Piano Sonata Op. 83 by Wolfgang Gabriel Piano Solo - Sheet Music

By Wolfgang Gabriel

Austrian composer Wolfgang Gabriel (1930-) wrote his Piano Sonata Op.83 for Kimberly Davenport in 2003. The two movement work utilizes the same two twelve-tone rows in both movements. Although structured with the twelve-tone rows, the work's language is quite accessible for performer and audience alike, featuring an opening slow movement which builds in dramatic intensity, and a quick second movement which builds in excitement. There are moderate technical challenges, but the would be an easy addition to the professional pianist's repertoire, and would make an excellent challenge for a high-school or college pianist. The composer's detailed explanation of the twelve-tone rows is included with the score, to aid in the performer's analysis and understanding of the work.

Print edition
$12.00
$15.00
You save: $3.00 ~ 20%

WELCOME20 activated

Ships in 4 to 6 weeks
Special order item, ships once received from publisher.
Quantity
1
Get a 10% discount with SMP Plus subscription

Details

Instrument:
Piano Solo
Genres:
Classical
Composers:
Wolfgang Gabriel
Publishers:
Alea Publishing
Format:
Score
Item types:
Physical
Musical forms:
Sonata
Artist:
Wolfgang Gabriel
Usages:
School and Community
Shipping Weight:
0.78 pounds

Solo piano

SKU: A7.ALEA1074

Composed by Wolfgang Gabriel. Classical. Score. Composed 2003. Duration 13 minutes. Alea Publishing #ALEA1074. Published by Alea Publishing (A7.ALEA1074).

Austrian composer Wolfgang Gabriel (1930-) wrote his Piano Sonata Op.83 for Kimberly Davenport in 2003. The two movement work utilizes the same two twelve-tone rows in both movements. Although structured with the twelve-tone rows, the work's language is quite accessible for performer and audience alike, featuring an opening slow movement which builds in dramatic intensity, and a quick second movement which builds in excitement. There are moderate technical challenges, but the would be an easy addition to the professional pianist's repertoire, and would make an excellent challenge for a high-school or college pianist. The composer's detailed explanation of the twelve-tone rows is included with the score, to aid in the performer's analysis and understanding of the work.