The Complete Works, Volume 26 - Concerto, Op. 30
This Volume 26 contains Giuliani's concerto op. 30 in A, in the version for guitar and string quartet. There are parts for guitar, violin 1, violin 2, viola, and violoncello. No score. The three volumes for this concerto in this Tecla series are: Volume 25): the version for guitar and full orchestra, in A. The guitar is a normal guitar (not a terz guitar). This Volume 26: the version for guitar and string quartet, in A (same guitar part as in Volume 25). Volume 27: the arrangement of the concerto which Diabelli made for terz guitar and piano. The guitar part here is a terz guitar so although it is written in A it actually sounds in C and the piano part is in C. All are in facsimiles of the first editions, parts only, no score. Giuliani composed three concertos for guitar, opus numbers 30, 36, and 70. This concerto op. 30 in A is the first and most famous of them. First published by Tecla in 1985, reprinted 2005. [Legibility: rather faint in places.]
| Featured Product | No |
|---|---|
| Composer | GIULIANI, MAURO |
| Availability | Available |
| TAB/Notation | Music Notation Only |
| Description | This Volume 26 contains Giuliani's concerto op. 30 in A, in the version for guitar and string quartet. There are parts for guitar, violin 1, violin 2, viola, and violoncello. No score. The three volumes for this concerto in this Tecla series are: Volume 25): the version for guitar and full orchestra, in A. The guitar is a normal guitar (not a terz guitar). This Volume 26: the version for guitar and string quartet, in A (same guitar part as in Volume 25). Volume 27: the arrangement of the concerto which Diabelli made for terz guitar and piano. The guitar part here is a terz guitar so although it is written in A it actually sounds in C and the piano part is in C. All are in facsimiles of the first editions, parts only, no score. Giuliani composed three concertos for guitar, opus numbers 30, 36, and 70. This concerto op. 30 in A is the first and most famous of them. First published by Tecla in 1985, reprinted 2005. [Legibility: rather faint in places.] |