Performances
Naxos
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Sheet Music
Scores
⇒ 5 more: 2. Chansonette de Titoff • 3. Romance de Warlamoff • 4. Le Rossignol, de A. Alabieff • 5. Chant Bohémien • 6. Kosa; Chant Bohémien
Editor
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First edition
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Publisher. Info.
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Hamburg: August Cranz, n.d.(1852?).
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Copyright
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Misc. Notes
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Published under the pseudonym G. W. Marks
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Purchase
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General Information
Work Title
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Souvenir de la Russie
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Alternative. Title
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Transcriptions en forme de fantaisies sur des airs russes et bohémiens
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Composer
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Brahms, Johannes
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Opus/Catalogue NumberOp./Cat. No.
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Anh.4/6
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I-Catalogue NumberI-Cat. No.
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None [force assignment]
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Movements/SectionsMov'ts/Sec's
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6 arrangements
- Hymne Nationale Russe de Lvoff. Allegro maestoso (F major)
- after the anthem God Save the Tsar by Lvov
- Chansonette de Titoff. Andante (A minor)
- after the song The Branch (Ветка) by Nikolai Alekseevich Titov
- Romance de Warlamoff. Con moto (A minor)
- after the song Don't You Wake Her at Dawn (На заре ты её не буди) by Aleksandr Varlamov
- Le Rossignol, de A. Alabieff (D minor)
- after the song The Nightingale by Alyabyev
- Chant Bohémien. Allegro moderato (G major)
- after the Bohemian folksong There's a Big Village on the Road (Вот на пути село большое)
- Chant Bohémien ("Kosa"). Moderato (G major)
- after the Bohemian folksong The Plait (Коса)
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Year/Date of CompositionY/D of Comp.
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1852?
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First Publication.
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1852? (as Op.151 of the composer "G. W. Marks")
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Average DurationAvg. Duration
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20 minutes
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Composer Time PeriodComp. Period
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Romantic
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Piece Style
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Romantic
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Instrumentation
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Piano (4 hands)
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Navigation etc.
Note: These arrangements are now believed to have been misattributed to Brahms.
- Fairly likely misattributed, and not too hard to see suggestive though not definite evidence- unless there's a reason not to, I'm removing this from the Brahms category altogether and just keeping it in the Marks cat. The "G.W. Marks" whose Op.151 these were also composed an Op.13 in 1831 and then on, fairly consistently in Op. no., through to Op.176 in the mid-1850s. This is easier to see if one searches for Marks in HMB-online- it's a sort of correlative stream, or something or other, though that could of course only prove publisher assignment of a pseudonymous name to various composers (someone else rather than Brahms pre-humously in 1831/32 for that Op.13, of course) rather than use of a name by one person- though I'm not positive they're all by the same publisher; need to recheck. - Schissel