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"Charlotte Sometimes" is a song by English rock band the Cure, recorded at producer Mike Hedges' Playground Studios and released as a non-album single on 9 October 1981 by Polydor Records, following the band's third studio album Faith. The titles and lyrics to both sides were based on the book Charlotte Sometimes by Penelope Farmer.
Piano Concerto in G minor may refer to: Piano Concerto No. 1 (Mendelssohn) Piano Concerto No. 2 (Saint-Saëns) Piano Concerto (Dvořák) Piano Concerto No. 2 (Prokofiev)
Piano Quintet in G minor (Sibelius) Piano Sonata No. 2 (Schumann) Piano Sonatas Nos. 19 and 20 (Beethoven) Piano Trio (Chopin) Piano Trio (Clara Schumann) Piano Trio in G minor (Smetana) Piano Trio No. 2 (Dvořák) Piano Trio No. 3 (Schumann) Polonaises, Op. posth. (Chopin) Prelude and Fugue in G minor, BWV 861; Prelude in G minor (Rachmaninoff)
Several works by different composers influenced Mendelssohn's composition of this piece. It is likely that Mendelssohn drew this unusual pairing of solo piano and violin from Johann Hummel's own Concerto for Piano, Violin, and Orchestra in G major, Op. 17, with whom he had briefly studied in 1821. [5]
Charlotte Sometimes, a 1969 children's book by Penelope Farmer "Charlotte Sometimes" (song), a 1981 song by The Cure, based on the book; Charlotte Sometimes, a 2002 independent film by Eric Byler, not related to the novel but title taken from the song; Charlotte Sometimes (musician), from 2008 to 2014 stage name of singer-songwriter Jessica ...
Philip Marlowe Concerto (Piano Concerto No. 2) Piano Concerto No. 2 for the left hand (in C minor and E-flat major) (Bortkiewicz) Piano Concerto No. 3 "Per aspera ad astra" (Sergei Bortkiewicz) Piano Concerto No. 1 (Arthur De Greef) Piano Concerto (Delius) Piano Concerto No. 1 (Concerto capriccioso) (Théodore Dubois)
“Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story” has one of the most complicated, and yet stylistically unified, scores of any series this year — Kris Bowers‘ original score, the 18th-century period ...
Mendelssohn's Piano Concerto No. 1 in G minor, Op. 25, was written in 1830–31, around the same time as his fourth symphony, and premiered in Munich on 17 October 1831. [1] This concerto was composed in Rome during a travel in Italy after the composer met the pianist Delphine von Schauroth in Munich.