Six Sonatas for Cembalo by Lou Harrison Chamber Music - Sheet Music

By Lou Harrison

Along with my Mass and one or two other works, my Six Sonatas for Cembalo or Pianoforte are Mission-style pieces. They were directly stimulated by my studies about and feelings for the land, peoples, and history of California. Indeed, they are a part of the "Regionalist" school of thought that was so prevalent and, for a young person, stimulating in the 1930's. These Six Sonatas reflect the romance and geometry of impassioned Spain, as well as the pastoral Indian imagery of native America in its Western life. The artistic model was, of course, Scarlatti and Manuel de Falla. The collection was first published by Henry Cowell's wondrous New Music Edition. It received wide distribution through the cultural offices of the United States Government abroad and became recommended teaching material within the country. Either in part or entire these sonatas have been played by Sylvia Marlowe, Ralph Kirkpatrick, and a number of other harpsichordists. By "cembalo" I mean the plucking string keyboards. While the two keyboards of a French classic clavecin or large German or English instrument might be very useful, I have heard these works played very beautifully and satisJyingly on tiny single manual instruments. Nowadays, thank Heavens, serious harpsichordists are concerned with fine intonation for their instrument and are exploring the necessary historical tunings and temperaments for the 17th and 18th century European repertoire. I heartily applaud this most musical development and suggest for these sonatas, for those who know how to tune them: 1. A standard quarter-comma Meantone Temperament; 2. Kirnberger's Well Temperament; 3. Werkmeister's Third Temperament; or 4. The Earl of Stanhope's Well Temperament.. I would like to thank harpsichordist and editor Susan Summerfield for her many suggestions on ornamentation, articulation and registration for the sonatas. --Lou Harrison

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Details

Instrument:
Harpsichord Cembalo
Ensembles:
Chamber Music
Genres:
20th Century
Composers:
Lou Harrison
Publishers:
Peermusic Classical
UPC:
680160425440
Format:
Score
Item types:
Physical
Musical forms:
Sonata
Artist:
Lou Harrison
Usages:
School and Community
Shipping Weight:
0.18 pounds

Chamber Music Harpsichord

SKU: PR.611295350

Composed by Lou Harrison. This edition: saddle-wire stitch. Sws. Score. With Standard notation. Peermusic Classical #61129-535. Published by Peermusic Classical (PR.611295350).

UPC: 680160425440.

Along with my Mass and one or two other works, my Six Sonatas for Cembalo or Pianoforte are Mission-style pieces. They were directly stimulated by my studies about and feelings for the land, peoples, and history of California. Indeed, they are a part of the "Regionalist" school of thought that was so prevalent and, for a young person, stimulating in the 1930's. These Six Sonatas reflect the romance and geometry of impassioned Spain, as well as the pastoral Indian imagery of native America in its Western life. The artistic model was, of course, Scarlatti and Manuel de Falla. The collection was first published by Henry Cowell's wondrous New Music Edition. It received wide distribution through the cultural offices of the United States Government abroad and became recommended teaching material within the country. Either in part or entire these sonatas have been played by Sylvia Marlowe, Ralph Kirkpatrick, and a number of other harpsichordists. By "cembalo" I mean the plucking string keyboards. While the two keyboards of a French classic clavecin or large German or English instrument might be very useful, I have heard these works played very beautifully and satisJyingly on tiny single manual instruments. Nowadays, thank Heavens, serious harpsichordists are concerned with fine intonation for their instrument and are exploring the necessary historical tunings and temperaments for the 17th and 18th century European repertoire. I heartily applaud this most musical development and suggest for these sonatas, for those who know how to tune them: 1. A standard quarter-comma Meantone Temperament; 2. Kirnberger's Well Temperament; 3. Werkmeister's Third Temperament; or 4. The Earl of Stanhope's Well Temperament.. I would like to thank harpsichordist and editor Susan Summerfield for her many suggestions on ornamentation, articulation and registration for the sonatas. --Lou Harrison.