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John Field (composer)

John Field (26 July 1782 – 23 January 1837), was an Irish pianist, composer, and teacher.[1] Field is best known as the inventor of the nocturne.

John Field, c. 1820

He was born in Dublin into a musical family, and received his early education there, in particular with the Italian composer Tommaso Giordani. The Fields soon moved to London, where Field studied under Muzio Clementi. Under his tutelage, Field quickly became a famous and sought-after concert pianist. Together, master and pupil visited Paris, Vienna, and St. Petersburg. Ambiguity surrounds Field's decision to remain in the former Russian capital, but it is likely that Field acted as a sales representative for the Clementi Pianos.

Field was very highly regarded by his contemporaries and his playing and compositions influenced many major composers, including Frédéric Chopin, Johannes Brahms, Robert Schumann, and Franz Liszt. Although little is known of Field in Russia, he undoubtedly contributed substantially to concerts and teaching, and to the development of the Russian piano school.[2]

Notable students include Prussian pianist and composer Charles Mayer, the Franco-Russian composer Alexandre Dubuque, and Polish pianist and composer Antoine de Kontski.

See: List of music students by teacher: C to F#John Field.

Biography

1782–1801: Early life

 
A plaque commemorating John Field in Golden Lane, Dublin.

Field was born 26 July 1782 in Golden Lane, Dublin,[3] the eldest son of Irish parents who were members of the Church of Ireland. He was baptised 30 September. His father, Robert Field, earned his living by playing the violin in Dublin theatres. Field first studied the piano under his grandfather (also named John Field), who was a professional organist, and later under Tommaso Giordani.[4] He made his debut at the age of nine, a performance that was well-received, on 24 March 1792 in Dublin.[5] According to an early biographer, W. H. Grattan Flood, Field started composing in Ireland, but no evidence exists to support his claim. Flood also asserted that Field's family moved to Bath, Somerset, in 1793 and lived there for a short time, and this too is considered unlikely by modern researchers. By late 1793, though, the Fields had settled in London, where the young pianist started studying with Muzio Clementi. This arrangement was made possible by Field's father, who was perhaps able to secure the apprenticeship through Giordani, who knew Clementi.

Field continued giving public performances and soon became famous in London, attracting favourable comments from the press and the local musicians. Around 1795 his performance of a Dussek piano concerto was praised by Haydn. Field continued his studies with Clementi, also helping the Italian with the making and selling of instruments. He also took up violin playing, which he studied under J. P. Solomon. His first published compositions were issued by Clementi in 1795; the first historically important work, the Piano Concerto No. 1, H 27, was premiered by the composer in London on 7 February 1799, when he was aged 16. Field's first official opus was a set of three piano sonatas published by (and dedicated to) Clementi in 1801.[5]

1802–1829: Settling in Russia

In summer 1802 Field and Clementi left London and went to Paris on business. They soon travelled to Vienna, where Field took a brief course in counterpoint under Johann Georg Albrechtsberger and had a meeting with Beethoven, for whom Field played in October, and Beethoven highly praised him. In early winter he arrived in Saint Petersburg. Field was inclined to stay, impressed by the artistic life of the city. Clementi left in June 1803, but not before securing Field a teaching post in Narva and "appointing" the young man as his deputy, so that Field would receive similarly high fees. After Clementi's departure, Field had a busy concert season, eventually performing at the newly founded Saint Petersburg Philharmonic Society. In 1805 Field embarked on a concert tour of the Baltic states, staying in Saint Petersburg during the summer. The following year he gave his first concert in Moscow. Clementi arranged the publication of some of Field's old works in Russia in late 1806; he evidently sold Field a piano in exchange for music. Field returned to Moscow in April 1807 and apparently did not revisit Saint Petersburg until 1811 (but he kept his apartment at Vasilievsky Island). In 1810 he married Adelaide Percheron, a French pianist and former pupil.[5]

