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grainne-meyerMember
Does anyone know if the Salvi covers fit Camac harps?
grainne-meyerMemberI’d noticed that my previous link didn’t work, so the one above should take you to a google search where the article is the first link.
It’s interesting to note that nearly every one of the solo sonatas follows the order of slow-fast-faster
grainne-meyerMembergrainne-meyerMemberHow on earth could the Italian Concerto have been a role model?!
grainne-meyerMemberThe correct movement order should be Adagio un poco – Allegro – Allegro. It’s such a shame that is it so seldom performed in the proper order…
“By the 1720s, when C.P.E. Bach was growing up in
Leipzig, italianate solo sonatas with four movements
in the succession slow–quick–slow–quick were giving
way to three-movement works containing a single slow
movement. During the 1730s and 1740s, one variety of
three-movement work, with movements in the sequence
slow–quick(er)–quick, came to dominate among sonatas
composed at Dresden and Berlin. “grainne-meyerMemberIf you fill in the form here you can access it. http://cpebach.org/license?file=II-1-parts.html
Interestingly, the treble and bass parts are separate as the sonata was originally written for harp and continuo.
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