pieces for clarinet and piano, published in this Henle Urtext edition for the first time. Our edition is based on the autograph, which Busoni probably wrote with the aid of his parents. Pianist and pedagogue Klaus Schilde supplies the fingerings.
Content/Details
- Andante con moto K 72
- Suite K 88
- Solo dramatique K 101
- Andantino K 107
- Serenade K 108
- Novelette K 116
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Preface
Among the earliest surviving juvenile compositions by Ferruccio Busoni (1866–1924) is a series of pieces for the clarinet, most of them with piano accompaniment. He had good cause to write them: his father Ferdinando Busoni was a clarinettist who wrote a Scuola per il clarinetto in 1883 and made a reputation for himself by undertaking concert tours in Italy and abroad; his … more
Critical Commentary
About the composer

Ferruccio Busoni
Important composer, pianist, conductor, and music essayist who advocated for classicality and classicism in a mode of thought aligned with progress. In addition, he adapted and transcribed quite a few works, especially those of Johann Sebastian Bach.
1866 | Born in Empoli on April 1, the son of a clarinetist and a pianist. His parents foster his musical education. Prodigy: early career as a pianist. |
1887 | String Quartet in D minor, Op. 26. |
from 1888 | Piano instructor in Helsinki, Moscow, and Boston. |
1890 | Participates in the piano and composition categories of the Rubinstein Competition in St. Petersburg with his Sonata No. 1 in E minor, for violin and piano, Op. 29; the Two Pieces for Piano, Op. 30a; and Konzertstück for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 31a. This last piece wins the first prize in composition. |
1894 | Moves to Berlin. |
1897/1904 | Comedy Overture, Op. 38. |
1903–04 | Concerto, Op. 39, for piano, orchestra, and male choir in five movements with a concluding choral movement. |
1907 | Essay: “Sketch of a New Esthetic of Music.” |
1909 | “Berceuse élégiaque,” Op. 42. |
1909–10 | Second tour of America. |
1910 | “Fantasia contrappuntistica” for piano as an attempt to find a conclusion for Bach’s “Art of Fugue.” |
1912 | Performance in Hamburg of his opera “Die Brautwahl” (“The Bridal Choice”). |
1913 | Director of the Liceo Musicale in Bologna. |
1915 | Rondò arlecchinesco, Op. 46. |
1915–20 | Living in Zurich, due to the war. |
1917 | Performances in Zurich of his operas “Turandot” and “Arlecchino”; they draw upon the Commedia dell’arte. |
1920 | Director of a master class at the Prussian Arts Academy in Berlin. Tanzwalzer, Op. 53.1922 Essay “On the Unity of Music.” |
1924 | Dies in Berlin on July 27. |
1925 | Posthumous performance in Dresden of his opera “Doktor Faust.” |