Up to 1808 almost all publications of Field's music were reissues of old works. In 1808–9 he finally began publishing newly composed music, starting with piano variations on Russian folksongs: Air russe varié for piano 4 hands, H 10, and Kamarinskaya for piano, H 22. In 1811 the composer returned to Saint Petersburg. He spent the next decade of his life here, more productive than ever before, publishing numerous new pieces and producing corrected editions of old ones. He was successful in establishing a fruitful collaboration with both H. J. Dalmas, the most prominent Russian publisher of the time, and Breitkopf & Härtel, one of the most important music publishing houses of Europe. In 1815 Field fathered an illegitimate son, Leon Charpentier (later Leon Leonov [ru]), but remained with his wife. They had a son, Adrien, in 1819; Leon would later become a famous tenor, active in Russia, while Adrien followed his father's steps and became a pianist. By 1819 Field was sufficiently wealthy to be able to refuse the position of court pianist that was offered to him. His lifestyle and social behaviour were becoming more and more extravagant.[5]

In 1818 Field revisited Moscow on business, prompted by his collaboration with the publisher Wenzel. He and his wife gave a series of concerts in the city in 1821, the last of which marked their last appearance in public together. Adelaide left Field soon afterward (taking Adrien with her) and attempted a solo career, which was not particularly successful. Field stayed in Moscow and continued performing and publishing his music. In 1822 he met Johann Nepomuk Hummel; the two collaborated on a performance of Hummel's Sonata for Piano 4-Hands, Op. 92.[5]

1830–1837: Last years and death

Partly as a result of his extravagant lifestyle, Field's health began deteriorating by the mid-1820s. From about 1823 his concert appearances started decreasing; by the late 1820s he was suffering from rectal cancer. Field left for London to seek medical attention. He arrived in September 1831 and, after an operation, gave concerts there and in Manchester. He stayed in England for some time, meeting distinguished figures such as Mendelssohn and Moscheles. In March 1832 his former teacher and friend Clementi died, and Field served as pallbearer at his funeral.[6] On Christmas Day 1832 Field was in Paris, performing his 7th Piano Concerto, which received a mixed reaction, just as at his recent concerts in England. After a series of concerts in various European cities, Field spent nine months (1834–5) in a Naples hospital. His Russian patrons rescued him. He briefly stayed with Carl Czerny in Vienna, where he gave three recitals, and then returned to Moscow with his son Adrien.[5] He gave his last concert in March 1836 and died in Moscow almost a year later, on 23 January 1837, from pneumonia. He was buried in the Vvedenskoye Cemetery. According to an eyewitness report, when asked on his deathbed what his religion was, Field replied with a characteristic pun: "I am not a Calvinist, but a Claveciniste (French for harpsichordist)."[7]

Music

None have quite attained to these vague eolian harmonies, these half-formed sighs floating through the air, softly lamenting and dissolved in delicious melancholy. Nobody has even attempted this peculiar style, and especially none of those who heard Field play himself, or rather who heard him dream his music in moments when he entirely abandoned himself to his inspiration.
Franz Liszt's preface to his edition of Field's nocturnes, 1859. (English translation by Julius Schuberth, 1859)[8]

Field became well-known for his post-London style, probably developed in Moscow around 1807. The characteristic texture is that of a chromatically decorated melody over sonorous left hand parts supported by sensitive pedalling. Field also had an affinity for ostinato patterns and pedal points, rather unusual for the prevailing styles of the day. Entirely representative of these traits are Field's 18 nocturnes and associated pieces such as Andante inedit, H 64. These works were some of the most influential music of the early Romantic period: they do not adhere to a strict formal scheme (such as the sonata form), and they create a mood without text or programme.[5] These pieces were admired by Frédéric Chopin, who subsequently made the piano nocturne famous, and Franz Liszt, who published an edition of the nocturnes based on rare Russian sources that incorporated late revisions by Field. Liszt's preface to the said edition was an extensive eulogy for Field and his nocturnes.[8]

Field also gave a few lessons to the young Mikhail Glinka, who was to become the first notable Russian composer.

