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 Mozart Cadenzas; Ibert & others
Author: TJTG 
Date:   2013-01-25 12:49

Hello all,

I was recently informed that there is an Ibert cadenza to the Mozart but a search of the Web has come up short. Does anybody have a copy I might see? I know it had been mentioned on board before, but it wasn't linked.

But less specifically, does anybody have a collection of transcribed cadenza and their contributing composer/artist? This is more for study and I may end up writing a short paper on it later this semester.

Thanks for the help!

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 Re: Mozart Cadenzas; Ibert & others
Author: cigleris 
Date:   2013-01-25 13:09

Stockhausen wrote some. There are others mentioned in Colin Lawson's Cambridge Companion to the Mozart Concerto. Have a look.

Peter Cigleris

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 Re: Mozart Cadenzas; Ibert & others
Author: GBK 
Date:   2013-01-25 16:31

The Ibert cadenza was reprinted in The Clarinet magazine, Volume 9/1 (Fall, 1981)

The back issue of the magazine is probably still available to purchase.

...GBK



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 Re: Mozart Cadenzas; Ibert & others
Author: Jack Kissinger 
Date:   2013-01-26 03:49

The Ibert cadenzas were included in the edition edited by Delecluse and published by Leduc. I have seen a copy (years ago) but about all I remember is that the cadenzas were long, florid and didn't seem to have much to do with the concerto. Also the edition was extremely expensive. SheetMusicPlus lists an edition by Leduc in its online catalog for $44.25. I suspect it is the Delecluse edition though SM+ does not identify the editor in their listing. I wouldn't be surprised, however, to find they don't actually have it in stock and it is out of print. In an admittedly quick search, I could not find it anywhere else.

You can read a brief description of the Ibert cadenzas here:

http://www.clarinet.org/clarinetfestarchive.asp?archive=46

if you scroll down the page until you come to the summary of the version edited by Delecluse.

My personal opinion of the Ibert cadenzas is that, while they may be interesting as an intellectual curiosity, they serve primarily as an example of somebody who should have known better doing something he shouldn't have done -- i.e., creating stylistically anachronistic cadenzas for a piece that does not call for any cadenzas to begin with.

Best regards,
jnk

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 Re: Mozart Cadenzas; Ibert & others
Author: Dingo 
Date:   2013-01-27 09:36

TJTG wrote:
"But less specifically, does anybody have a collection of transcribed cadenza and their contributing composer/artist? This is more for study and I may end up writing a short paper on it later this semester."


Maybe, the following link can help you (althought the text is written in spanish):
http://www.clariperu.org/Cadencias_concierto_Mozart.html



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