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Lift (2013) for solo cello, premiered at MIT (written for Jennifer Kloetzel) Cricket the Fiddler (2020), commissioned by Jennifer Kloetzel, solo cello, premiered online October 2020, ca 8’ Cloud Forest (2015) solo cello, 8 minutes, commissioned by Rhonda Rider; Peter Ruzicka. Sonata, Op. 9 (1969) Stille Four Epilogues (1976)
He is best known as "The Cello Guy" [1] [2] of the classical new-age musical group The Piano Guys, with whom he has released eight number-one albums and dozens of music videos. He also has three solo albums to his credit. He is considered a pioneer in "cello-percussion", which enhances traditional cello playing with pizzicato and percussive ...
Sonatina for cello and piano originally for piano (1915) (arr. Varga) Rami Bar-Niv. Improvisation for cello solo (5 min) (1997) Improvisation for cello and piano (11 min) (2001) Longing for my Father – 7 songs without words for cello and piano (26 min) (2002) Blue-Rag for cello and piano (5 min) (1998)
The quintessential Christmas crush song, Mariah Carey's "All I Want for Christmas Is You" finally hit No. 1 in 2019—25 years after its initial release! 2. Nat King Cole, "The Christmas Song"
The first live performance was held in December 2016, at the Sydney (Australia) Opera House and is available on DVD. 2CELLOS' fifth album, Let There Be Cello, was released in 2018. After 2CELLOS' 2019 US tour, the duo took a one-year break, to work on solo classical albums for Sony Music and to tour individually.
Cello Concerto No. 1, for solo cello, 17 wind instruments, percussion, and harmonium (1963) (Also orchestrated by Dmitri Shostakovich in 1969) Cello Concerto No. 2, for solo cello, 48 cellos, 12 double-basses, and percussion (1969, arranged for orchestra in 1979) Antoine Tisné. Cello Concerto (1965) Juro Tkalčić. Cello Concerto (1922) Ernst Toch
Cello Concerto No. 4 in D major (spurious, written by Giovanni Battista Costanzi) Cello Concerto No. 5 in C major (spurious, written by David Popper) [1] Cello Concerto in G minor (doubtful, lost) Paul Hindemith. Cello Concerto in E-flat major, Op. 3 (1916) Kammermusik No. 3 for cello and 10 instruments, Op. 36/2 (1925) Cello Concerto in G (1940)
Quixotic solo cello episodes lead to a joyful coda based on the 'lung' music, but now with a solo cello line. Finally the kinetic energy burns itself out gently, the rapid movement slows down and the cello line climbs slowly up to a stratospherically high b-flat, two centimetres to the left from the highest note of the piano." [1]