Similarly influential were Field's early piano concertos, which occupy a central place in the development of the genre in the 19th century. Already the earliest of these works show competent and imaginative orchestration, and bold, original piano writing. One interesting trait of his piano concertos is their limited choice of keys: they all use either E-flat major or C major at some point (or both, in the last concerto's case). Composers such as Hummel, Kalkbrenner and Moscheles were influenced by these works, which are particularly notable for their central movements, frequently nocturne-like. Some of the less known works were also historically important: particularly the piano fantasies, in which Field pioneered the Romantic large scale episodic structure.[5]

None of his piano sonatas, and only two of his 7 piano concertos, have a formal slow movement. In performance, Field would interpolate an existing nocturne in a related key or improvise one.[9]

List of works

This list is arranged according to Hopkinson numbers, introduced in the 1961 catalogue by Cecil Hopkinson. Many of these works were arranged for other instruments and (or) revised by the composer himself; such arrangements and revised versions are not listed.

Number Opus Form Title Key Notes Refs Year
H 1 Variation on "Fal Lal La" for piano A major ? ?
H 2 Rondo "Favorite Hornpipe" for piano A major ? ?
H 3 Rondo "Go the devil" for piano C major ? ?
H 4 Variation on "Since then I'm doom'd" for piano C major ? ?
H 5 Rondo "Slave, bear the sparkling goblet" for piano G major [n 1] ?
H 6 Rondo "The two slaves dances" for piano G major ? ?
H 7 Variation on "Logie of Buchan" for piano C major ? ?
H 8 Op. 1 Sonata Piano Sonata No. 1 E flat major ? ? P 1801[10]
Piano Sonata No. 2 A major P 1801
Piano Sonata No. 3 C minor P 1801
H 9 Concertante "Pleyel's" for piano, violin & cello F major ? ?
H 10 Variation "Air russe" for piano 4 hands A minor ? ?
H 11 Andante for piano 4 hands C minor ? ?
H 12 "Danse des ours" for piano 4 hands E flat major ? ?
H 13 Nocturne for piano (12) E major ? ?
H 14 Divertissement No. 2 for piano A major ? ?
H 14 Nocturne for piano (7) A major ? ?
H 15 Op. 3 Fantasia on "Guardami un poco" for piano A major ? ?
H 16 Marche triomphale for piano E flat major ? ?
H 17 Sonata for piano B major ? ? P 1812
H 18 Rondeau for piano A flat major ? ?
Waltz
H 19 Grande valse for piano 4 hands A major ? ?
H 20 Variation on "Vive Henry IV" for piano A minor ? ?
H 21 Polonaise for piano E flat major ? ?
H 22 Variation on "Kamarinskaya" for piano B flat major ? ?
H 23 Rondo "Speed the Plough" for piano B major ? ?
H 24 Nocturne No. 1 for piano E flat major ? ? P 1814
H 25 Nocturne No. 2 for piano C minor ? ? P 1814
H 26 Nocturne No. 3 for piano A flat major ? ? P 1814
H 27 Piano Concerto No. 1 E flat major [n 2] ?
Rondo from Piano Concerto No. 1
Variation on "Within a mile" for piano B flat major
H 28 Piano Concerto No. 4 E flat major [n 3] ?
Rondo from Piano Concerto No. 4
H 29 Rondo from Piano Concerto No. 3 E flat major ? ?
H 30 Nocturne No. 9 (8) for piano E flat major ? ?
H 31 Piano Concerto No. 2 A flat ? ?
Poco adagio from Piano Concerto No. 2 E flat major
Rondo from Piano Concerto No. 2 A flat major
H 32 Piano Concerto No. 3 E flat major [n 4] ?
H 33 Étude "Exercice modulé sur tous les tons majeurs et mineurs" for piano ? ?
H 34 Piano quintet A flat major ? ?
H 35 Fantasia on "Ah! quel dommage" for piano G major ? ?
H 36 Nocturne No. 4 for piano A major ? ? P 1817
H 37 Nocturne No. 5 for piano B flat major ? ? P 1817
H 38 Rondo for piano A major ? ?
H 39 Piano Concerto No. 5 "L'incendie par l'orage" C major [n 5] ?
Rondo from Piano Concerto No. 5
H 40 Nocturne No. 6 for piano F major ? ?
H 41 Variation on a Russian folksong for piano D minor ? ?
H 42 6 Dances for piano ? ?
H 43 Rondo for piano 4 hands G major ? ?
H 44 Étude "Exercice nouveau" No. 1 for piano C major ? ?
H 45 Nocturne No. 7 (13) for piano C major ? ?
H 46 Nocturne No. 8 (9) for piano E minor ? ?
H 47 "The Maid of Valdarno" [n 6] ?
H 48 "Exercice nouveau" No. 2 for piano C major ? ?
H 49 Piano Concerto No. 6 C major [n 7] ?
H 49 Rondo No. 6 from Piano Concerto C major ? ?
H 50 2 Songs ? ?
H 51 Waltz "Sehnsuchts-Walzer" for piano E major ? ?
H 52 Rondoletto for piano E flat major ? ?
H 53 Rondo "Come again, come again" for piano E major ? ?
H 54 Nocturne No. 10 for piano E major ? ?
H 55 Nocturne "Le troubadour" for piano C major ? ?
H 56 Nocturne No. 11 for piano E flat major ? ?
H 57 Fantasia on "We met" for piano G major ? ?
H 58 Nocturne No. 12 (14) for piano G major [n 8] ?
Piano Concerto No. 7 C minor
H 59 Nocturne No. 13 (15) for piano D minor ? ?
H 60 Nocturne No. 14 (16) for piano C major ? ?
H 61 Nocturne No. 15 (17) for piano C major ? ?
H 62 Nocturne No. 16 (18) for piano F major ? ?
H 63 Nocturne – for piano B flat major ? ?
H 64 Andante inedit for piano E flat major ? ?
H 65 Pastorale for piano [n 9] ?
H 66 Nocturne "Dernière pensée" for piano [n 10] ?
H 67 "88 passages doigtés" for piano [n 11] ?
H deest Étude "Exercice" for piano A flat major ? ?
H deest Fantasia on "Dans le jardin" for piano A minor ? ?
H deest Largo for piano C minor ? ?
H deest Prelude for piano C minor ? ?
H deest Nocturne No. 17 for piano E-flat major ? ?

