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Péchés de vieillesse

Composer: Rossini Gioachino

Instruments: Voice Soprano Alto Tenor Bass Piano Baritone Pump organ Men's chorus Organ Mixed chorus Violin Cello French horn Piano four hands

Tags: Piece Quartet Arietta Arias Song Bolero Dance Elegies Funeral music Duet Hymn Sacred hymns Religious music Canzonetta Nocturne Ballad Secular choruses Choruses Romance Tyrolienne Communion Mass Variation Saltarello Prelude Waltz Impromptu Barcarolle Polka Mazurka Étude Scherzo Marche Tarantella Motet Ritournelle Canon

#Arrangements

Download free scores:

Selections. Album I. Album italiano PDF 1 MBSelections. Album II. Album français PDF 1 MBSelections. Album III. Morceaux réservés PDF 1 MBSelections. Album IV. Quatre hors d’œuvres et quatre mendiants PDF 2 MB
Une larme, thème et variations (Album IX, No.10). Complete Score PDF 0 MBUne larme, thème et variations (Album IX, No.10). Cello Part (Version A), Urtext PDF 0 MBUne larme, thème et variations (Album IX, No.10). Cello Part (Version B), (fully edited) PDF 0 MB
Selections. Album V: Pour les enfants adolescents PDF 4 MB
Adieux à la vie! (Album II No.9). Complete Score PDF 0 MBAdieux à la vie! (Album II No.9). Voice PDF 0 MB
Danse sibérienne (Album XII, No.12). Complete Score PDF 0 MB
Une larme, thème et variations (Album IX, No.10). Complete Score and Cello Part PDF 0 MB

Arrangements:

Other

Adieux à la vie! (Album II No.9). Piano (Mandozzi, Orfeo)
Wikipedia
Péchés de vieillesse ("Sins of Old Age") is a collection of 150 vocal, chamber and solo piano pieces by composer Gioachino Rossini, who was best known for his operas. The pieces are grouped into fourteen unpublished albums under this self-deprecating and ironic title. The ordering of the pieces in the albums does not reflect the sequence or the dates of their composition, which range from 1857 to shortly before Rossini's death in 1868. The title Péchés de vieillesse was given by Rossini only to volumes V to IX but has been applied to all. The collection is salon music, though of a refined order, meant to be performed in the privacy of Rossini's drawing room at Passy. Volumes I, II, III and XI are vocal music to piano accompaniment. Volumes IV, V, VI, VII, VIII, X and XII are music for solo piano. Volume IX is for chamber ensemble or solo piano. Volumes XIII and XIV comprise vocal and non-vocal music.
After the composer's death in 1868, his widow, Olympe Pélissier, sold the entire collection, which was then auctioned in London, in 1878. The Société anonyme de publications périodique, Paris, was among the buyers, who sold publishing rights to the firm of Heugel. The edition was prepared by Auguste Vaucorbeil (1821–1884), director of the Paris Opéra, who reordered the pieces and gave them new picturesque titles, as Rossini's often nonsensical titles, which looked forward to Erik Satie's, were deemed unsuitable.
Critical editions of all the albums are in process of publication by the Fondazione Rossini [it], Pesaro, which conserves the original autograph manuscripts; they are distributed by Ricordi of Milan. The new editions restore Rossini's expressively precise musical notation and offer heretofore unpublished alternative versions of some Péchés.
In 1918, Ottorino Respighi orchestrated a number of the piano pieces for the ballet La Boutique fantasque. In 1925, he arranged some more piano pieces, from Vol. XII (Quelques riens), as the orchestral suite Rossiniana. Benjamin Britten also used some of Rossini's themes in his orchestrally arranged suites "Soirées musicales", Op. 9, (1936) and "Matinées musicales", Op. 24 (1941).
From 2008 to 2018 Naxos Records released 11 albums with Peches de vieillesse played by pianist Alessandro Marangoni