Title: | Sonatas for Violin Flute Cello and Piano Complete |
Otros títulos: | Sonatas for Piano Flute & Cello 3 Sonatas for Piano Flute & Cello Op. 21 Nos. 1-2-3 : 3 Sonatas for Piano Flute & Cello Op. 22 Nos. 1-2-3 Sonatas Completas para Violín Violonchelo Flauta y Piano Sonatas para Piano Flauta y Violonchelo |
Intérprete/ Colaborador: | Muzio Clementi; Pietro Spada; Gianni Biocotino; Andrea Bergamelli |
Código CDU: | Cle.07 |
Forma Musical: | Sonatas (Flute, Piano, Cello) |
Abstract: | Born shortly after Handel wrote his oratorio Jephtha and dead shortly after Berlioz wrote his Symphonie fantastique, Muzio Clementi failed to write anything equal to the originality of those two composers—or, certainly, equal to the best of his closer contemporaries, Mozart and Haydn. Yet Clementi remains a significant figure for his pioneering work on behalf of the newfangled piano, that percussive, expressive instrument that quickly displaced the harpsichord at the end of the eighteenth century. His full-scale sonatas and small studies exploited the possibilities of the early piano and groomed the technique of early pianists, and led him to be known as "the father of the piano." His influence on Beethoven has likely been underestimated. Clementi was a child prodigy, with an appointment as an organist at age 9 and an oratorio to his credit by the time he was 12. In 1766 Clementi's father was persuaded to take the boy to study in England, the country that would remain Clementi's base ... |