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Cello Concerto (Dvořák)

The Cello Concerto in B minor, Op. 104, B. 191, is the last solo concerto by Antonín Dvořák. It was written in 1894 for his friend, the cellist Hanuš Wihan, but was premiered in London on March 19, 1896, by the English cellist Leo Stern.[1][2]

Structure edit

The piece is scored for a full romantic orchestra (with the exception of a 4th horn), containing two flutes (second doubling piccolo), two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, three horns, two trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, triangle (last movement only), and strings, and is in the standard three-movement concerto format:

  1. Allegro (B minor then B major; about 15 minutes)
  2. Adagio, ma non troppo (G major; about 12 minutes)
  3. Finale: Allegro moderato — Andante — Allegro vivo (B minor then B major; about 13 minutes)

Total duration: approximately 40 minutes.

History edit

In 1865, early in his career, Dvořák started a Cello Concerto in A major (B. 10). The piece was written for Ludevít Peer, whom he knew well from the Provisional Theatre Orchestra in which they both played. He handed the cello score (with piano accompaniment) over to Peer for review but neither bothered to finish the piece. It was recovered from his estate in 1925.

Hanuš Wihan, among others, had asked for a cello concerto for quite some time, but Dvořák always refused, stating that the cello was a fine orchestral instrument but totally insufficient for a solo concerto. According to Josef Michl, Dvořák was fond of the middle register, but complained about a nasal high register and a mumbling bass. In a letter to a friend, Dvořák wrote that he himself was probably most surprised by his decision to write a cello concerto despite these long-held reservations.

Dvořák wrote the concerto while in New York City for his third term as the Director of the National Conservatory. In 1894 one of the teachers at the Conservatory, Victor Herbert, also a composer, finished his Cello Concerto No. 2 in E minor, Op. 30, and premiered it in a series of concerts, commencing on 9 March.[3] Dvořák heard at least two performances of the piece and was inspired to fulfill Wihan's request in composing a cello concerto of his own. Herbert had been principal cellist in the orchestra that premiered Dvořák's "New World" Symphony[3] on 16 December 1893. Herbert's middle movement was in B minor, which may have inspired Dvořák to write his concerto in the same key.[4] It was started on 8 November 1894 and completed on 9 February 1895.[5]

After seeing the score, Hanuš Wihan made various suggestions for improvement, including two cadenzas, one at the end of the third movement. But Dvořák accepted only a few minor changes and neither of the cadenzas. The third movement was a tribute to his sister-in-law, Josefina Kaunitzova, née Čermakova, who had written him a letter in November 1894 saying she was seriously ill.[6] Specifically, the slow, wistful section, before the triumphant ending, quotes his song "Leave Me Alone (Kéž duch můj sám)", Op. 82, B.157, No. 1, a favorite of hers.[7] She died in May 1895, after which the concerto was further revised.[8]

Dvořák wrote to his publishers:[9]

I give you my work only if you will promise me that no one – not even my friend Wihan – shall make any alteration in it without my knowledge and permission, also that there be no cadenza such as Wihan has made in the last movement; and that its form shall be as I have felt it and thought it out.

The finale, he wrote, should close gradually with a diminuendo "like a breath ... then there is a crescendo, and the last measures are taken up by the orchestra, ending stormily. That was my idea, and from it I cannot recede".[9]

Hanuš Wihan first privately performed the concerto with the composer in Lužany in September 1895.[10] Although he had rejected most of Wihan's suggested changes, Dvořák still very much wanted Wihan to premiere the work publicly and had promised him that role. An account of the sequence of events whereby it did not happen is given by Clapham.[11] Francesco Berger, Secretary of the London Philharmonic Society, wrote to Dvořák in November 1895 to invite him to conduct a concert of some of his works in London. Dvořák agreed and proposed to conduct the premiere of his Cello Concerto with Wihan as soloist. Berger proposed the date 19 March 1896, but that date was not convenient for Wihan (it may have clashed with concert dates for the Bohemian Quartet, to which Wihan was already contracted). The Philharmonic Society insisted on the date and hired the English cellist Leo Stern without consulting Dvořák. The composer then at first refused to come for the concert. "Berger was horrified and greatly embarrassed," as the concert had already been advertised. Clapham conjectures that Wihan released Dvořák from his promise. Stern traveled to Prague to prepare his performance under Dvořák's supervision. By early March, all was agreed, and the premiere took place on 19 March in Queen's Hall, London, with Dvořák conducting. The cello played by Stern was the 1684 "General Kyd", one of only about 60 cellos made by Stradivarius.

