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Capriccio for Piano (Left Hand) and Wind Ensemble
Janacek, Leos
Janacek Capriccio for Piano (Left Hand) and Wind Ensemble (Score & Parts)
for piano, flute, two trumpets (in C), three trombones,tenor tuba (in B-flat)/horn
One of Leoš Janáček’s last chamber music works was written in the autumn of 1926 at the suggestion of the pianist Otakar Hollmann (1894–1967), an invalid from the First World War. Like his contemporary Paul Wittgenstein, Hollmann urged composers to write something for piano left hand; he succeeded in winning over Bohuslav Martinu, Erwin Schulhoff and Janáček to do this. Janáček did not want, as he put it, to compose a “dance for one leg”, but finally wrote a four-movement work with associations to military music, scored for piano, flute (piccolo), two trumpets, three trombones (preferably valve trombones because of the fast passages) and a tenor tuba. The French horn was allowed by the composer to substitute the tuba.
The Capriccio was premiered by Otakar Hollmann and members of the Czech Philharmonic in Prague on 2 March 1928 in the presence of the enthusiastic composer.
- Urtext based on the Critical Complete Edition of the Works of Leoš Janáček
- New foreword (Cz/Eng/Ger) by the editor Jarmila Procházková|
- Includes additional part for the French horn