Internationale Stiftung Mozarteum, Ulrich Leisinger
Nannerl-Notenbuch
das Klavierbuch der Geschwister Mozart
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Internationale Stiftung Mozarteum, Ulrich Leisinger
Nannerl-Notenbuch
das Klavierbuch der Geschwister Mozart
- Instrumentation Piano
- Composer Internationale Stiftung Mozarteum Ulrich Leisinger
- Edition Sheet Music and CD
- Publisher Strube Verlag
- Order no. STRUBE9083
incl. tax,
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Description:
Complete facsimile of all surviving parts of the manuscript with an introduction and an afterword by Ulrich Leisinger, published by the Mozarteum Foundation Salzburg. Series: Denkmäler der Musik in Salzburg, Faksimile-Ausgaben Vol. 16. Incl. complete recording of all pieces from the music book on 2 CDs. Four-color, cloth, hardcover. 120 p.
The famous "Nannerl-Notenbuch" occupies an outstanding position among the piano books of the 18th century: For it not only documents the musical education of Anna Maria (Nannerl) Mozart and her brother Wolfgang, but also contains the young Mozart's first attempts at composition, which document the astounding development from the improvisation of a 5-year-old to the ambitious sonata and concerto movements of a composer barely 8 years old. Leopold Mozart taught his children from the book until 1766, later Nannerl began to separate individual works by Wolfgang from the volume and give them as gifts to her famous brother.
The editors have compiled all the handwritten fragments of Nannerl's music book whose whereabouts have been clarified; at 72 pages, the facsimile volume probably comprises exactly three quarters of the original volume.
All the pieces were recorded by Florian Birsak, a well-known harpsichord and clavichord soloist, on 2 CDs which are included with the volume.
The famous "Nannerl-Notenbuch" occupies an outstanding position among the piano books of the 18th century: For it not only documents the musical education of Anna Maria (Nannerl) Mozart and her brother Wolfgang, but also contains the young Mozart's first attempts at composition, which document the astounding development from the improvisation of a 5-year-old to the ambitious sonata and concerto movements of a composer barely 8 years old. Leopold Mozart taught his children from the book until 1766, later Nannerl began to separate individual works by Wolfgang from the volume and give them as gifts to her famous brother.
The editors have compiled all the handwritten fragments of Nannerl's music book whose whereabouts have been clarified; at 72 pages, the facsimile volume probably comprises exactly three quarters of the original volume.
All the pieces were recorded by Florian Birsak, a well-known harpsichord and clavichord soloist, on 2 CDs which are included with the volume.