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The musical Cross Road, premiered 2022 and revived 2024, features Niccolo Paganini as a main character, played by Hiroki Aiba (2022 and 2024), Kenta Mizue (2022), and Kento Kinouchi (2024). [32] The story is about his making a contract with the Devil of Music, Amduscias , played by Akinori Nakagawa in both productions.
Caprice No. 13, nicknamed Devil's Laughter or Devil's Chuckle, [1] is one of Niccolò Paganini's renowned 24 Caprices for Solo Violin. It is the only one of the suite that is in the key of B-flat major. [2] This solo violin piece starts out with scale-like double-stopped passages at a moderate speed.
Caprice No. 5 is one of 24 caprices for solo violin composed by virtuoso violinist Niccolò Paganini in the early 19th century. The piece is known for its fast tempo and technical difficulty. Paganini is said to have been able to play it on one string, but there is no evidence to support or refute this. [1]
Gregor Piatigorsky – Variations on a Paganini Theme, for cello and orchestra (1946), later arranged for cello and piano; Simon Proctor – Paganini Metamorphasis, for solo piano; Frank Proto – Capriccio di Niccolo for Trumpet and Orchestra (1994). Nine Variants on Paganini for Double Bass and Orchestra, also for Double Bass and Piano (2001).
Niccolò Paganini. The 24 Caprices for Solo Violin were written in groups (seven, five and twelve) by Niccolò Paganini between 1802 and 1817. They are also designated as M.S. 25 in Maria Rosa Moretti's and Anna Sorrento's Catalogo tematico delle musiche di Niccolò Paganini which was published in 1982.
Caprice No. 16 in G Minor is one of Niccolò Paganini's 24 Caprices. [1] The meter is triple meter. The caprice consists of a continuous stream of 16th notes. The duration is approximately one and a half minutes.
Paganini presented the copy to his only student, Camillo Sivori, who would later bequeath the instrument to the Municipality of Genoa, where it now is exhibited with the original Il Cannone. [2] [3] Il Cannone is exhibited alongside other Paganini memorabilia within the Paganini room of the Palazzo Doria-Tursi, the Genoa town hall.
Nicolò Paganini may refer to: Niccolò Paganini (1782–1840), Italian composer Nicolò Paganini's numbers (c. 1850–?), Italian mathematician who found a pair of amicable numbers