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Recognizing a piece by its score
Posted: Thu Dec 31, 2015 1:14 pm
by pupv20
Hello. My teacher has printed an amazing piano duet, named "in memory of gavrilin". Unfortunately, she hasn't write the name of the composer. I've tried to find the score in the internet and the only 2 things I've found are:
1. Igor Rogalev Book of marches and dances in memory of Valery Gavrilin.
2. IGOR VOROBYOV - FIVE ROMANCES AND VOCALIZE IN MEMORY OF VALERY GAVRILIN.
My score isn't one of these, so it's very frustrating. I really want to find the name of the composer, please help me..
Re: Recognizing a piece by its score
Posted: Fri Jan 01, 2016 9:29 pm
by jossuk
This looks to be a piece in a collection, since it begins on p. 44. Your teacher may not remember the composer, but perhaps she could remember the title of the collection...?
Re: Recognizing a piece by its score
Posted: Mon Jan 04, 2016 1:27 pm
by pupv20
Thanks, but she cannot remember also that. She found it on the internet and I cannot find the website with this score..It's very frustrating because I really like this piece and I want to find out who is the composer, but it seems that it cannot be found anywhere...
Re: Recognizing a piece by its score
Posted: Tue Jan 05, 2016 3:10 am
by jossuk
Not to criticize your teacher, but she might have been following some particular internet thread before discovering this piece. Remembering even a small portion of that "journey" might help in recovering the composer's identity.
Re: Recognizing a piece by its score
Posted: Tue Jan 05, 2016 6:38 am
by coulonnus
pupv20 wrote:. She found it on the internet [...]
Is there a
History feature on her browser? It helps if she approximately remembers the date of the discovery.
Re: Recognizing a piece by its score
Posted: Mon Jan 11, 2016 11:20 am
by pupv20
She cannot find it anywhere...I've searched even in Russian on the internet (with google translate, I don't speak Russian) and I cannot find it. The problem is that I asked her too late. She can't find it now...What do you think? Is there any way to find it by myself?
Re: Recognizing a piece by its score
Posted: Mon Jan 11, 2016 12:56 pm
by coulonnus
At least, does she remember if the site was something fixed like a library or something evolutive like a blog or a forum? If the dedicatee is Valery Gavrilin (1939-1999) the piece is copyrighted and the site administrators are in hot waters. (we have no smiley for "scared")
Re: Recognizing a piece by its score
Posted: Tue Jan 12, 2016 9:49 am
by coulonnus
And is the present image the first page of the internet scan or did you print it and make a photograph afterwards?
Re: Recognizing a piece by its score
Posted: Tue Jan 12, 2016 2:57 pm
by coulonnus
Does your teacher use Finale? And is it for 2 pianos or 1 piano 4 hands?
Re: Recognizing a piece by its score
Posted: Fri Jan 15, 2016 1:45 pm
by pupv20
Hi. The image that i've uploaded is my scan. She gave me the printed score in the class. The duet is for 2 pianists, 1 piano. The only thing I know for sure is that she use to print scores from Russian websites, but I cannot find it anywhere...What do you think? Do I have any chance finding the composer's name?
Re: Recognizing a piece by its score
Posted: Fri Jan 15, 2016 1:57 pm
by Choralia
I would suggest the following:
- search using the most popular Russian search engine,
Yandex;
- make a good scan of the score (not just a photo) and use the "search by image" function provided by most search engines, including Yandex.
Max
Re: Recognizing a piece by its score
Posted: Fri Jan 15, 2016 2:34 pm
by coulonnus
Then I believe this score was typeset by someone, because 4-hand pieces are typeset by publishers piano-I right page, piano-II left page. The braces look like Finale's, so the most likely source is a Finale score-exchange forum.
Re: Recognizing a piece by its score
Posted: Sat Jan 16, 2016 5:49 am
by jossuk
You may be right about the typesetting, but there is also an alternative format for 4-hand pieces which puts both parts on the same page. Of course, that layout is not as comfortable to read as the more traditional format, but it does exist.