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TH 131

Three Pieces

Три пьесы

For piano solo, Op. 9 (1870).

  1. Rêverie
    Греэы (D major).
    • Dedicated to Nadezhda Muromtseva.
  2. Polka de salon
    Салонная полька (B-flat major).
    • Dedicated to Aleksandra Zograf.
  3. Mazurka de salon
    Салонная мазурка (D minor).

History

Evidently composed in October 1870 in Moscow. In a letter to Ivan Klimenko of 26 October 1870, Tchaikovsky reported: "I’ve written three new pieces" [1]. For the third piece - Mazurka de Salon - Tchaikovsky arranged music he had written for Aleksandr Ostrovskii's dramatic chronicle Dmitrii the Pretender and Vasilii Shuiskii.

The first piece - Rêverie - is dedicated to the pianist Nadezhda Muromtseva; the second - Polka de salon - to the pianist Aleksandra Zograf; the third - Mazurka de salon - to the pianist and composer Aleksandr Diubiuk.

Rêverie and Polka de salon were played for the first time by Nikolai Rubinstein on 16 March 1871 at a concert of Tchaikovsky's works in the Little Hall of the Nobles' Society in Moscow.

Published by Petr Jurgenson in March 1871.

From: Музыкальное наследие Чайковского (1958), p. 397
English text copyright © 2006 Brett Langston


Notes:
  1. Letter 213 to Ivan Klimenko, 26 October/7 November 1870 [back]

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