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Topic: Stravinsky Tango  (Read 8363 times)

Offline costicina

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Stravinsky Tango
on: February 03, 2012, 07:15:57 PM
I discovered by chance that I own the score of this piece. What do you think about it?
Perphaps is too dry for a Tango (not languorous enough)...notetheless I like it a lot!!!!
If anybody is interested, I can scan the score and post it...
Marg

Offline 49410enrique

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Re: Stravinsky Tango
Reply #1 on: February 03, 2012, 07:26:42 PM
it's a cool piece, i think i posted about it int he sheet music board unger tangos, but i took it down cause i think it's protected in the usa, not sure there though.  have you read and listened to the rag music? that one's cool too

Piano-Rag-Music is a composition for piano solo by Igor Stravinsky, written in 1919.
At the beginning of the 20th century, the ragtime, originally a syncopated binary dance with bass note and its chord alternated respectively on the even and odd counts, reached an impressionable peak.[citation needed] Stravinsky, who had, by that time, emigrated to France after his studies with Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov in Russia, was confronted with American jazz combos actively influential in Europe. Stravinsky's knowledge of stylistic jazz properties was at first limited to scores brought to him from the United States by his colleague Ernest Ansermet.. However, he had managed to hear live jazz bands by the time he wrote Piano-Rag Music.

Compositionally, Stravinsky interprets the ragtime in a cubist way rather than imitate the style. Stravinsky incorporates elements from his Russian period (ostinati, shifting accents, bitonality) with rhythmic and harmonic fragments from ragtime. The irregular meters give the piece an improvisatory character. The end, shifting through various fast and short double thriller parts, perhaps referring more to a form of bruitism[citation needed] than technical capacity, eases down to a halt in a lyric relegation to his Sacre du Printemps.

Stravinsky wrote the piece for pianist Arthur Rubinstein.Rubinstein, however, does not seem to have performed it;[citation needed] it was instead premiered by pianist José Iturbi on November 8 1919 in Lausanne. Stravinsky also arranged Trois mouvements de Petrouchka, his Petrushka for solo piano, for Rubinstein.

Offline costicina

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Re: Stravinsky Tango
Reply #2 on: February 03, 2012, 07:52:22 PM
it's a cool piece, i think i posted about it int he sheet music board unger tangos, but i took it down cause i think it's protected in the usa, not sure there though.  have you read and listened to the rag music? that one's cool too

I've heard the piano-reag, but the score is unavailable for free in Italy....it seems pretty thught!

Offline 49410enrique

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Re: Stravinsky Tango
Reply #3 on: February 03, 2012, 08:02:25 PM
I've heard the piano-reag, but the score is unavailable for free in Italy....it seems pretty thught!
i think i have it, chk ur pm sent you my mediafire link

Offline bacchus1224

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Re: Stravinsky Tango
Reply #4 on: February 19, 2012, 01:06:38 PM
I like the dryness, it's more his style. That being said, the first time I heard it, I thought he was parodying a Tango ....either way, its an amusing piece.

Offline cdke

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Re: Stravinsky Tango
Reply #5 on: June 01, 2013, 11:52:49 AM
how can i get hold of the stravisnky tango sheet music? rgds
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