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Treatise on the Fundamental Principles of Violin Playing

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ISBN-10: 0193185024

ISBN-13: 9780193185029

Edition: 2nd

Authors: Mozart, Editha Knocher, Albert Einstein

List price: $37.50
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Known principally as the father of Wolfgang Amadeus, Leopold Mozart was a distinguished musician in his own right. An excellent violinist and composer, his greatest contribution to music was his Treatise on Fundamental Principles of Violin Playing. Published at Ausburg in 1756 it was themajor work of its time on the violin and it contains much that is of considerable interest and value to musicians today: notes on performance, practice, a glossary of technical terms and specific chapters on the playing of written and improvised embellishments, the trill, and special rhythmicfigures. Copious exercises illustrate each point made in the text. A Preface--revised for this edition--offers an…    
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Book details

List price: $37.50
Edition: 2nd
Publisher: Oxford University Press, Incorporated
Publication date: 12/31/1948
Binding: Hardcover
Language: English

Albert Einstein, March 14, 1879 - April 18, 1955 Albert Einstein was born on March 14, 1879 in Ulm. He spent his childhood in Munich where his family owned a small machine shop. By the age of twelve, Einstein had taught himself Euclidean geometry. His family moved to Milan, where he stayed for a year, and he used it as an excuse to drop out of school, which bored him. He finished secondary school in Aarau, Switzerland and entered the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich. Einstein graduated in 1900, by studying the notes of a classmate since he did not attend his classes out of boredom, again. His teachers did not like him and would not recomend him for a position in the…    

Note to 1985 Reprint
Preface
Foreword to Translator's Introduction
Preface
Introduction To The Violinschule
How the Violinist Must Hold the Violin and Direct the Bow
What the Pupil Must Observe Before He Begins to Play; in Other Words What Should Be Placed Before Him from the Beginning
of the Order of the Up and Down Strokes
How, by Adroit Control of the Bow, One Should Seek to Produce a Good Tone on a Violin and Bring It Forth in the Right Manner
of the So-Called Triplet
of the Many Varieties of Bowing
of the Positions
of the Appoggiature, and Some Embellishments Belonging Thereto
on the Trill
of the Tremolo, Mordent, and Some Other Improvised Embellishments
of Reading Music Correctly, and in Particular, of Good Execution
Index Of the Most Important Matters
Translator's Appendix