Water Music & Fireworks Music for Keyboard

Handel, George Frideric

£40.00
In stock

Handel Water Music HWV 348-350 & Music for the Royal Fireworks HWV 351 for Harpsichord or Organ
plus an original edition of an anonymous arrangement for flute/oboe/violin and harpsichord/basso continuo
Score with 3 parts (flute/oboe/violin; basso continuo with figures (cello/bass); basso continuo realised with figures (harpsichord/organ)

Water Music HWV 348–350
Arranged for harpsichord or organ by Francesco Geminiani (1743)

Music for the Royal Fireworks HWV 351
Based on the first edition (approx. 1749) .  Arranged for harpsichord or organ by Siegbert Rampe

Music for the Royal Fireworks HWV 351
Original edition of an anonymous arrangement for
transverse flute/oboe/violin and harpsichord/basso continuo (London, approx. 1749)

Musical text with arrangements by two Handel contemporaries as well as the editor’s own arrangement for harpsichord or organ

All editorial additions are clearly marked

Equally effective when performed note-for-note on the organ

As early as 1743, while Handel was still alive, Francesco Geminiani produced an arrangement of the Water Music for keyboard instruments, thereby making it possible to perform this popular work in domestic surroundings.  Then, presumably in 1749, an unknown musician arranged the Music for the Royal Fireworks for transverse flute or violin and harpsichord.  In addition to these two contemporary versions, this edition also contains an arrangement by the editor for harpsichord or organ, based on the first edition.  Though both early sources explicitly mention a harpsichord, the arrangements can also be performed effectively note-for-note on the organ.

As the surviving anonymous version merely places a solo part and a figured bass on a two-stave system, our edition is accompanied by performance material with one part each for transverse flute/oboe/violin and violoncello/double bass, plus a figured bass realisation.

Rampe, Siegbert
BA9254
9790006559350
Baerenreiter Germany

Additional Information

Baroque Period
Harpsichord, Organ