Serenade 6 Easy Pieces for Clarinet and Piano Clarinet Solo - Sheet Music

Ivan Müller was born in Reval, Russia (now Tallinin, Estonia) on December 3, 1786, and died in Bückeburg (Germany) in 1854. In 1808-09 he performed widely as a clarinet virtuoso in Berlin, Leipzig, Wien, Paris and many other places where he also presented the new 'clarinette omnitonique' in B flat which he had invented. That system of keys used in Germany to this day is based on Müllers invention. As a composer Müller was an exponent of the early Romantic style and wrote numerous concertos for his chosen instrument as well as this Serenade for Clarinet and Piano (or Harp or Guitar). The editor Dieter Klöcker writes: ″These rather beautiful and accessible Romantic miniatures enjoyed great popularity in their day and I assume that even today they will meet with the approval of professional and amateur players alike.″

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Details

Instrument:
Piano Accompaniment Clarinet Solo
Genres:
Classical
Publishers:
Schott Music
UPC:
073999614947
ISBN:
9790001123853
Item types:
Physical
Level:
Beginning Intermediate
Usages:
School and Community
Number of Pages:
28
Size:
9.0x12.0x0.105 inches
Shipping Weight:
0.38 pounds

Clarinet; Piano - easy to intermediate

SKU: HL.49011073

6 Easy Pieces for Clarinet and Piano. Composed by Ivan Müller. Edited by Dieter Kloecker. Arranged by Dieter Klöcker. This edition: Saddle stitching. Sheet music. Klarinetten-Bibliothek (Clarinet Library). Classical. 28 pages. Schott Music #KLB46. Published by Schott Music (HL.49011073).

ISBN 9790001123853. UPC: 073999614947. 9.0x12.0x0.105 inches.

Ivan Müller was born in Reval, Russia (now Tallinin, Estonia) on December 3, 1786, and died in Bückeburg (Germany) in 1854. In 1808-09 he performed widely as a clarinet virtuoso in Berlin, Leipzig, Wien, Paris and many other places where he also presented the new 'clarinette omnitonique' in B flat which he had invented. That system of keys used in Germany to this day is based on Müllers invention. As a composer Müller was an exponent of the early Romantic style and wrote numerous concertos for his chosen instrument as well as this Serenade for Clarinet and Piano (or Harp or Guitar). The editor Dieter Klöcker writes: ″These rather beautiful and accessible Romantic miniatures enjoyed great popularity in their day and I assume that even today they will meet with the approval of professional and amateur players alike.″.