Sarcasms, Visions fugitives, and other short works for piano

Front Cover
Courier Corporation, Jan 1, 2000 - Music - 179 pages

One of the 20th century's most prolific composers of piano music, Sergei Prokofiev (1891 1953) is celebrated for his unique piano idiom, combining the seemingly incongruous elements of highly percussive textures with passages of great lyrical charm. "Above all," notes "Grove's," "his music shows a professional care for the performer, never reaching beyond the practicable limits of execution."
Pianists will welcome this excellent new compilation of pieces composed between 1907 and 1922 the great formative years of Prokofiev's unique approach to keyboard writing from his highly original "Diabolical suggestion" and the dramatic, capricious "Sarcasms" to the very popular March and Scherzo transcribed by the composer from his opera "The love for three organs."
Reproduced from authoritative early editions, this generous collection includes "Four etudes," Op. 2; "Four pieces," Op. 3; excerpts from "Four pieces," Op. 4; "Toccata," Op. 11; "Ten pieces," Op. 12; the complete "Sarcasms," Op. 17, and "Visions fugitives," Op. 22; "Tales of the old grandmother," Op. 31; "Four pieces," Op. 32; and the "March and Scherzo," Op. 33ter."

 

Contents

Section 1
45
Section 2
76
Section 3
111
Section 4
145
Section 5
153
Section 6
156
Section 7
160
Section 8
163

About the author (2000)

Sergei Prokofiev (1891-1953) was a Russian pianist, conductor, and composer who mastered several genres and is one of the major composers of the 20th century. His best-known works are the five piano concertos, nine completed sonatas, and seven symphonies. He also created the Romeo and Juliet ballet, Peter and the Wolf, and other family classics.

Bibliographic information