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48 études, op. 31. Volume 2

Études 25 à 48

Franz Wilhelm FERLING Arrangement by Gaetano DI BACCO

Details

Instrument family Saxophone
Catalog classifications Saxophones Studies
Instrument nomenclature Pour saxophone et piano
Publisher Éditions Billaudot
Collection DAVID Vincent
Collection management DAVID Vincent
Cotage GB9596
Languages French, English
Cycle / Level Difficult (cycle 3)
Target audience Young people, Adults
Musical style Classical
Directory type Work(s) from the repertoire
Copyright year 2018
EAN code 9790043095965
Audios Without

Description

Everyone is familiar with the immense educational value of Franz Wilhelm Ferling's 48 studies, which are now a staple of saxophone curricula worldwide. Originally composed for oboe in 1831, adapted for the saxophone and used in 1942 by Marcel Mule, they have become a pillar of saxophone teaching.


When I was working on these studies in my conservatory class, the concern was not only to resolve
the technical difficulty of execution but also to give the student a complete musical vision. It is for this reason that I felt the need to create a piano part in order to better understand the harmonic and formal aspect of these works, and also to make these studies into true concert pieces. I have tried to respect the "bel canto" style of authors such as Bellini, Donizetti and Rossini. Furthermore, I have deliberately abstained from any metronomic movement, hoping that the character of the piano accompaniment would suggest the speed of each study.


I dedicate these studies to Claude Delangle, whom I particularly thank for encouraging me to continue
this undertaking is certainly exciting but long-term.


I can't help but think of Charles Gounod, who, 135 years ago, created the sublime Ave Maria by superimposing his melody on Prelude No. 1 from the first book of Johann Sebastian Bach's The Well-Tempered Clavier. In this case, a German composed these melodies to which, 180 years later, an Italian is composing
the piano harmonization that a French publisher decides to publish. A German, an Italian, and a Frenchman: Europe, indeed!
Gaetano DI BACCO

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