Horn Concerto No. 2 in E flat major TrV 283 Urtext by Richard Strauss Orchestra - Sheet Music

By Richard Strauss

Richard Strauss composed his second horn concerto about 60 years after his first horn concerto, having recently considered that his actual creativity had come to an end with his opera Capriccio. The late work was just a "wrist exercise" and not by any means intended for publication during his lifetime, though it does not reveal the depressing circumstances of its genesis during World War II. In the key of E-flat major, with the classic three movements including a rondo finale, the concerto has is a reminiscence of its earlier sister work and seems like a nostalgic retrospect of his youth from an almost 80-year-old Strauss. Hans Pizka, editor of this work's first Urtext edition, has experienced the performance tradition and history of this concerto at first hand, both as a pupil of Gottfried von Freiberg, soloist of the world premiere, and also as the former solo hornist of the Bavarian State Opera in Munich.

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Details

Instrument:
Horn Solo
Ensembles:
Orchestra
Genres:
20th Century
Composers:
Richard Strauss
Publishers:
Breitkopf and Haertel
Series:
Breitkopf Score Library
ISBN:
9790004215890
Format:
Score
Item types:
Physical
Musical forms:
Concerto
Artist:
Richard Strauss
Usages:
School and Community
Number of Pages:
88
Size:
10 x 12.5 inches
Shipping Weight:
1.1 pounds

Horn and orchestra (solo: hn – 2.2.2.2 - 2.2.0.0 – timp – str)

SKU: BR.PB-15163

Urtext. Composed by Richard Strauss. Edited by Hans Pizka. Orchestra; Softbound. Partitur-Bibliothek (Score Library). Solo concerto; Early modern. Full score. 88 pages. Duration 20:00. Breitkopf and Haertel #PB 15163. Published by Breitkopf and Haertel (BR.PB-15163).

ISBN 9790004215890. 10 x 12.5 inches.

Richard Strauss composed his second horn concerto about 60 years after his first horn concerto, having recently considered that his actual creativity had come to an end with his opera Capriccio. The late work was just a "wrist exercise" and not by any means intended for publication during his lifetime, though it does not reveal the depressing circumstances of its genesis during World War II. In the key of E-flat major, with the classic three movements including a rondo finale, the concerto has is a reminiscence of its earlier sister work and seems like a nostalgic retrospect of his youth from an almost 80-year-old Strauss. Hans Pizka, editor of this work's first Urtext edition, has experienced the performance tradition and history of this concerto at first hand, both as a pupil of Gottfried von Freiberg, soloist of the world premiere, and also as the former solo hornist of the Bavarian State Opera in Munich.