TOLSTOY - STARR; "Anna Karenina" Waltz (an orchestral arrangement by Mark Starr of a waltz for piano composed by Count Leo Tolstoy)

By: Count Leo Tolstoy
For: Orchestra + solo Flute
page one of TOLSTOY - STARR; "Anna Karenina" Waltz (an orchestral arrangement by Mark Starr of a waltz for piano composed by Count Leo Tolstoy)

Buy this score and parts

TOLSTOY - STARR; "Anna Karenina" Waltz (an orchestral arrangement by Mark Starr of a waltz for piano composed by Count Leo Tolstoy)

$22.00

$10.00

from $2.00

(+ VAT when applicable)

Preview individual parts:

PDF icon

Instant download

You are purchasing high quality sheet music PDF files suitable for printing or viewing on digital devices.
Composer
Count Leo Tolstoy
Year of composition
1878
Arranger
Difficulty
Moderate (Grades 4-6)
Duration
1 minute
Genre
Classical music
License details
For anything not permitted by the above licence then you should contact the publisher first to obtain permission.

This waltz is the only known musical composition by Count Leo Tolstoy, author of "War and Peace" and ’Anna Karenina.’ It was notated by A. Goldenveizer after he heard Tolstoy perform it on the piano in 1906 before Taneev (presumably the Russian composer/pianist Sergei Taneyev) and Yasnaya Polyana. Goldenveizer later collaborated with A. Gusev on a book, "Leo Tolstoy and Music," published in Moscow in 1953, in which this waltz was published.

The nickname "Anna Karenina" Waltz is mine (as is the decorative flute solo.)

Goldenveizer attributed the composition of this piano piece to Tolstoy’s youth. Thus, it was likely composed around the time Tolstoy wrote Anna Karenina – the book which he later called his "first true novel." Tolstoy wrote this novel in incomplete serial form during the years 1873 to 1877, and it was first published complete in book form in 1878.

"Anna Karenina" is filled with aristocratic balls and waltzes. One of the most notable ballroom scenes comes in Part 1. Vronsky pays Anna considerable attention. He dances with her, choosing her as his partner instead of Kitty - who is shocked and heartbroken. Kitty realises that Vronsky has fallen in love with Anna. Despite Vronsky’s overt flirtations with Anna, he has no intention of marrying her. He views his attentions to her as mere amusement, and he believes that she does the same.

Incidentally,a recent poll of 125 contemporary authors - published in 2007 in "The Top Ten" - declared that Anna Karenina is the "greatest novel ever written".

I suggest to all: re-read Part 1 of "Anna Karenina" while listening to the MP3 demo recording of this waltz, composed by the author of the novel. I think it is a unique experience.

To purchase this score, please add it to your cart above. To purchase music not currently available on Score Exchange or for extended license requests, please contact the publisher directly.

Reviews of TOLSTOY - STARR; "Anna Karenina" Waltz (an orchestral arrangement by Mark Starr of a waltz for piano composed by Count Leo Tolstoy)

Sorry, there's no reviews of this score yet. Please .