Capriccio for violoncello solo (PDF)
Yagling, VictoriaProduct information
| Title: | Capriccio for violoncello solo (PDF) | ||
| Authors: | Yagling, Victoria (Composer) | ||
| Product number: | 9790550167865 | ||
| Product form: | Digital download, PDF | ||
| Availability: | After purchase immediately available for download | ||
| Publication date: | 2.10.2025 | ||
| Price per piece: | 10,80 € (9,47 € vat 0 %) | ||
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| Publisher: | Fennica Gehrman |
| Edition: | 2025 |
| Publication year: | 2025 |
| Language: | English |
| Format: | |
| Protection type: | Vesileima |
| Pages: | 4 |
| Product family: | Celebrating women composers PDF download Other instruments (download edition) Strings Violoncello |
| Finnish library classification: | 78.732 Sello ilman säestystä |
| Key words: | sello |
Downloadable and printable PDF edition. Capriccio for violoncello solo is composed in 1990 and dedicated to Mstislav Rostropovich. It includes a quotation from Benjamin Britten's 1st suite for solo cello (4th movement).
Victoria Yagling (1946−2011) was born in Russia and lived in Finland since 1990. Her long career as a cellist served as an excellent accompaniment to the composition she began at an early age. For 11 years she was a cello student of Mstislav Rostropovich at the Moscow Conservatory and Dmitry Kabalevsky and Tikhon Khrennikov taught her composition.
Yagling won the first prize in the Gaspar Cassadò Cello Competition and the following year the second prize in the Moscow Tchaikovsky Competition. Her solo engagements took her to countless countries. She has also taught at several international music courses and master classes and was often a jury member for international cello competitions.
Yagling left a profilic oeuvre, and the three cello concertos are her main works. Her other orchestral works include Finnish Notebook, Lyrical Preludes and the Suite for Cello and String Orchestra. She has also composed solo works (e.g. the Suite for Cello Solo No. 1 chosen as an obligatory piece for the 7th Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow in 1982), chamber works, including two string quartets, and vocal music. Her expressive, romantically orientated style is Russian in spirit and has grown out of the soil provided by Prokofiev and Shostakovich.
Victoria Yagling (1946−2011) was born in Russia and lived in Finland since 1990. Her long career as a cellist served as an excellent accompaniment to the composition she began at an early age. For 11 years she was a cello student of Mstislav Rostropovich at the Moscow Conservatory and Dmitry Kabalevsky and Tikhon Khrennikov taught her composition.
Yagling won the first prize in the Gaspar Cassadò Cello Competition and the following year the second prize in the Moscow Tchaikovsky Competition. Her solo engagements took her to countless countries. She has also taught at several international music courses and master classes and was often a jury member for international cello competitions.
Yagling left a profilic oeuvre, and the three cello concertos are her main works. Her other orchestral works include Finnish Notebook, Lyrical Preludes and the Suite for Cello and String Orchestra. She has also composed solo works (e.g. the Suite for Cello Solo No. 1 chosen as an obligatory piece for the 7th Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow in 1982), chamber works, including two string quartets, and vocal music. Her expressive, romantically orientated style is Russian in spirit and has grown out of the soil provided by Prokofiev and Shostakovich.
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