Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Waltzes, op.9a (Franz Schubert)

Dances \'First Waltzes\' by Franz Schubert (1797-1828)

A waltz, or valse from the French term, is a piece of music in triple meter, most often 3/4 but sometimes 3/8 or 3/2. A waltz has a 1.2.3. - 1.2.3. count and (generally) a slow tempo. Waltzes typically have one chord per measure, with the root of the chord as the first note. the left hand if reffering to the piano would always be in the 1-2-3 as was said earlier but the special name for this is \'oom pa pa\'. Classical composers traditionally supplied music for dancing when required, and Franz Schubert\'s waltzes were written for household dancing, without any pretense at being art music. However, Frédéric Chopin\'s surviving 19 waltzes (five he wrote as a child), along with his mazurkas and polonaises, were clearly not intended to be danced to. They marked the adoption of the waltz and other dance forms as serious composition genres. Other notable contributions to the waltz genre in classical music include 16 by Johannes Brahms (originally for piano duet), and Maurice Ravel\'s Valses nobles et sentimentales for piano and La Valse for orchestra. The waltz style is found in nearly every kind of European and Euro-American folk music and also in classical music. Although waltzes are often associated with the dance of the same name, not all waltzes were composed as dances: some were written for concert performance. The waltz had once held so much importance in European music circles that great waltz composers received the honorary title of Waltz King. The title came with an ...


Download sheet music pdf: Waltzes, op.9a (Franz Schubert)

Miguel Guzman - Schubert Waltzes (Op.77, No.1 & No. 9)

1)Waltz in C Major - Franz Schubert (Op. 77, No.1) 2)Waltz in A Minor - Franz Schubert ( Op.77, No.9) -Performed by Miguel Guzman at Valencia Community College in Orlando, FL. -Instructor: Mary Engel