Ephemera

In the Dublin suburb of Walkinstown there is a road called Field Avenue, one of a number of so called 'musical roads' named after prominent Irish musicians.

He is mentioned in passing in War and Peace when Countess Rostova calls on the Rostov household musician to play her favourite nocturne.[11]

Also, in Tolstoy's 'Childhood' Field is said to have taught the narrator's mother to play.

'Mamma was playing Field's second concerto. Field had been her master.' Everyman Library, trans. C.J. Hogarth.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Manuscript lost
  2. ^ 1799
  3. ^ 1814, revised in 1819
  4. ^ 1811
  5. ^ 1817
  6. ^ Manuscript lost
  7. ^ 1819, revised in 1820
  8. ^ 1822, revised in 1822–32
  9. ^ Manuscript lost
  10. ^ Manuscript lost
  11. ^ Manuscript lost

References

  1. ^ Library Ireland, "John Field"
  2. ^ Piggott, Patrick. 1973. The Life and Music of John Field, 1782–1837, Creator of the Nocturne. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-02412-0
  3. ^ The Etude, August 1915
  4. ^ The Etude (August 1915). . Archived from the original on 5 February 2005.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Langley, Grove.
  6. ^ Moss, Charles K. (4 November 2003). . Carolina Classical Connection. Archived from the original on 6 December 2003.
  7. ^ Piggott 1973, 97–98.
  8. ^ a b Preface to: John Field – 18 Nocturnes, edited by Franz Liszt. Leipzig: J. Schuberth & Co., n.d. Edition Schuberth No.140; various plate numbers. 1859. Available online.
  9. ^ Calum MacDonald: "John Field", Limelight, October 2012, p. 60.
  10. ^ Hopkinson, Ceil (1961). A Bibliographical Thematic Catalogue of the Works of John Field 1782-1837. London, UK: Harding and Curtis Ltd.
  11. ^ Tolstoy, Count Lev Nikolayevich (1869) [Original publication date in Russian]. War and Peace. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 558. ISBN 9780199232765.

