Le Carnaval des Animaux (Carnival of the Animals) Piano Solo Transcription by Camille Saint-Saens Piano Solo - Sheet Music

By Camille Saint-Saens

Le Carnaval des animaux was conceived in a small Austrian village, while Camille Saint-Saëns was working on his 3rd Symphony with organ, opus 78. Afraid that this humoristic fantasy could cause his oeuvre to be taken less seriously and harm his reputation, he forbade its being published during his lifetime. “Grande Fantaisie zoologique” is composed of 14 movements and the instrumental ensamble of the original version included two pianos, two violins, viola, cello, double bass, flute, clarinet, glass harmonica [celesta] and xylophone. The Final is the only movement in which all instruments play together. Lucien Garban, official arrenger ARRANGER of Éditions Durand, was responsible for numerous arrangements of the Carnaval des animaux, notably a version for solo piano that was realised in several stages but released in its entirety in 1951; while in 1922 realised the 4-hand piano transcription. Introduction and notes on interpretation in French and English by Edmond Lemaître. New engraving.

Print edition
$15.99
$19.99
You save: $4.00 ~ 20%

WELCOME20 activated

In Stock
Usually ships within 24 hours.
Quantity save 5% on 2 or more
1
Get a 10% discount with SMP Plus subscription

Details

Instrument:
Piano Solo
Genres:
Classical
Composers:
Camille Saint-Saens
Publishers:
Editions Durand
UPC:
196288329183
EAN:
9798350153415
Format:
Collection / Songbook
Item types:
Physical
Artist:
Camille Saint-Saens
Usages:
School and Community
Size:
9.0x12.0x0.17 inches
Number of Pages:
52
Shipping Weight:
0.64 pounds

Piano Solo Transcription Piano Solo

SKU: HL.50607201

(Carnival of the Animals) Piano Solo Transcription. Composed by Camille Saint-Saens. Piano. Classical, Transcription. Softcover. 52 pages. Editions Durand #DF01688700. Published by Editions Durand (HL.50607201).

UPC: 196288329183. 9.0x12.0x0.17 inches.

Le Carnaval des animaux was conceived in a small Austrian village, while Camille Saint-Saëns was working on his 3rd Symphony with organ, opus 78. Afraid that this humoristic fantasy could cause his oeuvre to be taken less seriously and harm his reputation, he forbade its being published during his lifetime. “Grande Fantaisie zoologique” is composed of 14 movements and the instrumental ensamble of the original version included two pianos, two violins, viola, cello, double bass, flute, clarinet, glass harmonica [celesta] and xylophone. The Final is the only movement in which all instruments play together. Lucien Garban, official arrenger ARRANGER of Éditions Durand, was responsible for numerous arrangements of the Carnaval des animaux, notably a version for solo piano that was realised in several stages but released in its entirety in 1951; while in 1922 realised the 4-hand piano transcription. Introduction and notes on interpretation in French and English by Edmond Lemaître. New engraving.