Complete Works (JSW) Symphonie Nr. 3 C-dur op. 52 by Jean Sibelius Orchestra - Sheet Music

By Jean Sibelius

If Jean Sibelius really did call his Third Symphony his "most unfortunate child," he was perhaps thinking not only of the work's hesitant reception, but also of its difficult birth. Sibelius began the piece in 1904, but then stopped and only resumed work on his not very detailed sketches in 1906/07. He kept making alterations until the final rehearsal and up to the premiere. Yet even then he had not yet attained the final form of the Third, as Timo Virtanen has shown. The editor who is also the editorial director of the Sibelius Complete Edition recently published his dissertation on the Third Symphony, in which he devoted much space to the origin and the sketches. He was thus practically predestined to review all the various sources and present the work within the Complete Edition as the "Fassung letzer Hand," or definitive version.

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Details

Ensembles:
Orchestra
Genres:
Romantic Period 20th Century Scandinavian
Composers:
Jean Sibelius
Publishers:
Breitkopf and Haertel
ISBN:
9790004802823
Item types:
Physical
Musical forms:
Symphony
Artist:
Jean Sibelius
Usages:
School and Community
Number of Pages:
208
Size:
10 x 12.5 inches
Shipping Weight:
3.2 pounds

Orchestra

SKU: BR.SON-611

Symphonie Nr. 3 C-dur op. 52. Composed by Jean Sibelius. Edited by Timo Virtanen. Linen. Complete Works.

The definitive version of Sibelius' Third

Late-romantic; Early modern. Complete Works. 208 pages. Breitkopf and Haertel #SON 611. Published by Breitkopf and Haertel (BR.SON-611).

ISBN 9790004802823. 10 x 12.5 inches.

If Jean Sibelius really did call his Third Symphony his "most unfortunate child," he was perhaps thinking not only of the work's hesitant reception, but also of its difficult birth. Sibelius began the piece in 1904, but then stopped and only resumed work on his not very detailed sketches in 1906/07. He kept making alterations until the final rehearsal and up to the premiere. Yet even then he had not yet attained the final form of the Third, as Timo Virtanen has shown. The editor who is also the editorial director of the Sibelius Complete Edition recently published his dissertation on the Third Symphony, in which he devoted much space to the origin and the sketches. He was thus practically predestined to review all the various sources and present the work within the Complete Edition as the "Fassung letzer Hand," or definitive version.