Bibliography

  • Patrick Piggott, The Life and Music of John Field, 1782–1837, Creator of the Nocturne (London: Faber and Faber, 1973).
  • Majella Boland, John Field in Context: a Reappraisal of the Nocturne and Piano Concerti (PhD Dissertation, University College Dublin, 2013)
  • Julian Horton, "John Field and the Alternative History of Concerto First-Movement Form", in Music and Letters vol. 92 (2011) no. 1.

External links

john, field, composer, john, field, july, 1782, january, 1837, irish, pianist, composer, teacher, field, best, known, inventor, nocturne, john, field, 1820, born, dublin, into, musical, family, received, early, education, there, particular, with, italian, comp. John Field 26 July 1782 23 January 1837 was an Irish pianist composer and teacher 1 Field is best known as the inventor of the nocturne John Field c 1820 He was born in Dublin into a musical family and received his early education there in particular with the Italian composer Tommaso Giordani The Fields soon moved to London where Field studied under Muzio Clementi Under his tutelage Field quickly became a famous and sought after concert pianist Together master and pupil visited Paris Vienna and St Petersburg Ambiguity surrounds Field s decision to remain in the former Russian capital but it is likely that Field acted as a sales representative for the Clementi Pianos Field was very highly regarded by his contemporaries and his playing and compositions influenced many major composers including Frederic Chopin Johannes Brahms Robert Schumann and Franz Liszt Although little is known of Field in Russia he undoubtedly contributed substantially to concerts and teaching and to the development of the Russian piano school 2 Notable students include Prussian pianist and composer Charles Mayer the Franco Russian composer Alexandre Dubuque and Polish pianist and composer Antoine de Kontski See List of music students by teacher C to F John Field Contents 1 Biography 1 1 1782 1801 Early life 1 2 1802 1829 Settling in Russia 1 3 1830 1837 Last years and death 2 Music 3 List of works 4 Ephemera 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksBiography Edit1782 1801 Early life Edit A plaque commemorating John Field in Golden Lane Dublin Field was born 26 July 1782 in Golden Lane Dublin 3 the eldest son of Irish parents who were members of the Church of Ireland He was baptised 30 September His father Robert Field earned his living by playing the violin in Dublin theatres Field first studied the piano under his grandfather also named John Field who was a professional organist and later under Tommaso Giordani 4 He made his debut at the age of nine a performance that was well received on 24 March 1792 in Dublin 5 According to an early biographer W H Grattan Flood Field started composing in Ireland but no evidence exists to support his claim Flood also asserted that Field s family moved to Bath Somerset in 1793 and lived there for a short time and this too is considered unlikely by modern researchers By late 1793 though the Fields had settled in London where the young pianist started studying with Muzio Clementi This arrangement was made possible by Field s father who was perhaps able to secure the apprenticeship through Giordani who knew Clementi Field continued giving public performances and soon became famous in London attracting favourable comments from the press and the local musicians Around 1795 his performance of a Dussek piano concerto was praised by Haydn Field continued his studies with Clementi also helping the Italian with the making and selling of instruments He also took up violin playing which he studied under J P Solomon His first published compositions were issued by Clementi in 1795 the first historically important work the Piano Concerto No 1 H 27 was premiered by the composer in London on 7 February 1799 when he was aged 16 Field s first official opus was a set of three piano sonatas published by and dedicated to Clementi in 1801 5 1802 1829 Settling in Russia Edit In summer 1802 Field and Clementi left London and went to Paris on business They soon travelled to Vienna where Field took a brief course in counterpoint under Johann Georg Albrechtsberger and had a meeting with Beethoven for whom Field played in October and Beethoven highly praised him In early winter he arrived in Saint