
| Product Code: | 979-0-004-81040-8 |
| ISMN: | 979-0-004-81040-8 |
| Publishers Number: | EB 3326D |
| Page count: | 12 |
| Condition: | New |
Young cellists from throughout Europe followed the pilgrim path to Leipzig in order to receive instruction from him. He toured Germany and Europe as a celebrated virtuoso and member of the Gewandhaus String Quartet but he always felt rested in Leipzig. He was born in Leipzig on September 24, 1859, and died there on October 17, 1933, and the city was the center of his artistic life.
Klengel embodied the spirit of Leipzig as a music city in its good points and on its less favorable side. When Klengel’s Cello Concerto No. 4 was printed in 1903, the “Allgemeine Musik-Zeitung” emphasized with praise those qualities that one could describe as “Leipzig virtues”: “It is a lively piece of music, saturated with temperament and melodiousness. Its great advantage over many other pieces of the same genre is that it is not only virtuoso music but also an extraordinarily fine piece of work in which the composer again shows that in his case virtuosity as a means to an end always has to subordinate itself to his thorough musical training.”
Of course, Klengel also wrote virtuoso music, a couple of little bravura pieces for cello. For the ensemble playing of his students he composed several works for four cellos and the “Hymn” for twelve Cellos still popular today. Among the larger genres he wrote four cello concertos, double concertos for two cellos and for violin and cello, a serenade for string orchestra, two string quartets, a sextet, and a piano trio.
(Peter Sarkar, translated by Susan Marie Praeder, from the booklet to “Klengel – Cello Concertos”, CD cpo, 2001)
The famous Leipzig cello virtuoso Julius Klengel filled a true market gap a hundred years ago with his Children’s Trios Op. 35 and 39: chamber music so…
Klengel’s Children’s Trio Op. 35/2, an “only child” in the Breitkopf and Haertel catalogue added in 1993, has cheerfully welcomed three new siblings into the family. Two pieces from Opus 35 and two from Opus 39 now help budding string players and pianists discover the pleasure of ensemble playing with some rewarding music.
R.R.P 13
Our Price: 11
Digital Download – PDF
Please create and forward a copy of this publication to the customer
Your basket is currently empty!
Notifications
