Piano Concerto No. 1 in D minor op. 15 (Edition for 2 Pianos) Urtext by Johannes Brahms Piano Solo - Sheet Music

By Johannes Brahms

Urtext Edition by Paul Badura-SkodaThe gestation period of Brahms's first concerto for piano lasted for over seventeen years. Now, of course, an integral and permanent part of the repertoire, it surprisingly did not find initial favour with music critics of the time.This new edition by Paul Badura-Skoda is based on a previous edition by Johannes Gerdes and has been revised on the basis of additional source material. Contains an idiomatic piano reduction of the orchestral accompaniment for secondo pianist (two copies required for performance).

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Details

Summary
Instrument:
Piano Solo
Genres:
Romantic Period
Composers:
Johannes Brahms
Publishers:
Edition Peters
ISBN:
9790014109981
Format:
Collection / Songbook
Item types:
Physical
Musical forms:
Concerto
Artist:
Johannes Brahms
Usages:
School and Community
Shipping Weight:
1.13 pounds
Detailed Description
Piano/Keyboard

SKU: PE.EP9827A

Urtext. Composed by Johannes Brahms. Edited by Paul Badura-Skoda. Piano x2, 4 Hands. Edition Peters. Book. Edition Peters #98-EP9827A. Published by Edition Peters (PE.EP9827A).

ISBN 9790014109981. English.

Urtext Edition by Paul Badura-Skoda

The gestation period of Brahms's first concerto for piano lasted for over seventeen years. Now, of course, an integral and permanent part of the repertoire, it surprisingly did not find initial favour with music critics of the time.

This new edition by Paul Badura-Skoda is based on a previous edition by Johannes Gerdes and has been revised on the basis of additional source material. Contains an idiomatic piano reduction of the orchestral accompaniment for secondo pianist (two copies required for performance).

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Ratings + Reviews

2 Rating

1 review

Anonymous

Dec 4, 2022

subpar editing

While the editing and research are undoubtedly scholarly, the actual choices of what appears in the main score are not used by any serious pianists. Many poor decisions on the part of the editor, who put the standard choices in the appendix. It's even more disappointing that Peters discontinued their older edition that became the standard for all modern performances up to this day. This is an unfortunate situation.