Petersburg Field was inclined to stay impressed by the artistic life of the city Clementi left in June 1803 but not before securing Field a teaching post in Narva and appointing the young man as his deputy so that Field would receive similarly high fees After Clementi s departure Field had a busy concert season eventually performing at the newly founded Saint Petersburg Philharmonic Society In 1805 Field embarked on a concert tour of the Baltic states staying in Saint Petersburg during the summer The following year he gave his first concert in Moscow Clementi arranged the publication of some of Field s old works in Russia in late 1806 he evidently sold Field a piano in exchange for music Field returned to Moscow in April 1807 and apparently did not revisit Saint Petersburg until 1811 but he kept his apartment at Vasilievsky Island In 1810 he married Adelaide Percheron a French pianist and former pupil 5 Up to 1808 almost all publications of Field s music were reissues of old works In 1808 9 he finally began publishing newly composed music starting with piano variations on Russian folksongs Air russe varie for piano 4 hands H 10 and Kamarinskaya for piano H 22 In 1811 the composer returned to Saint Petersburg He spent the next decade of his life here more productive than ever before publishing numerous new pieces and producing corrected editions of old ones He was successful in establishing a fruitful collaboration with both H J Dalmas the most prominent Russian publisher of the time and Breitkopf amp Hartel one of the most important music publishing houses of Europe In 1815 Field fathered an illegitimate son Leon Charpentier later Leon Leonov ru but remained with his wife They had a son Adrien in 1819 Leon would later become a famous tenor active in Russia while Adrien followed his father s steps and became a pianist By 1819 Field was sufficiently wealthy to be able to refuse the position of court pianist that was offered to him His lifestyle and social behaviour were becoming more and more extravagant 5 In 1818 Field revisited Moscow on business prompted by his collaboration with the publisher Wenzel He and his wife gave a series of concerts in the city in 1821 the last of which marked their last appearance in public together Adelaide left Field soon afterward taking Adrien with her and attempted a solo career which was not particularly successful Field stayed in Moscow and continued performing and publishing his music In 1822 he met Johann Nepomuk Hummel the two collaborated on a performance of Hummel s Sonata for Piano 4 Hands Op 92 5 1830 1837 Last years and death Edit Partly as a result of his extravagant lifestyle Field s health began deteriorating by the mid 1820s From about 1823 his concert appearances started decreasing by the late 1820s he was suffering from rectal cancer Field left for London to seek medical attention He arrived in September 1831 and after an operation gave concerts there and in Manchester He stayed in England for some time meeting distinguished figures such as Mendelssohn and Moscheles In March 1832 his former teacher and friend Clementi died and Field served as pallbearer at his funeral 6 On Christmas Day 1832 Field was in Paris performing his 7th Piano Concerto which received a mixed reaction just as at his recent concerts in England After a series of concerts in various European cities Field spent nine months 1834 5 in a Naples hospital His Russian patrons rescued him He briefly stayed with Carl Czerny in Vienna where he gave three recitals and then returned to Moscow with his son Adrien 5 He gave his last concert in March 1836 and died in Moscow almost a year later on 23 January 1837 from pneumonia He was buried in the Vvedenskoye Cemetery According to an eyewitness report when asked on his deathbed what his religion was Field replied with a characteristic pun I am not a Calvinist but a Claveciniste French for harpsichordist 7 Music EditNone have quite attained to these vague eolian harmonies these half formed sighs floating through the air softly lamenting and dissolved in delicious melancholy Nobody has even attempted this peculiar style and especially none of those who heard Field play himself or rather who heard him dream his music in moments when he entirely abandoned himself to his inspiration Franz Liszt s preface to his edition of Field s