Barcarole in G Major, Op. 135, No. 1 from 6 Salon Pieces Violin and Piano by Louis Spohr Violin Solo - Sheet Music

By Louis Spohr

Even as a child, the composer, violinist and teacher Louis Spohr caused a furore with his musical talent, and very soon his reputation as a brilliant violin virtuoso preceded him. On his numerous concert tours through the whole of Europe, he played time and again the concertos he had composed for his instrument or played his own works in smaller ensembles. Apart from these 'serious' chamber music works, i.e. sonatas, trios, quartets, etc., Spohr also wrote a number of salon pieces: the first series with six titles as opus 127 and the second as opus 135 which opens with the 'Barcarole in G major' presented here. The success of the salon pieces must have been great, and the composer liked to perform these pieces himself.

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Details

Instrument:
Piano Accompaniment Violin Solo
Genres:
Classical Period Romantic Period
Composers:
Louis Spohr
Publishers:
Schott Music
UPC:
841886011601
ISBN:
9790001153027
Format:
Collection / Songbook
Item types:
Physical
Level:
Intermediate
Artist:
Louis Spohr
Usages:
School and Community
Size:
9.0x12.0x0.058 inches
Number of Pages:
16
Shipping Weight:
0.24 pounds

Piano Accompaniment; Violin - intermediate

SKU: HL.49017669

From 6 Salon Pieces Violin and Piano. Composed by Louis Spohr. Edited by Maria Egelhof. This edition: Saddle stitching. Sheet music. String. Classical. Softcover. Op. 135/1. 16 pages. Schott Music #VLB129. Published by Schott Music (HL.49017669).

ISBN 9790001153027. UPC: 841886011601. 9.0x12.0x0.058 inches.

Even as a child, the composer, violinist and teacher Louis Spohr caused a furore with his musical talent, and very soon his reputation as a brilliant violin virtuoso preceded him. On his numerous concert tours through the whole of Europe, he played time and again the concertos he had composed for his instrument or played his own works in smaller ensembles. Apart from these 'serious' chamber music works, i.e. sonatas, trios, quartets, etc., Spohr also wrote a number of salon pieces: the first series with six titles as opus 127 and the second as opus 135 which opens with the 'Barcarole in G major' presented here. The success of the salon pieces must have been great, and the composer liked to perform these pieces himself.