Product Description
Key Signature: A major
Time Signature: 4/4
Tempo: Andante espressivo (virtuoso-ish)
Difficulty: Advanced
Version: parts included
Playback were modeled after the performance of:
Akemi Takayama, Violin, Kazuoki Fujii, Piano
May 23, 2010, Toppan Hall, Tokyo, Japan.
Composed in 1893, Romance for Violin and Piano, Op. 23 is one of Amy Beachs early instrumental gems, written during a time when she was already making waves as a pioneering female composer in the male-dominated world of late 19th-century classical music. The piece was premiered by the renowned violinist Maud Powell, a champion of American composers and women in music, which helped shine a light on Beachs talent beyond her well-known art songs and choral works. Though Beach was largely self-taught, her deep musicality and grasp of Romantic idioms are evident throughout this lush and lyrical work. Its said that she wrote the piece specifically for a performance at the Worlds Columbian Exposition in Chicago, a monumental event celebrating culture and progressa fitting debut for a woman who herself represented both.
What makes Romance stand out is its unabashed lyricism and emotional warmth. The violin sings with an almost vocal expressiveness, swooping through tender melodies and rhapsodic swells, while the piano offers both delicate support and dramatic interplay. The harmonic language is rich with late-Romantic color, and there's a sense of refined elegance paired with heartfelt sincerity that feels uniquely Beach. While its a relatively short piece, it delivers an outsized emotional punchpart dreamy reverie, part impassioned confession. In many ways, it's a microcosm of Beachs broader musical voice: refined, deeply emotive, and unmistakably her own.
This product was created by a member of ArrangeMe, Hal Leonard's global self-publishing community of independent composers, arrangers, and songwriters. ArrangeMe allows for the publication of unique arrangements of both popular titles and original compositions from a wide variety of voices and backgrounds.