Telemann 36 Fantasies Piano Scores

TWV 33: 1st Dozen
Fantasia No.1 in D major
Fantasia No.2 in D minor
Fantasia No.3 in E major
Fantasia No.4 in E minor
Fantasia No.5 in F major
Fantasia No.6 in F minor
Fantasia No.7 in G major
Fantasia No.8 in G minor
Fantasia No.9 in A major
Fantasia No.10 in A minor
Fantasia No.11 in B flat major
Fantasia No.12 in E flat major
TWV33: 2nd Dozen
Fantasia No.13 in C minor
Fantasia No.14 in C major
Fantasia No.15 in B minor
Fantasia No.16 in D major
Fantasia No.17 in G minor
Fantasia No.18 in B flat major
Fantasia No.19 in A minor
Fantasia No.20 in A major
Fantasia No.21 in E minor
Fantasia No.22 in G major
Fantasia No.23 in G minor
Fantasia No.24 in B flat major
TWV 33: 3rd Dozen
Fantasia No.25 in F major
Fantasia No.26 in D minor
Fantasia No.27 in E minor
Fantasia No.28 in G major
Fantasia No.29 in G minor
Fantasia No.30 in C minor
Fantasia No.31 in A major
Fantasia No.32 in A minor
Fantasia No.33 in B minor
Fantasia No.34 in D major
Fantasia No.35 in E flat major
Fantasia No.36 in B flat major
Telemann 36 Fantasies Piano Scores

By Santino Cara
Piano solo – Digital Sheet Music
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Piano solo. Composed by Georg Philipp Telemann. Arranged by Santino Cara. Baroque. Score. 114 pages. Santino Cara. Published by Santino Cara.

Complete scores of “36 Fantasies for Piano TWV 33:1/36, 3 Dozen“. Composed in Hamburg between 1732 and 1733 by Georg Philipp Telemann. Rewritten and elaborated for Piano in Rome in 1982 by Santino Cara.

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Le 36 fantasie per cembalo furono composte ad Amburgo tra il 1732 e il 1733 da Georg Philipp Telemann.
Sul frontespizio della pubblicazione riporta chiaramente 3 dozzine di fantasie. La prima e la terza dozzina sono in stile italiano come si può vedere nei tempi dei movimenti, e la seconda dozzina in stile francese con i tempi dei movimenti un po’ italianizzati. Telemann dispose queste fantasie come una sorta di sonate, se pur la forma sonata come la conosciamo noi arrivò per la prima volta tra il 1740/42 con le 12 sonate per clavicembalo di Giovanni Benedetto Platti e più chiaramente nel 1796 con Francesco Galeazzi e definitivamente poi con Carlo Gervasoni che mise la regola alla forma sonata. Ma veniamo alle fantasie. Telemann imposta le fantasie a coppia fino ad arrivare a una dozzina. Suona il primo movimento e il secondo, ripete il primo e passa alla seconda fantasia con il primo movimento, secondo, ripete il primo e ripete la prima fantasia, così con tutte le coppie di fantasie inserite nelle 3 dozzine. Per capirci meglio, riportiamo di seguito
l’elenco delle fantasie con i relativi movimenti e ripetizioni.
The 36 harpsichord fantasies were composed in Hamburg between 1732 and 1733 by Georg Philipp Telemann.
On the title page of the publication, 3 dozen fantasies are clearly indicated. The first and third dozen are in the Italian style as can be seen in the tempos of the beats, and the second dozen are in the French style with the tempos of the beats somewhat Italianate. Telemann set up these fantasies as a sort of sonatas, even if the sonata form as we know it arrived for the first time between 1740/42 with the 12 sonatas for harpsichord by Giovanni Benedetto Platti and more clearly in 1796 with Francesco Galeazzi and definitively then with Carlo Gervasoni who set the rule to sonata form. But let’s get to the fantasies. Telemann sets the fantasies two by two until he reaches a dozen until he reaches a dozen.He plays the first and second movements, repeats the first and goes to the second fantasy with the first movement, second, repeats the first and repeats the first fantasy, likewise with all the fantasies entered in the 3 dozen. To better understand each other, we report below the list of the fantasies with the relative movements and repetitions.

Telemann 36 Fantasies Piano Scores

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