also includes:
Appendix: Preliminary/Alternative Versions
- From Belsazars gästabud (Belshazzar’s Feast), JS 48: Incidental music to the play by Hjalmar Procopé
Piano transcriptions by the composer
World Première Recording
· No.4 Livets dans (Dance of Life)
· No.5 Dödens dans (Dance of Death)
- Ballade
Preliminary version of Aspen, Op.75 No.3
World Première Recording
- Granen (The Spruce)
Preliminary version of Op.75 No.5
World Première Recording
- Valse lyrique
Preliminary version of Op.96a combining material from Syringa and Granen
World Première Recording
- Valse chevaleresque
Preliminary version of Op.96c
World Première Recording
Commodo – Con energia – Presto
- Lied (Song)
Preliminary version of Op.97 No.2
World Première Recording
- Impromptu
Preliminary version of Op.97 No.5
World Première Recording
- Andantino – Allegretto
Preliminary version of Scène romantique, Op.101 No.5
World Première Recording
- In Mournful Mood
Preliminary version of Op.103 No.5
World Première Recording
- Metsälaulu (Song in the Forest)
Preliminary version of Op.114 No.4
World Première Recording
Although less well-known than his orchestral works, his output for the piano is extensive, and we can now present the second instalment of music for solo piano in the BIS Sibelius Edition. The music on this second set was written between 1905 and 1931, and includes the Three Sonatinas, widely seen as some of Sibelius’s finest piano works, as well as the five pieces from the composer’s Op.75, commonly known as ‘The Trees’. Among the several world première recordings in this collection we find an Adagio written for his wife Aino’s birthday in 1931, Sibelius’s last composition for piano – and his only one for piano four-hands. Included are also a number of Sibelius’ own transcriptions, mainly of music he had composed for stage performances of plays such as Pelléas et Mélisande. A special case in this category is the four minute long reworking for the piano of an original bell melody written in 1912 for Helsinki’s newly built Kallio Church.