After the London performance, Stern again played the solo part in what may have been the second public performance, in Prague on 11 April 1896, and later again in London. In December 1896 and during 1897–1898 the concerto was performed by a few cellists and conductors in England and the United States, including Stern in Chicago in January 1897. Wihan went on to perform the concerto with great success, first in January 1899 at The Hague, and later for the first time under Dvořák's baton in Budapest on 20 December 1899.[12] Despite there having been so many public performances before Wihan's first, he and Dvořák remained firm friends.

The concerto was published in 1896 by N. Simrock, Berlin.

The work edit

The first movement starts softly, with the clarinets introducing the theme. The full orchestra later plays the theme in a grandioso manner, leading to a horn solo which introduces the secondary, lyrical theme. The first theme is played throughout the movement and during the last part of the third movement, giving the concerto a cyclic structure. The solo cello begins with a quasi improvisando section stating the theme in B major followed by triple-stopped chords. The cello then plays the theme again in E major. This concerto requires a lot of technical ability, especially in the coda, where the cello plays octaves and many double stops. After the resolution by the solo cello, there is a modulation in which the winds play an E-flat minor chord, changing the key. The solo cello ends with trills on a high B. The movement ends tutti with the restatement of the first theme marked grandioso and fortissimo.

Following this opening essay is the lengthy Adagio, a lyrical movement which features a cadenza-like section which is accompanied mainly by flutes. The cello plays double stops accompanied by left-hand pizzicato on open strings. The movement ends with the cello playing harmonics very quietly.

The final movement is formally a rondo. It opens with the horn playing the main theme quietly. A gradual crescendo leads into a dramatic woodwinds and strings section. The solo cello enters by playing the modified main theme loudly which is marked risoluto. The orchestra plays the new modified theme again. Then the cello enters with a melody played on the A string played with thirty-second notes on the D string. This fast section leads into a section marked poco meno mosso, dolce, and piano. A crescendo and accelerando leads into a fast arpeggio played in sixteenth-note triplets. A fast scale leads into a loud tutti section presenting new material. The cello enters and a gradual decrescendo to another restatement of the theme marked piano. This is followed by a contrasting, loud restatement of the theme played by woodwinds accompanied by strings and brass. This is followed by a moderato section in C major and eventually meno mosso which slowly modulates from A major to C major to B major and finally goes to the original tempo in B major. This is followed by another quiet and slow section which uses material from the first movement and second movement. The concerto ends allegro vivo presented by full orchestra.

Dvořák's friend and mentor Johannes Brahms had written a double concerto for violin and cello in 1887, eight years before Dvořák's cello concerto. He corrected the proofs of Dvořák's concerto for the composer and hence he knew the work intimately from the score.[13] In 1896, Robert Hausmann had played it at his home with Brahms' piano accompaniment, and Brahms is reported as saying: "If I had known that it was possible to compose such a concerto for the cello, I would have tried it myself!"[14] On 7 March 1897, Brahms heard Hugo Becker's performance of the piece in a concert of the Vienna Philharmonic, and he said to his friend Gänsbacher before the concert: "Today you will hear a real piece, a male piece!"[15]

Dvořák's original score, before he accepted a few of the numerous changes suggested by Hanuš Wihan, has been described as "much more musical", and this version has been performed from time to time.[16] Some of Dvořák's music written in America, such as the American String Quartet, written in Spillville, Iowa, and the New World Symphony, was notably influenced by the American environment, specifically pentatonic scales used in African-American and Native American music. For the Cello Concerto such influence is less clear. One author[5] suggests that there was little American influence on the concerto. Another author tells a story that one day when Dvořák was in New York but not at the Conservatory, said to be ill, a visitor to his home found him there composing. "His only illness was a fever of composition ... The remains of many past meals were strewn around the room, where he had been barricaded, probably for several days."[17] Although the time is not specified, it might be understandable that in the later part of his sojourn at the Conservatory, when his salary had been cut and still not paid regularly, Dvořák could have felt less obligation to his duties.

