New recordings have been added to the new edition. These include Elements of Music Interactives, Fundamentals of Music Video Tutorials, Spotify Playlists, and targeted guidance in Listening Outlines and Vocal Listening Guides. The new edition features four learning tools that supplement and expand on Roger Kamien's narrative on the elements. Often it is a student's first exposure to musical vocabulary and concepts. Typically the first material that a Music Appreciation student encounters in the se¬mester is about the elements of music.
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The Brief 10th edition of Music: An Appreciation equips students with the language, tools, and listening skills required to sustain a lifelong enthusiasm for music. Roger Kamien continues to focus on coverage of the elements of music, fostering each student's unique path to listening and understanding. Music: An Appreciation welcomes nonmajors to the art of listening to great music. For those who are familiar only with Fontana’s version, you might find some of the differences a bit surprising.Roger Kamien Music: An Appreciation, Brief Edition 10 Janu9781260719352 Since it was Artur Rubinstein himself who put Chopin’s original on the map, it is fitting that he should play us out with this 1964 recording. In the autograph, the left hand of the coda reverts to sextuplet groups, whereas in Fontana’s version we find groups of 4. Looking further along into the middle section, there are the occasional discrepancies between notes in the left hand (bars 59 and 61), with a variant of the filling material in the upper line in bar 60. They all indicate special (long) pedals – over the two introductory bars of Db major harmony and then whole-bar changes, but disappear thereafter. Autograph, bars 13-20įontana’s edition has copious pedal markings – not so the autograph, where we find only three (at the start of the middle section). In the autograph, the broad melody that appears in bar 13 in crotchets (quarter notes) continues in the right thumb from the second phrase, there is no transfer to the 5 th finger. Some left hand notes are not the same – the autograph has G sharps in the second groups of bars 5 and 6, and the layout of the broken chord in the second group of bar 7 is different. In the opening material Fontana adds pedal, and removes the accents in the left hand. Let’s look at a few excerpts from the autograph score so we can see some of the differences. This is the version I learned as a student, and because it is very ingrained in my fingers, I have stuck with it. It would appear that the reason Chopin had not published the work was because he had received a commission from the Baroness, and the piece was therefore her property. It is possible this manuscript might be a later copy of the work, which could explain the gap of a year between its composition and the date in the album’s copy.Įven though the autograph manuscript has since been published, many pianists prefer to play from the much more familiar Fontana edition. The album contained a manuscript of the Fantaisie-Impromptu in Chopin’s own hand, dated 1835. In 1960, Artur Rubinstein acquired an album owned by Madame la Baronne d’Este.
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How Chopin’s autograph came to light makes a fascinating story. This much-loved work was made popular through the version published by his close friend and musical executor, Julian Fontana, but it contains quite a number of textual discrepancies. Even though the Fantaisie-Impromptu was composed in 1834, the world had to wait until 1960 to hear the piece as Chopin intended it.