Opus 6 by Bela BARTOK
14 BAGATELLEN fur Klavier - 14 BAGATELLES for piano - 14 BAGATELL zongorara
Opus 6 de Bela BARTOK
This is one of Bartók's most famous series of piano pieces, whose fame is probably greater than either its popularity with pianists, or the frequency with which it occurs on concert programmes. When it was written [in 1908] it triggered sensation and scandal in musical circles. The series as a whole (its Hungarian title was originally 14 zongoradarab [14 piano pieces], Bartók later converting to the use of the word bagatelle in Hungarian too) is not a true cyclic composition that can only be played in its entirety and with movements in the original order, but rather a more loosely ordered collection, an anthology. Some of the pieces belong together. But the varied succession of tempos and characters, the 'Gradus ad Parnassum' principle, generally proceeding from the easier towards the technically or musically more difficult, could also be a reason for the volume's ordering.
Contents :
1. Molto sostenuto
2. Allegro giocoso
3. Andante
4. Grave
5. Vivo
6. Lento
7. Allegretto molto capriccioso
8. Andante sostenuto
9. Allegretto grazioso
10. Allegro
11. Allegretto molto rubato
12. Rubato
13. Lento funebre (Elle est morte - - -)
14. Valse (Ma mie qui danse - -)
Langue : Hungarian, English, German
48 pages
Publié en 1953 par Peter BARTOK
Edition : Editio Musica Budapest (EMB)
Opus 6 by Bela BARTOK