Evaluation and recordings edit

Among all cello concertos, Dvořák's has been called "supreme,"[18] "the greatest",[5][19] and the "king."[20] But other concertos have advocates. There are many compositions for cello and orchestra by various composers, but there are none, for example, by J. S. Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, or Brahms (not counting Mozart's unfinished Sinfonia Concertante for Violin, Viola, and Cello, Beethoven's "Triple" Concerto or Brahms' "Double").

The concerto has been recorded by nearly every well-known cellist. Notable recordings include performances by Pablo Casals, Emanuel Feuermann, Pierre Fournier, Gregor Piatigorsky, Jacqueline du Pré, Bernard Greenhouse, Leonard Rose, Johannes Moser, Gauthier Capuçon, Truls Mork, Mischa Maisky, Julian Lloyd Webber and Steven Isserlis. Yo-Yo Ma recorded Dvořák's cello concerto three times, in 1986, 1995, and 2017. Mstislav Rostropovich made four commercial recordings on western labels (with Adrian Boult and the London Philharmonic Orchestra for EMI; with Herbert von Karajan and the Berlin Philharmonic for Deutsche Grammophon; with Carlo Maria Giulini and the London Philharmonic for EMI; and with Seiji Ozawa and the Boston Symphony Orchestra for Erato). János Starker also recorded the work three times: with the Philharmonia Orchestra and Walter Susskind for Angel/EMI, with Antal Doráti and the London Symphony Orchestra for Mercury, and with Leonard Slatkin and the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra for RCA Victor Red Seal.

Yo-Yo Ma's recording of five "Great Cello Concertos" includes Dvořák's, Elgar's, one of Haydn's, Saint-Saëns' first, and Schumann's.[21]

Media edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "New York Times, 12 September 1904" (PDF). New York Times. 1904-09-12. Retrieved 2014-01-21.
  2. ^ Cello Concerto in B Minor, Op. 104 Britannica
  3. ^ a b Michael Steinberg, The Concerto
  4. ^ "Guild Music". Guild Music. Retrieved 2014-01-21.
  5. ^ a b c Battey, Robert, "Thoughts of Home," Chapter 22 of Tibbets (ed.) (1993)
  6. ^ Smaczny, 1999, p. 57
  7. ^ Smaczny, 1999, p. 79
  8. ^ Smaczny, 1999, pp. 81–82
  9. ^ a b Smaczny, 1999, p. 90, with slightly different translation into English
  10. ^ Clapham 1979, Norton, p. 148
  11. ^ Clapham 1979, Norton, pp. 86, 148–149
  12. ^ . Cellist.nl. Archived from the original on 2013-10-29. Retrieved 2014-01-21.
  13. ^ . Sobs.org. 2004-01-05. Archived from the original on 2012-02-16. Retrieved 2014-01-21.
  14. ^ Florence May, "Johannes Brahms" Vol 2, Munich 1983, p. 301
  15. ^ Florence May, "Johannes Brahms" Vol 2, Munich 1983, p. 303
  16. ^ "Dimitry Markevitch, Some Thoughts on More Rational Cello Fingerings". Cello.org. 1999-05-05. Retrieved 2014-01-21.
  17. ^ Emmanuel Rubin, "Dvořák at the National Conservatory," Chapter 6 of Tibbets (ed., 1993), p. 71
  18. ^ Harold C. Schonberg, The Lives of the Great Composers, Norton, New York, 1980
  19. ^ Clapham, John (1979), Dvořák, Norton, New York
  20. ^ Yoell, John H., "Dvořák in America: A Discography," Appendix C of Tibbets (ed.) (1993), pp. 404-417; on the cello concerto, pp. 412–414
  21. ^ "Great Cello Concertos | Yo-Yo Ma".
  22. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-07-26. Retrieved 2009-02-18.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

References edit

  • Clapham, John. "Antonín Dvořák, Musician and Craftsman". St. Martin's Press, New York, 1966.
  • Clapham, John, Dvořák. New York: Norton, 1979.
  • Dvořák, Antonín: Violoncellový koncert op. 104. (Violoncello e piano) Praha: Editio Bärenreiter, 2004. H 1200
  • Smaczny, Jan. Dvořák: Cello Concerto. Cambridge Music Handbooks. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1999.
  • Tibbets, John C. (ed.), Dvořák in America, Portland, OR: Amadeus Press, 1993.

