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Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky's Trio in A minor, Op. 50, was written in Rome between December 1881 and late January 1882. It is subtitled À la mémoire d’un grand artiste [In memory of a great artist], in reference to Nikolai Rubinstein, his close friend and mentor, who had died on 23 March 1881. It is scored for piano, violin, and cello.
Op. 1 Two Pieces for piano (1867) Scherzo à la russe in B ♭ major; Impromptu in E ♭ minor; Op. 2 Souvenir de Hapsal, 3 pieces for piano (1867) Op. 3 The Voyevoda, opera (1868) Op. 4 Valse-caprice in D major, for piano (1868) Op. 5 Romance in F minor, for piano (1868) Op. 6 6 Romances (1869), including "None but the lonely heart"
Beethoven – Piano trio No. 6 in E ♭ major, ii (C) [33] Beethoven – Violin Sonata No. 9, "Kreutzer", i (A) [34] Beethoven – Piano Quartet No. 1 in E ♭ WoO 36, i (and ii) (E ♭) [35] (although sometimes construed as two separate movements, they are not really separable as the first ends with a half-cadence leading into the second)
Piano Sonata in G major (Tchaikovsky) S. Scherzo à la russe (Tchaikovsky) The Seasons (Tchaikovsky) Souvenir de Hapsal This page was last edited on 29 June 2024, at ...
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky composed his Orchestral Suite No. 2 in C major, Op. 53, in 1883. It was premiered on February 16, 1884 at a Russian Musical Society concert in Moscow, conducted by Max Erdmannsdörfer .
The trio uses material Tchaikovsky had composed for an 1872 cantata to celebrate the bicentenary of the birth of Tsar Peter the Great. The entire movement has muted strings, and there is a trombone solo at the exposition before the trio and the recapitulation after the trio, the only appearance of the trombone in the symphony outside the first ...