nocturnes 1859 English translation by Julius Schuberth 1859 8 Field became well known for his post London style probably developed in Moscow around 1807 The characteristic texture is that of a chromatically decorated melody over sonorous left hand parts supported by sensitive pedalling Field also had an affinity for ostinato patterns and pedal points rather unusual for the prevailing styles of the day Entirely representative of these traits are Field s 18 nocturnes and associated pieces such as Andante inedit H 64 These works were some of the most influential music of the early Romantic period they do not adhere to a strict formal scheme such as the sonata form and they create a mood without text or programme 5 These pieces were admired by Frederic Chopin who subsequently made the piano nocturne famous and Franz Liszt who published an edition of the nocturnes based on rare Russian sources that incorporated late revisions by Field Liszt s preface to the said edition was an extensive eulogy for Field and his nocturnes 8 Field Nocturne H 37 in B flat major source source Performed by Constantin Stephan Problems playing this file See media help Field also gave a few lessons to the young Mikhail Glinka who was to become the first notable Russian composer Similarly influential were Field s early piano concertos which occupy a central place in the development of the genre in the 19th century Already the earliest of these works show competent and imaginative orchestration and bold original piano writing One interesting trait of his piano concertos is their limited choice of keys they all use either E flat major or C major at some point or both in the last concerto s case Composers such as Hummel Kalkbrenner and Moscheles were influenced by these works which are particularly notable for their central movements frequently nocturne like Some of the less known works were also historically important particularly the piano fantasies in which Field pioneered the Romantic large scale episodic structure 5 None of his piano sonatas and only two of his 7 piano concertos have a formal slow movement In performance Field would interpolate an existing nocturne in a related key or improvise one 9 List of works EditThis list is arranged according to Hopkinson numbers introduced in the 1961 catalogue by Cecil Hopkinson Many of these works were arranged for other instruments and or revised by the composer himself such arrangements and revised versions are not listed Number Opus Form Title Key Notes Refs YearH 1 Variation on Fal Lal La for piano A major H 2 Rondo Favorite Hornpipe for piano A major H 3 Rondo Go the devil for piano C major H 4 Variation on Since then I m doom d for piano C major H 5 Rondo Slave bear the sparkling goblet for piano G major n 1 H 6 Rondo The two slaves dances for piano G major H 7 Variation on Logie of Buchan for piano C major H 8 Op 1 Sonata Piano Sonata No 1 E flat major P 1801 10 Piano Sonata No 2 A major P 1801Piano Sonata No 3 C minor P 1801H 9 Concertante Pleyel s for piano violin amp cello F major H 10 Variation Air russe for piano 4 hands A minor H 11 Andante for piano 4 hands C minor H 12 Danse des ours for piano 4 hands E flat major H 13 Nocturne for piano 12 E major H 14 Divertissement No 2 for piano A major H 14 Nocturne for piano 7 A major H 15 Op 3 Fantasia on Guardami un poco for piano A major H 16 Marche triomphale for piano E flat major H 17 Sonata for piano B major P 1812H 18 Rondeau for piano A flat major WaltzH 19 Grande valse for piano 4 hands A major H 20 Variation on Vive Henry IV for piano A minor H 21 Polonaise for piano E flat major H 22 Variation on Kamarinskaya for piano B flat major H 23 Rondo Speed the Plough for piano B major H 24 Nocturne No 1 for piano E flat major P 1814H 25 Nocturne No 2 for piano C minor P 1814H 26 Nocturne No 3 for piano A flat major P 1814H 27 Piano Concerto No 1 E flat major n 2 Rondo from Piano Concerto No 1Variation on Within a mile for piano B flat majorH 28 Piano Concerto No 4 E flat major n 3 Rondo from Piano Concerto No 4H 29 Rondo from Piano Concerto No 3 E flat major H 30 Nocturne No 9 8 for piano E flat major H 31 Piano Concerto No 2 A flat Poco adagio from Piano Concerto No 2 E flat majorRondo from Piano Concerto No 2 A flat majorH 32 Piano Concerto No 3 E flat major n 4 H 33 Etude Exercice module sur tous les