External links edit

cello, concerto, dvořák, dvořák, early, unorchestrated, cello, concerto, cello, concerto, major, dvořák, cello, concerto, minor, last, solo, concerto, antonín, dvořák, written, 1894, friend, cellist, hanuš, wihan, premiered, london, march, 1896, english, celli. For Dvorak s early and unorchestrated cello concerto see Cello Concerto in A major Dvorak The Cello Concerto in B minor Op 104 B 191 is the last solo concerto by Antonin Dvorak It was written in 1894 for his friend the cellist Hanus Wihan but was premiered in London on March 19 1896 by the English cellist Leo Stern 1 2 Contents 1 Structure 2 History 3 The work 4 Evaluation and recordings 5 Media 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksStructure editThe piece is scored for a full romantic orchestra with the exception of a 4th horn containing two flutes second doubling piccolo two oboes two clarinets two bassoons three horns two trumpets three trombones tuba timpani triangle last movement only and strings and is in the standard three movement concerto format Allegro B minor then B major about 15 minutes Adagio ma non troppo G major about 12 minutes Finale Allegro moderato Andante Allegro vivo B minor then B major about 13 minutes Total duration approximately 40 minutes History editIn 1865 early in his career Dvorak started a Cello Concerto in A major B 10 The piece was written for Ludevit Peer whom he knew well from the Provisional Theatre Orchestra in which they both played He handed the cello score with piano accompaniment over to Peer for review but neither bothered to finish the piece It was recovered from his estate in 1925 Hanus Wihan among others had asked for a cello concerto for quite some time but Dvorak always refused stating that the cello was a fine orchestral instrument but totally insufficient for a solo concerto According to Josef Michl Dvorak was fond of the middle register but complained about a nasal high register and a mumbling bass In a letter to a friend Dvorak wrote that he himself was probably most surprised by his decision to write a cello concerto despite these long held reservations Dvorak wrote the concerto while in New York City for his third term as the Director of the National Conservatory In 1894 one of the teachers at the Conservatory Victor Herbert also a composer finished his Cello Concerto No 2 in E minor Op 30 and premiered it in a series of concerts commencing on 9 March 3 Dvorak heard at least two performances of the piece and was inspired to fulfill Wihan s request in composing a cello concerto of his own Herbert had been principal cellist in the orchestra that premiered Dvorak s New World Symphony 3 on 16 December 1893 Herbert s middle movement was in B minor which may have inspired Dvorak to write his concerto in the same key 4 It was started on 8 November 1894 and completed on 9 February 1895 5 After seeing the score Hanus Wihan made various suggestions for improvement including two cadenzas one at the end of the third movement But Dvorak accepted only a few minor changes and neither of the cadenzas The third movement was a tribute to his sister in law Josefina Kaunitzova nee Cermakova who had written him a letter in November 1894 saying she was seriously ill 6 Specifically the slow wistful section before the triumphant ending quotes his song Leave Me Alone Kez duch muj sam Op 82 B 157 No 1 a favorite of hers 7 She died in May 1895 after which the concerto was further revised 8 Dvorak wrote to his publishers 9 I give you my work only if you will promise me that no one not even my friend Wihan shall make any alteration in it without my knowledge and permission also that there be no cadenza such as Wihan has made in the last movement and that its form shall be as I have felt it and thought it out The finale he wrote should close gradually with a diminuendo like a breath then there is a crescendo and the last measures are taken up by the orchestra ending stormily That was my idea and from it I cannot recede 9 Hanus Wihan first privately performed the concerto with the composer in Luzany in September 1895 10 Although he had rejected most of Wihan s suggested changes Dvorak still very much wanted Wihan to premiere the work publicly and had promised him that role An account of the sequence of events whereby it did not happen is given by Clapham 11 Francesco Berger Secretary of the London Philharmonic Society wrote to Dvorak in November 1895 to invite him to conduct a concert of some of his works in London Dvorak agreed and proposed to conduct the premiere of his Cello Concerto with Wihan as soloist Berger proposed the date 19 March 1896 but that date was not convenient for Wihan it may have clashed with concert dates for the Bohemian Quartet to which Wihan was already contracted The Philharmonic Society insisted on the date and hired the English cellist Leo Stern