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Breitkopf & Hartel Variations on the song 'Trockne Blumen' D 802 - Schubert/Badura-Skoda/Delius - Flute/Piano - Sheet Music
Composer: Franz Schubert (1797 - 1828)
Editors: Paul Badura-Skoda, Nikolaus Delius
Format: Sheet Music
Instrumentation: Flute and Piano
The variations on the song "Trockne Blumen" D 802 number among the few works for flute written in the first half of the 19th century that have survived their time of origin and become standard literature for their instruments.
In January 1824 Schubert himself called the work succinctly "Variations pour Pianoforte et Flute". Judging from the first edition ("Introduction et Variations sur un theme original", published posthumously in 1850), it doesn't seem as if Schubert borrowed the variation theme from the song "Trockne Blumen" from his cycle "Die schone Mullerin".
The addressee for both instruments was presumably the flutist Ferdinand Bogner, a friend of Schubert's. The work makes equal - and highly virtuoso - demands on the players. For their revision, the editors Nikolaus Delius and Paul Badura-Skoda consulted the autograph, which is housed in Vienna's Stadtbibliothek.
Editors: Paul Badura-Skoda, Nikolaus Delius
Format: Sheet Music
Instrumentation: Flute and Piano
The variations on the song "Trockne Blumen" D 802 number among the few works for flute written in the first half of the 19th century that have survived their time of origin and become standard literature for their instruments.
In January 1824 Schubert himself called the work succinctly "Variations pour Pianoforte et Flute". Judging from the first edition ("Introduction et Variations sur un theme original", published posthumously in 1850), it doesn't seem as if Schubert borrowed the variation theme from the song "Trockne Blumen" from his cycle "Die schone Mullerin".
The addressee for both instruments was presumably the flutist Ferdinand Bogner, a friend of Schubert's. The work makes equal - and highly virtuoso - demands on the players. For their revision, the editors Nikolaus Delius and Paul Badura-Skoda consulted the autograph, which is housed in Vienna's Stadtbibliothek.
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