Nocturne, Op 22 - Thalberg

By: Sigismond Thalberg
For: Solo instrument (Piano)
page one of Nocturne, Op 22 - Thalberg

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Composer
Sigismond Thalberg
Year of composition
1844
Publisher
Difficulty
Moderate (Grades 4-6)
Genre
Classical music
License details
For anything not permitted by the above licence then you should contact the publisher first to obtain permission.

Piano Solo – Intermediate – Digital Download Composed by Charles-Valentin Alkan. Arranged by Editions Melodia. Romantic Period, Repertoire. Score, Sheet Music Single.

Nocturne, Op. 22 by Charles-Valentin Alkan, is an example of a traditional nocturne, similar in style to that of Chopin. This piece was first published and first performed in 1844. Take a listen to this beautiful nocturne and see for yourself why Alkan’s music has gained a renewed interest to pianists of all types, professional and amateur.

Alkan was a French-Jewish composer and virtuoso pianist. At the height of his fame in the 1830’s and 1840’s he was, alongside his friends and colleagues Frédéric Chopin and Franz Liszt, among the leading pianists in Paris, a city in which he spent virtually his entire life.

Alkan earned many awards at the Conservatoire de Paris, which he entered before he was six. His career in the salons and concert halls of Paris was marked by his occasional long withdrawals from public performance, for personal reasons. Although he had a wide circle of friends and acquaintances in the Parisian artistic world, including Eugène Delacroix and George Sand, from 1848 he began to adopt a reclusive life style, while continuing with his compositions – virtually all of which are for the keyboard. During this period he published, among other works, his collections of large-scale studies in all the major keys (Op. 35) and all the minor keys (Op. 39). The latter includes his Symphony for Solo Piano (Op. 39, nos. 4–7) and Concerto for Solo Piano (Op. 39, nos. 8–10), which are often considered among his masterpieces and are of great musical and technical complexity. Alkan emerged from self-imposed retirement in the 1870s to give a series of recitals that were attended by a new generation of French musicians.

Alkan’s attachment to his Jewish origins is displayed both in his life and his work. He was the first composer to incorporate Jewish melodies in art music. Fluent in Hebrew and Greek, he devoted much time to a complete new translation of the Bible into French. This work, like many of his musical compositions, is now lost. Alkan never married, but his presumed son Élie-Miriam Delaborde was, like Alkan, a virtuoso performer on both the piano and the pedal piano, and edited a number of the elder composer’s works.

Following his death (which according to persistent but unfounded legend was caused by a falling bookcase) Alkan’s music became neglected, supported by only a few musicians including Ferruccio Busoni, Egon Petri and Kaikhosru Sorabji. From the late 1960’s onwards, led by Raymond Lewenthal and Ronald Smith, many pianists have recorded his music and brought it back into the repertoire.

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