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Summer Music (1917, orch. 1921, revised 1932) The Happy Forest (1922) The Tale the Pine Trees Knew (1931) Northern Ballad No. 1 (1927) Northern Ballad No. 2 (1934) Prelude for a Solemn Occasion (Northern Ballad No. 3) (1927, orch. 1933) A Legend (1944)
Prelude and Fugue in E flat major, no. 3. Op. 101 Fugatos from the organ works: Fantasia in D flat major for organ (1866) Op. 109 Preludes and Fugues for organ (1898) Salieri, Antonio. Concerto for organ and orchestra in C major (1773) Schumann, Robert. Six Studies in the Form of Canons for Organ, Op. 56 (1845) Four Sketches for Organ, Op. 58 ...
For instance, the Prelude and Fugue in E-flat major now became BWV 552, situated in the range of the works for organ. In contrast to other catalogues such as the Köchel catalogue for Mozart 's compositions there is no attempt at chronological organization in the BWV numbering, for instance BWV 992 is an early composition by Bach.
Major/minor compositions are musical compositions that begin in a major key and end in a minor key (generally the parallel minor), specifying the keynote (as C major/minor). This is a very unusual form in tonal music, [ 1 ] [ 2 ] although examples became more common in the nineteenth century. [ 3 ]
Other musical sequences went unused that Gershwin created for Delicious, as Fox Film Corporation declined to use the rest of his score. Second Rhapsody (1931), for piano and orchestra, part of which was used in Delicious in the Rhapsody in Rivets sequence (it has been a common misconception that the orchestral work was a subsequent expansion of ...
Below is a List of compositions by Bedřich Smetana sorted by genre, catalogue numbers, original and English titles. JB numbers are from Tematický katalog skladeb Bedřicha Smetany (Thematic Catalogue of Works by Bedřich Smetana) by Jiří Berkovec (Prague, 1999).
Keyboard works (Klavierwerke) by Johann Sebastian Bach traditionally refers to Chapter 8 in the BWV catalogue or the fifth series of the New Bach Edition, [1] both of which list compositions for a solo keyboard instrument like the harpsichord or the clavichord.
Scholars have seen in this work the origins of the solo keyboard concerto as it is the first example of a concerto with a solo keyboard part. [29] [30] An earlier version, BWV 1050a, exists, and has many small differences from its later cousin, but no major difference in structure or instrumentation. It is dated ca. 1720–21.