Sonata for Violin and Piano in e minor
Here's another chamber work that I'm working on. Right now, I only have the first movement, but I'll add to the score when I notate the other three.
I received a lot of feedback from my piano trio that the first movement was quite long, so I tried a more compact first movement for this violin sonata. It's not in the traditional sonata-allegro form in that there is no exposition repeat and the tempo alternates between moderate and fast, but otherwise it's more classical and baroque leaning than my piano trio.
I also included a quote from Schubert's unfinished piano trio in there if you could spot it.
Feedback is very much welcome.
Comments
Lovely. One thing I will say is the tremolos on the piano part (At least in the online player) around the 3 minute mark sound too fast for a human player. Of course, I'm not the best piano player, so perhaps I'm slow.
Otherwise, great piece!
In reply to Lovely. One thing I will say… by Jack Papel (Go…
Those are actually just trills; the MIDI just renders them extremely fast for some reason. Anyone who can actually play trills that fast on the piano must have really good fingers!
Thanks anyways. I'll be uploading the parts of the other three movements soon.
In reply to Those are actually just… by Brian Berino
As for those trills, piano keys have this rebound time, so I doubt it's possible. I might be wrong, but that's just what I think.
In reply to As for those trills, piano… by Wild Daisy
Please see https://musescore.org/en/project/articulation-and-ornamentation-control to craft your own trills. In general, musescore.com, not here, is the place to post new works and receive comment on them; that's what it's there for.
Wow, I really enjoyed that. Thank you for posting, To me, very Schubert-like, I didn't manage to spot the actual Schubert quote though, Only had time to listen to it once ....
In reply to Wow, I really enjoyed that… by Jon Ray
Thanks! Schubert is one of my biggest inspirations.
The Schubert quote starts at bar 78. Compare with this: www.youtube.com/watch?v=8NFgFwNcToM&t=41
Lovely piece, very elegant! I look forward to the other movements.