인스 트루먼 트의
Ensembles
Genres
작곡가
출연자

악보 $14.95

원본

Souvenir d'Orient. Fantaisie brillante Op. 12. Classical Guitar sheet music. Flute sheet music.

번역

동부 기억. Fantaisie brillante Op. 12. 클래식 기타 악보. 플루트 악보.

원본

Souvenir d'Orient. Fantaisie brillante Op. 12 composed by Onorato Costa. Edited by Fabio Rizza. For Flute and Guitar. Score and parts. Op. 12. 40 pages. Published by Ut Orpheus. UT.CH-124. ISBN 979-0-2153-1884-7. Onorato Costa was a guitarist and composer. In Vienna between 1818 and 1832 he published a number of compositions for solo guitar and duets with other instruments. According to the Allgemeine musika- lische Zeitung, on the 27 February 1820, a guitarist by the name of Costa performed some variations on a Rossini cavatina in Vienna, which may be identified as the 'Variations sur un Theme favori de l'Opera. Cenerentola de Rossini' Op. 6, published by Onorato Costa with Cappi & Diabelli precisely around the period 1819-20. In this fantasia Costa uses three popular pieces. the first two are of Greek origin. the romance Ilios Lambros and a Sirtos, which was the most common dance throughout Greece in the 19th century. whilst the third is a Hungarian dance with variations.

번역

동부 기억. Fantaisie brillante Op. 12 composed by Onorato Costa. 파비오 리자에 의해 수정 됨. 플루트와 기타를위한. 점수 및 부품. Op. 12. 40 페이지. 유타 오르페우스에 의해 게시. UT.CH-124. ISBN 979-0-2153-1884-7. Onorato Costa was a guitarist and composer. In Vienna between 1818 and 1832 he published a number of compositions for solo guitar and duets with other instruments. According to the Allgemeine musika- lische Zeitung, on the 27 February 1820, a guitarist by the name of Costa performed some variations on a Rossini cavatina in Vienna, which may be identified as the 'Variations sur un Theme favori de l'Opera. Cenerentola de Rossini' Op. 6, published by Onorato Costa with Cappi & Diabelli precisely around the period 1819-20. In this fantasia Costa uses three popular pieces. the first two are of Greek origin. the romance Ilios Lambros and a Sirtos, which was the most common dance throughout Greece in the 19th century. whilst the third is a Hungarian dance with variations.