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Impromptu

Экспромт

Op. 1, No. 2 (1863/64).

Catalogue References TH 122 ; ČW 99
Date 1863 or 1864
Key E minor
Tempo/Section Listing Allegro furioso (E minor, 150 bars)
Instrumentation Piano (solo)
Autograph Location Lost
First Publication Moscow: P. Jurgenson, 1868
Average Duration 7 minutes
External Links Internet Music Score Library Project (downloadable score)

History

The Impromptu was composed during Tchaikovsky's years as a student at the Saint Petersburg Conservatory (1863–64), and found its way into print accidentally. Nikolai Kashkin said of this piece: "It was written much earlier and was set down in the middle of Petr Il’ich's other Petersburg work, but in this copy-book were some blank pages, on which a new composition [Scherzo á la russe] was written down... When P. I. Jurgenson wanted to print the Scherzo á la russe, [N. G.] Rubinstein took him the whole copy-book, but P. I. Jurgenson did not receive any instructions, and so he had engraved all the pieces he found. When Tchaikovsky saw the proofs of both pieces, at first he was surprised and annoyed that the Impromptu had also been engraved, but afterwards became reconciled to this irreversible fact" [1].

The Scherzo á la russe and Impromptu were published by Petr Jurgenson in 1868 as Op. 1, Nos. 1 and 2 respectively.

From: Музыкальное наследие Чайковского (1958), p. 390
English text copyright © 2006 Brett Langston


Notes:
  1. Nikolai Kashkin, Воспоминания о П. И. Чайковском (1896), pp. 49–50 [back]

This page was last updated on 13 May 2010