Antonio Vivaldi: Concerto in C major - Sheet music | Carus-Verlag

Antonio Vivaldi Concerto in C major

RV 444

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Score Carus 11.235/00, ISMN 979-0-007-08684-8 24 pages, DIN A4, paperback
available
17,00 € / copy
Vocal score, with one part Carus 11.235/03, ISMN 979-0-007-08842-2 16 pages, DIN A4, paperback
available
12,50 € / copy
Set of parts, complete orchestral parts Carus 11.235/19, ISMN 979-0-007-13873-8 23 x 32 cm, without cover
available
32,00 € / copy
  • 3 x Individual part, violin 1 (11.235/11)
    each: 2,90 €
    3 x Individual part, violin 2 (11.235/12)
    each: 2,90 €
    2 x Individual part, viola (11.235/13)
    each: 2,90 €
    3 x Individual part, violoncello / double bass (11.235/14)
    each: 2,90 €
    1 x Individual part, flute (11.235/21)
    each: 7,60 €
Additional product information
  • Antonio (Lucio) Vivaldi was an Italian composer and violinist of the Baroque period.

    It is assumed that his father, who was a musician himself, was responsible for Vivaldi's musical education. However, he began his professional career as a priest, which earned him the nickname Il prete rosso (the red-haired priest).

    From 1703, Vivaldi worked intermittently as a violin teacher and composer at the Ospedale della Pietà, an orphanage for girls in Venice, until shortly before his death. Initially, he also worked there as a priest, but relinquished this role after three years. He wrote numerous chamber music works and concertos for his pupils at the Pietà. The famous Four Seasons are particularly well-known and often performed today. Vivaldi also composed sacred and secular vocal music and was an opera composer and director.

    Of over 800 works known today, only 135 were published during Vivaldi's lifetime. After his death, Vivaldi's compositions were initially largely forgotten. Many of his works were rediscovered and published, particularly in the 20th century. Among them is the Gloria in D RV 589, the very first sheet music edition published by Carus-Verlag.

    Personal details
  • Peter Thalheimer studied recorder, flute (with Prof. Hartmut Strebel) and school music in Stuttgart. He completed his musicological studies with a doctorate at the Eberhard-Karls-Universität of Tübingen. He has taught in Nuremberg since 1978, and is currently professor of historical performance practice and recorder/transverse flute at the Hochschule für Musik Nuremberg. Concerts, radio and recording productions, courses and lectures he has given have taken him throughout Europe and the USA. In addition, his work has resulted in numerous music editions, as well as publications on performance practice, the study of instruments and on woodwind technique. An extensive collection of historical and modern flutes and recorders forms the basis for this work. Personal details

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