without consulting Dvorak The composer then at first refused to come for the concert Berger was horrified and greatly embarrassed as the concert had already been advertised Clapham conjectures that Wihan released Dvorak from his promise Stern traveled to Prague to prepare his performance under Dvorak s supervision By early March all was agreed and the premiere took place on 19 March in Queen s Hall London with Dvorak conducting The cello played by Stern was the 1684 General Kyd one of only about 60 cellos made by Stradivarius After the London performance Stern again played the solo part in what may have been the second public performance in Prague on 11 April 1896 and later again in London In December 1896 and during 1897 1898 the concerto was performed by a few cellists and conductors in England and the United States including Stern in Chicago in January 1897 Wihan went on to perform the concerto with great success first in January 1899 at The Hague and later for the first time under Dvorak s baton in Budapest on 20 December 1899 12 Despite there having been so many public performances before Wihan s first he and Dvorak remained firm friends The concerto was published in 1896 by N Simrock Berlin The work editThe first movement starts softly with the clarinets introducing the theme The full orchestra later plays the theme in a grandioso manner leading to a horn solo which introduces the secondary lyrical theme The first theme is played throughout the movement and during the last part of the third movement giving the concerto a cyclic structure The solo cello begins with a quasi improvisando section stating the theme in B major followed by triple stopped chords The cello then plays the theme again in E major This concerto requires a lot of technical ability especially in the coda where the cello plays octaves and many double stops After the resolution by the solo cello there is a modulation in which the winds play an E flat minor chord changing the key The solo cello ends with trills on a high B The movement ends tutti with the restatement of the first theme marked grandioso and fortissimo Following this opening essay is the lengthy Adagio a lyrical movement which features a cadenza like section which is accompanied mainly by flutes The cello plays double stops accompanied by left hand pizzicato on open strings The movement ends with the cello playing harmonics very quietly The final movement is formally a rondo It opens with the horn playing the main theme quietly A gradual crescendo leads into a dramatic woodwinds and strings section The solo cello enters by playing the modified main theme loudly which is marked risoluto The orchestra plays the new modified theme again Then the cello enters with a melody played on the A string played with thirty second notes on the D string This fast section leads into a section marked poco meno mosso dolce and piano A crescendo and accelerando leads into a fast arpeggio played in sixteenth note triplets A fast scale leads into a loud tutti section presenting new material The cello enters and a gradual decrescendo to another restatement of the theme marked piano This is followed by a contrasting loud restatement of the theme played by woodwinds accompanied by strings and brass This is followed by a moderato section in C major and eventually meno mosso which slowly modulates from A major to C major to B major and finally goes to the original tempo in B major This is followed by another quiet and slow section which uses material from the first movement and second movement The concerto ends allegro vivo presented by full orchestra Dvorak s friend and mentor Johannes Brahms had written a double concerto for violin and cello in 1887 eight years before Dvorak s cello concerto He corrected the proofs of Dvorak s concerto for the composer and hence he knew the work intimately from the score 13 In 1896 Robert Hausmann had played it at his home with Brahms piano accompaniment and Brahms is reported as saying If I had known that it was possible to compose such a concerto for the cello I would have tried it myself 14 On 7 March 1897 Brahms heard Hugo Becker s performance of the piece in a concert of the Vienna Philharmonic and he said to his friend Gansbacher before the concert Today you will hear a real piece a male piece 15 Dvorak s original score before he accepted a few of the numerous changes suggested by Hanus Wihan has been described as much more musical and this version has been performed from time to time 16 Some of Dvorak s music written in America such as the American String Quartet written in Spillville Iowa and the New World Symphony was notably influenced by the American environment specifically pentatonic scales used in African American and Native American music For the Cello Concerto such influence is less clear One author 5 suggests that there was