Sicilienne and Rigaudon, one of Fritz Kreisler's lesser-known short pieces for violin and piano, is one of the many pieces that Kreisler composed "in the style of" other composers (which Kreisler actually originally presented, when he first published the pieces in 1905, as recently discovered works by those other composers, newly adapted and arranged by himself). In the case of Sicilienne and Rigaudon, it is eighteenth-century French violinist/composer François Francoeur whose name figures on the title sheet, though the piece really has nothing at all to do with Francoeur's style, and one suspects that Kreisler had perhaps already penned the piece in a generalized mock-eighteenth-century style before he decided to which composer to attribute it.
The piece is a simple and a charming one, however. The sicilienne is a binary-form miniature that sweeps along on the characteristic sicilienne dotted rhythm, rather melancholy of melody but prim and proper in tone. Think old French ballet, something of which Francoeur, for whatever it's worth, wrote a great deal. The constant 16th notes of the rigaudon, it must be said, give it a character quite unlike that of a traditional rigaudon (or rigadoon), but there is none of the flash and dazzle of, say, the allegro from Kreisler's Praeludium and Allegro.
Read more: http://www.answers.com/topic/sicilienne-and-rigaudon-in-the-style-of-francoeur-for-violin-piano#ixzz2wt9e9WgS
Sicilienne and Rigaudon, one of Fritz Kreisler's lesser-known short pieces for violin and piano, is one of the many pieces that Kreisler composed "in the style of" other composers (which Kreisler actually originally presented, when he first published the pieces in 1905, as recently discovered works by those other composers, newly adapted and arranged by himself). In the case of Sicilienne and Rigaudon, it is eighteenth-century French violinist/composer François Francoeur whose name figures on the title sheet, though the piece really has nothing at all to do with Francoeur's style, and one suspects that Kreisler had perhaps already penned the piece in a generalized mock-eighteenth-century style before he decided to which composer to attribute it.
The piece is a simple and a charming one, however. The sicilienne is a binary-form miniature that sweeps along on the characteristic sicilienne dotted rhythm, rather melancholy of melody but prim and proper in tone. Think old French ballet, something of which Francoeur, for whatever it's worth, wrote a great deal. The constant 16th notes of the rigaudon, it must be said, give it a character quite unlike that of a traditional rigaudon (or rigadoon), but there is none of the flash and dazzle of, say, the allegro from Kreisler's Praeludium and Allegro.
Read more: http://www.answers.com/topic/sicilienne-and-rigaudon-in-the-style-of-francoeur-for-violin-piano#ixzz2wt9e9WgS
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