Carl Reinecke
Ondine - Sonate pour flûte op. 167
De l’abondante production de Reinecke émergent quelques rares œuvres qui se sont dès le début imposées dans le répertoire de concert. Parmi elles, on trouve en premier lieu la Sonate pour flûte op. 167, composée en 1882 et surnommée «Ondine» car inspirée du conte éponyme de Friedrich de La Motte-Fouqué sur les amours malheureuses d’une sirène. Il n’y a toutefois pas d’intention programmatique; il s’agit plutôt, à l’instar des titres poétiques employés par Schumann, de susciter un environnement imaginaire pour cette sonate d’un romantisme exacerbé, qui comporte des traits de grande virtuosité, mais demeure traditionnelle dans sa forme en quatre mouvements. L’autographe étant perdu, ce sont les éditions imprimées qui ont servi de base à la nouvelle édition critique, grâce à laquelle cette sonate solidement ancrée dans le répertoire pour flûte est enfin accessible sous forme urtext chez Henle.
CONTENU/DÉTAILS
About the Authors
Ernst-Günter Heinemann (Editeur)
Dr. Ernst-Günter Heinemann, born in 1945 in Bad Marienberg (Westerwald), completed his schooling in Gießen and read musicology, philosophy and German in Marburg and Frankfurt/Main and also for some time Protestant church music. He did his doctorate on “Franz Liszts geistliche Musik. Zum Konflikt von Kunst und Engagement”.
From 1978–2010 Heinemann worked as an editor at G. Henle Publishers (in 1978 in Duisburg, from 1979 onwards in Munich). He edited a great many Urtext editions for the publishing house, including “Das Wohltemperierte Klavier”, Volume 1 by Bach and all of Debussy’s piano works. In addition, he wrote essays on Debussy, Grieg, Liszt, Mendelssohn and questions concerning general editing, as well as giving seminars on editorial practice for musicology students in Munich.
Rolf Koenen (Doigtés)
As a pupil, Prof. Rolf Koenen, born in 1946 in Duisburg, had already had contact with Ewald Zimmermann, the first editor at the young publishing house. He studied the piano at the Folkwangschule in Essen with Detlef Kraus, with Ludwig Hoffmann in Munich and with Maria Tipo in Florence.
He gave concerts in a permanent duo partnership with Hansjörg Schellenberger, who was later to become the solo oboe player with the Berlin Philharmonic, and made several recordings with the Deutsche Grammophon-Gesellschaft, with Denon and Sony. Other chamber music partners included András Adorján, Stefan Dohr, Wolfgang Schulz, Claes H. Ahnsjö. Following a teaching position in Munich, Rolf Koenen was appointed as a professor at the Berlin University of the Arts in 1982.
The Undine Sonata has become a core part of the flute’s Romantic repertoire, and this new scholarly edition is a welcome addition to the available information regarding the work. For those interested in the full context of the work, this edition is a must – for everyone else, the clear presentation and high quality production of this edition make it hard to resist.
PAN, 2022recommandations
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Autres éditions de ce titre
Autres éditions de ce titre