little American influence on the concerto Another author tells a story that one day when Dvorak was in New York but not at the Conservatory said to be ill a visitor to his home found him there composing His only illness was a fever of composition The remains of many past meals were strewn around the room where he had been barricaded probably for several days 17 Although the time is not specified it might be understandable that in the later part of his sojourn at the Conservatory when his salary had been cut and still not paid regularly Dvorak could have felt less obligation to his duties Evaluation and recordings editAmong all cello concertos Dvorak s has been called supreme 18 the greatest 5 19 and the king 20 But other concertos have advocates There are many compositions for cello and orchestra by various composers but there are none for example by J S Bach Mozart Beethoven or Brahms not counting Mozart s unfinished Sinfonia Concertante for Violin Viola and Cello Beethoven s Triple Concerto or Brahms Double The concerto has been recorded by nearly every well known cellist Notable recordings include performances by Pablo Casals Emanuel Feuermann Pierre Fournier Gregor Piatigorsky Jacqueline du Pre Bernard Greenhouse Leonard Rose Johannes Moser Gauthier Capucon Truls Mork Mischa Maisky Julian Lloyd Webber and Steven Isserlis Yo Yo Ma recorded Dvorak s cello concerto three times in 1986 1995 and 2017 Mstislav Rostropovich made four commercial recordings on western labels with Adrian Boult and the London Philharmonic Orchestra for EMI with Herbert von Karajan and the Berlin Philharmonic for Deutsche Grammophon with Carlo Maria Giulini and the London Philharmonic for EMI and with Seiji Ozawa and the Boston Symphony Orchestra for Erato Janos Starker also recorded the work three times with the Philharmonia Orchestra and Walter Susskind for Angel EMI with Antal Dorati and the London Symphony Orchestra for Mercury and with Leonard Slatkin and the St Louis Symphony Orchestra for RCA Victor Red Seal Yo Yo Ma s recording of five Great Cello Concertos includes Dvorak s Elgar s one of Haydn s Saint Saens first and Schumann s 21 Media edit nbsp First movement source source Second movement source source Third movement source source Performed by John Michel Problems playing these files See media help nbsp First movement source source Performed by Hans Goldstein with the Milwaukee Youth Orchestra Problems playing this file See media help European Archive 22 Copyright free LP recording of the Dvorak Cello Concerto performed by Zara Nelsova cello Josef Krips conductor and the London Symphony Orchestra for non American viewers only at the European Archive Mischel Cherniavsky cello October 18 1943 Music Hall Theatre SeattleNotes edit New York Times 12 September 1904 PDF New York Times 1904 09 12 Retrieved 2014 01 21 Cello Concerto in B Minor Op 104 Britannica a b Michael Steinberg The Concerto Guild Music Guild Music Retrieved 2014 01 21 a b c Battey Robert Thoughts of Home Chapter 22 of Tibbets ed 1993 Smaczny 1999 p 57 Smaczny 1999 p 79 Smaczny 1999 pp 81 82 a b Smaczny 1999 p 90 with slightly different translation into English Clapham 1979 Norton p 148 Clapham 1979 Norton pp 86 148 149 Hanus Wihan Cellist nl Archived from the original on 2013 10 29 Retrieved 2014 01 21 Unearthing Johannes Robert Kameczura Sobs org 2004 01 05 Archived from the original on 2012 02 16 Retrieved 2014 01 21 Florence May Johannes Brahms Vol 2 Munich 1983 p 301 Florence May Johannes Brahms Vol 2 Munich 1983 p 303 Dimitry Markevitch Some Thoughts on More Rational Cello Fingerings Cello org 1999 05 05 Retrieved 2014 01 21 Emmanuel Rubin Dvorak at the National Conservatory Chapter 6 of Tibbets ed 1993 p 71 Harold C Schonberg The Lives of the Great Composers Norton New York 1980 Clapham John 1979 Dvorak Norton New York Yoell John H Dvorak in America A Discography Appendix C of Tibbets ed 1993 pp 404 417 on the cello concerto pp 412 414 Great Cello Concertos Yo Yo Ma Archived copy Archived from the original on 2011 07 26 Retrieved 2009 02 18 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link References editClapham John Antonin Dvorak Musician and Craftsman St Martin s Press New York 1966 Clapham John Dvorak New York Norton 1979 Dvorak Antonin Violoncellovy koncert op 104 Violoncello e piano Praha Editio Barenreiter 2004 H 1200 Smaczny Jan Dvorak Cello Concerto Cambridge Music Handbooks Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1999 Tibbets John C ed Dvorak in America Portland OR Amadeus Press 1993 External links editCello Concerto No 2 Op 104 Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Portal nbsp Classical Music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cello Concerto Dvorak amp oldid 1157298782, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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