Facebook Pixel

* Due to copyright this item is final sale
HENLE MOZART Sonatas For Piano & Violin Fragments

HENLE MOZART Sonatas For Piano & Violin Fragments

HENLE EDWARD Elgar Salut D'amour Opus 12 For Violoncello & Piano

HENLE EDWARD Elgar Salut D'amour Opus 12 For Violoncello & Piano

HENLE FAURE Sonata No 2 For Violin & Piano In E Minor Opus 108

$50.99
Special Order
SKU
177788
  • Catalog #: 51481036
  • GABRIEL FAURE
  • VIOLIN


Please click CHECK IN-STORE button below for store pickup availability.
This product is currently not ready to ship. You can still special order this item and we will contact you with an expected delivery date.





Attention! Store stock availability may not be up to date and may be “open box” inventory.      

  1. Phone your preferred store Store to confirm availability and condition.      
  2. Contact your preferred store Store to confirm availability and condition.      


Vancouver Store
728 Granville St.
Vancouver, BC, V6Z 1E4
Phone Store 604-685-8471
  Contact Store Out Of Stock

Coquitlam Store
2560 Barnet Hwy.,
#116 Coquitlam, BC, V3H 1W3
Phone Store 604-941-8447
  Contact Store Out Of Stock

Langley Store
19638 Fraser Highway
Langley, BC, V3A 4C5
Phone Store 604-532-8303
  Contact Store Out Of Stock

Richmond Store
#150-3631 No. 3 Road
Richmond, BC, V6X 2B9
Phone store 604-273-6661
  Contact Store Out Of Stock

Victoria Store
#105-2401D Millstream Road
Victoria, BC, V9B 3R5
Phone Store 250-383-5222
  Contact Store Out Of Stock

Fauré’s 2nd Violin Sonata was written in 1916 in Evian and Paris, the first in a series of chamber music works. It is thus one of Faure’s late works, characterised by austerity, introspection and the intensity of its expression. It is hard to imagine a greater contrast to the brilliant and ornamental style of the virtuosic 1st Violin Sonata (HN 980), published 40 years earlier. The 2nd Sonata concentrates on the essentials, and on closer contact turns out to be a fascinating composition that harmonically explores the limits of tonality, delving deep into the “Modernism” of the 1920s.

Write Your Own Review
Only registered users can write reviews. Please Sign in or create an account