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The Wealth of Nations was the product of seventeen years of notes and earlier studies, as well as an observation of conversation among economists of the time (like Nicholas Magens) concerning economic and societal conditions during the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, and it took Smith some ten years to produce. [8]
Concerto for cello No. 3 for solo cello (1965) Granville Bantock. Sonata in G minor (1924) Rami Bar-Niv. Improvisation; Arnold Bax. Rhapsodic Ballad (1939) [2] Sally Beamish. Gala Water for solo cello (1988) [3] The Wise Maid [3] Conrad Beck. Epigrams (for Paul Sacher) Grant Beglarian. Elegy for Cellist for solo cello (1979) Paul Ben-Haim ...
Serenade for cello and piano (1941) 3 – 4 – J ("Three for Jay") for cello and piano (1960) Suite for the Young 'Cellist for cello and piano (1961) Kol Nidre for cello and piano (1970) Lament II for cello and piano (1983) Andriy Shtoharenko. Sonata for cello and piano; Jean Sibelius. Malinconia Op.20 (1900) Cantique & Devotion op.77 (1915)
for violin, cello and piano: Op. 15; revised 1857, B. 104 Chamber music: 1:105: 116: 1876: Smyčcový kvartet č. 1 „Z mého života“ String Quartet No.1 "From My Life" (Aus meinem Leben) E minor: for 2 violins, viola and cello Chamber music: 1:118: 128: 1879–1880: Z domoviny: From My Homeland (Aus der Heimat), 2 Pieces: A major G minor ...
Concertino "In dich hab' ich gehoffet, Herr" for cello and organ; Zsolt Gárdonyi. Variations on a Hungarian Chorale; Lothar Graap "Befiehl du deine Wege", Variations for cello and organ "Hinunter ist der Sonne Schein", Chorale suite for cello and organ; Percy Grainger. The Nightingale; Sofia Gubaidulina. In Croce; René Guillou. Adagio ...
Franklin Thomas Grant Richards (21 October 1872 – 24 February 1948) was a British publisher and writer. After creating his own publishing firm at the age of just 24 years old, [1] he launched The World's Classics series (still published by Oxford University Press as Oxford World's Classics) and published writers such as George Bernard Shaw, A. E. Housman, Samuel Butler and James Joyce. [2]
Bert Hagels in his notes speculates that when Ries composed this sonata he was influenced in some way by Beethoven's Op. 69 cello sonata which was in the same key and was being composed around the same time as Ries was working on this sonata, citing common stylistic elements in the opening movement as evidence. [4]
Strauss completed the first version of the Cello Sonata on 5 May 1881. [2] His sister Johanna was a good friend of Dora Wihan, a talented pianist and wife of the cellist Hanuš Wihan (he was known by the first name Hans in Germany), who played in the Munich Court orchestra along with Richard's father Franz.