tons majeurs et mineurs for piano H 34 Piano quintet A flat major H 35 Fantasia on Ah quel dommage for piano G major H 36 Nocturne No 4 for piano A major P 1817H 37 Nocturne No 5 for piano B flat major P 1817H 38 Rondo for piano A major H 39 Piano Concerto No 5 L incendie par l orage C major n 5 Rondo from Piano Concerto No 5H 40 Nocturne No 6 for piano F major H 41 Variation on a Russian folksong for piano D minor H 42 6 Dances for piano H 43 Rondo for piano 4 hands G major H 44 Etude Exercice nouveau No 1 for piano C major H 45 Nocturne No 7 13 for piano C major H 46 Nocturne No 8 9 for piano E minor H 47 The Maid of Valdarno n 6 H 48 Exercice nouveau No 2 for piano C major H 49 Piano Concerto No 6 C major n 7 H 49 Rondo No 6 from Piano Concerto C major H 50 2 Songs H 51 Waltz Sehnsuchts Walzer for piano E major H 52 Rondoletto for piano E flat major H 53 Rondo Come again come again for piano E major H 54 Nocturne No 10 for piano E major H 55 Nocturne Le troubadour for piano C major H 56 Nocturne No 11 for piano E flat major H 57 Fantasia on We met for piano G major H 58 Nocturne No 12 14 for piano G major n 8 Piano Concerto No 7 C minorH 59 Nocturne No 13 15 for piano D minor H 60 Nocturne No 14 16 for piano C major H 61 Nocturne No 15 17 for piano C major H 62 Nocturne No 16 18 for piano F major H 63 Nocturne for piano B flat major H 64 Andante inedit for piano E flat major H 65 Pastorale for piano n 9 H 66 Nocturne Derniere pensee for piano n 10 H 67 88 passages doigtes for piano n 11 H deest Etude Exercice for piano A flat major H deest Fantasia on Dans le jardin for piano A minor H deest Largo for piano C minor H deest Prelude for piano C minor H deest Nocturne No 17 for piano E flat major Ephemera EditIn the Dublin suburb of Walkinstown there is a road called Field Avenue one of a number of so called musical roads named after prominent Irish musicians He is mentioned in passing in War and Peace when Countess Rostova calls on the Rostov household musician to play her favourite nocturne 11 Also in Tolstoy s Childhood Field is said to have taught the narrator s mother to play Mamma was playing Field s second concerto Field had been her master Everyman Library trans C J Hogarth See also EditNocturnes Field Notes Edit Manuscript lost 1799 1814 revised in 1819 1811 1817 Manuscript lost 1819 revised in 1820 1822 revised in 1822 32 Manuscript lost Manuscript lost Manuscript lostReferences Edit Library Ireland John Field Piggott Patrick 1973 The Life and Music of John Field 1782 1837 Creator of the Nocturne University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 02412 0 The Etude August 1915 The Etude August 1915 John Field Archived from the original on 5 February 2005 a b c d e f g h Langley Grove Moss Charles K 4 November 2003 John Field The Irish Romantic Carolina Classical Connection Archived from the original on 6 December 2003 Piggott 1973 97 98 a b Preface to John Field 18 Nocturnes edited by Franz Liszt Leipzig J Schuberth amp Co n d Edition Schuberth No 140 various plate numbers 1859 Available online Calum MacDonald John Field Limelight October 2012 p 60 Hopkinson Ceil 1961 A Bibliographical Thematic Catalogue of the Works of John Field 1782 1837 London UK Harding and Curtis Ltd Tolstoy Count Lev Nikolayevich 1869 Original publication date in Russian War and Peace Oxford Oxford University Press p 558 ISBN 9780199232765 Bibliography EditPatrick Piggott The Life and Music of John Field 1782 1837 Creator of the Nocturne London Faber and Faber 1973 Majella Boland John Field in Context a Reappraisal of the Nocturne and Piano Concerti PhD Dissertation University College Dublin 2013 Julian Horton John Field and the Alternative History of Concerto First Movement Form in Music and Letters vol 92 2011 no 1 External links Edit Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Field John Media related to John Field composer at Wikimedia Commons Free scores by John Field at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Langley Robin 2001 John Field In Sadie Stanley Tyrrell John eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd ed London Macmillan ISBN 978 1 56159 239 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Field composer amp oldid 1123974283, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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