Ludwig van Beethoven
Menuet En Sol
Ludwig van Beethoven
Menuet En Sol
- Instrumentation Piano
- Composer Ludwig van Beethoven
- Edition Sheet Music
- Publisher Editions Bourgès R.
- Order no. EBRA032
Description:
The ANACROUSE collection offers novice and experienced pianists alike a wide choice of classical works, from the Renaissance to the modern era.
We have set ourselves the goal of offering both "must-haves" from the classical repertoire and pieces by sometimes forgotten composers, all of undeniable pedagogical value. Each piece, sold individually, has been the subject of careful editorial work, both in terms of the musical text and its engraving, in order to guarantee musicians the conditions indispensable to the pleasures derived from frequent trade in these works.
The scores are offered in the form of traditional works (paper sheets), and also available by download.
Issued from a set of six minuets for orchestra written in the 1795s by the composer, Menuet en sol majeur n°2 WoO 10 consists, like the other five minuets, of 32 measures each with a three-beat beat.
The original manuscript of the six minuets is lost, and only sketches of the orchestral version currently exist. The piano transcription of the minuets was probably made by Beethoven himself, and this version for two-handed piano was published in Vienna in March 1796 by Arteria. It was entitled: "VI Menuetten/Für das clavier/von Herrn/Ludwig van Beethoven/2ten Theil".
In this minuet, Beethoven adopts the classical three-part form of the "minuet with trio". The dotted rhythm used in this minuet is one of the composer's favorite temporal figures. It represents the characteristic rhythm of this dance: originally a French country dance, the minuet was later adopted at the court of King Louis IV. Jubilation and elation resonate in the hopping of this miniature piece. At times energetic, at other times languorous, its swaying tone hints at the character's stylistic personality, and allows the pianist to entertain himself on a Beethoven piece intended for bodily expression.
We have set ourselves the goal of offering both "must-haves" from the classical repertoire and pieces by sometimes forgotten composers, all of undeniable pedagogical value. Each piece, sold individually, has been the subject of careful editorial work, both in terms of the musical text and its engraving, in order to guarantee musicians the conditions indispensable to the pleasures derived from frequent trade in these works.
The scores are offered in the form of traditional works (paper sheets), and also available by download.
Issued from a set of six minuets for orchestra written in the 1795s by the composer, Menuet en sol majeur n°2 WoO 10 consists, like the other five minuets, of 32 measures each with a three-beat beat.
The original manuscript of the six minuets is lost, and only sketches of the orchestral version currently exist. The piano transcription of the minuets was probably made by Beethoven himself, and this version for two-handed piano was published in Vienna in March 1796 by Arteria. It was entitled: "VI Menuetten/Für das clavier/von Herrn/Ludwig van Beethoven/2ten Theil".
In this minuet, Beethoven adopts the classical three-part form of the "minuet with trio". The dotted rhythm used in this minuet is one of the composer's favorite temporal figures. It represents the characteristic rhythm of this dance: originally a French country dance, the minuet was later adopted at the court of King Louis IV. Jubilation and elation resonate in the hopping of this miniature piece. At times energetic, at other times languorous, its swaying tone hints at the character's stylistic personality, and allows the pianist to entertain himself on a Beethoven piece intended for bodily expression.