Concerto

Double Bass & Piano
Composer: Edouard Nanny

Product code:

RMD1081
Publisher:

£10.00

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Description

Édouard Nanny’s Concerto was published in 1938 and was originally only available for orchestral tuning. In three contrasting movements and lasting around fifteen minutes, the concerto is easy to programme and would be ideal for any audience or occasion. Aimed at the advanced bassist and using the entire range of the double bass, there are a wealth of technical and musical challenges making this ideal as a study or recital piece.

Dedicated to Nestor Higuet, Professor of Double Bass at the Royal Conservatoire in Brussels, the first movement (Allegro moderato) is confident and vibrant, with an imposing and arresting first theme introduced by the soloist in bar 9. There are a wealth of double stops to negotiate, many scale and arpeggio passages, and Nanny certainly tests the technical prowess and stamina of the solo bassist.

The slow movement (Lento), a mere 20 bars, emphasises the lyrical possibilities of the double bass through a series of arpeggio figurations followed by a virtuosic cadenza leading directly into the Finale (Allegro moderato) which is bright and buoyant, technically challenging and with a strong rhythmic momentum throughout.

The compositional style is tonal and accessible with a supportive and independent piano accompaniment which adds energy and colour. Nanny knew the technical possibilities of the double bass in 1938, the majority of which he included, and it’s a concerto which deserves to be reassessed in the 150th anniversary of Nanny’s birth.

This edition includes accompaniments for both solo and orchestral tuning.

Édouard Nanny (1872-1942) was the leading French bassist of his generation, taught at the Paris Conservatoire for 20 years, and is recognised as the founder of the modern French double bass school.

Alongside a wealth of transcriptions for double bass, Nanny also composed a series of original works which are worthy of revival in the 21st-century. His music is elegant and charming, exploiting the lyrical and technical possibilities of the double bass, and all are useful as both study and concert repertoire for the progressing bassist.

An anniversary is a good time to reassess a composer’s work and Recital Music is planning to create new editions of a number of Nanny’s original works and transcriptions, in both tunings, this year.

Édouard Nanny is an important figure in the development of the double bass in the first forty years of the 20th-century, particularly in France, and much of his educational music is still in print today. He made an amazing contribution to the double bass world and deserves to be celebrated and remembered.

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Description

Édouard Nanny’s Concerto was published in 1938 and was originally only available for orchestral tuning. In three contrasting movements and lasting around fifteen minutes, the concerto is easy to programme and would be ideal for any audience or occasion. Aimed at the advanced bassist and using the entire range of the double bass, there are a wealth of technical and musical challenges making this ideal as a study or recital piece.

Dedicated to Nestor Higuet, Professor of Double Bass at the Royal Conservatoire in Brussels, the first movement (Allegro moderato) is confident and vibrant, with an imposing and arresting first theme introduced by the soloist in bar 9. There are a wealth of double stops to negotiate, many scale and arpeggio passages, and Nanny certainly tests the technical prowess and stamina of the solo bassist.

The slow movement (Lento), a mere 20 bars, emphasises the lyrical possibilities of the double bass through a series of arpeggio figurations followed by a virtuosic cadenza leading directly into the Finale (Allegro moderato) which is bright and buoyant, technically challenging and with a strong rhythmic momentum throughout.

The compositional style is tonal and accessible with a supportive and independent piano accompaniment which adds energy and colour. Nanny knew the technical possibilities of the double bass in 1938, the majority of which he included, and it’s a concerto which deserves to be reassessed in the 150th anniversary of Nanny’s birth.

This edition includes accompaniments for both solo and orchestral tuning.

Édouard Nanny (1872-1942) was the leading French bassist of his generation, taught at the Paris Conservatoire for 20 years, and is recognised as the founder of the modern French double bass school.

Alongside a wealth of transcriptions for double bass, Nanny also composed a series of original works which are worthy of revival in the 21st-century. His music is elegant and charming, exploiting the lyrical and technical possibilities of the double bass, and all are useful as both study and concert repertoire for the progressing bassist.

An anniversary is a good time to reassess a composer’s work and Recital Music is planning to create new editions of a number of Nanny’s original works and transcriptions, in both tunings, this year.

Édouard Nanny is an important figure in the development of the double bass in the first forty years of the 20th-century, particularly in France, and much of his educational music is still in print today. He made an amazing contribution to the double bass world and deserves to be celebrated and remembered.

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More Info

EditorDavid Heyes
OrchestrationDouble Bass & Piano
Publishers numberRMD1081

Contents

About the Composer

Édouard Nanny (1872-1942) was the leading French bassist of his generation, taught at the Paris Conservatoire for 20 years, and is recognised as the founder of the modern French double bass school. Alongside a wealth of transcriptions for double bass, Nanny also composed a series of original works which are worthy of revival in the 21st-century. His music is elegant and charming, exploiting the lyrical and technical possibilities of the double bass, and all are useful as both study and concert repertoire for the progressing bassist. An anniversary is a good time to reassess a composer’s work and Recital Music is planning to create new editions of a number of Nanny’s original works and transcriptions, in both tunings, this year. Édouard Nanny is an important figure in the development of the double bass in the first forty years of the 20th-century, particularly in France, and much of his educational music is still in print today. He made an amazing contribution to the double bass world and deserves to be celebrated and remembered.

About the Arranger

About the Editor

David Heyes (b.1960) studied double bass with Laurence Gray and Bronwen Naish, later at the Royal College of Music in London, and completed his post-graduate studies in Prague with František Pošta (Principal Bass, Czech Philharmonic Orchestra). He has given recitals and masterclasses in 20 countries over the past few years and has been a juror at a number of international competitions, three times as chairman. David’s collaborative work gained him a prestigious award from the David Walter Charitable Trust of New York for his pioneering activities as a soloist, teacher, publisher, and commissioner of new music for double bass and he works with composers throughout the world to expand the double bass repertoire by commissioning new music and by rediscovering forgotten ones. Since 1983 more than 700 works have been written for him, music from one to twenty basses and from beginner to virtuoso, and he has premiered ten contemporary concertos with orchestra. David began to compose in 2013 and has had music performed and recorded in 29 countries across five continents. He is a D’Addario Performing Artist and has recently commissioned a solo double bass from British master-luthier Martin Penning.