Skip to content
You are not logged in |Login  

LEADER 00000nz   2200000n  4500 
001    n  81116262  
003    DLC 
005    20040220052405.0 
008    140321n| acannaabn          |a aaa |||   
010    n  81116262 
035    (OCoLC)oca00661254 
040    DLC|beng|cDLC|dDLC|dPPi-MA|dMvI 
100 1  Diabelli, Anton,|d1781-1858.|tGrande sérénade concertante,
       |nop. 105 
400 1  Diabelli, Anton,|d1781-1858.|tSerenata concertante, op. 
       105 
400 1  Diabelli, Anton,|d1781-1858.|tGrande sérénade concertante,
       |nno. 5 
400 1  Diabelli, Anton,|d1781-1858.|tVme grande sérénade 
       concertante 
400 1  Diabelli, Anton,|d1781-1858.|tCinquième grande sérénade 
       concertante 
400 1  Diabelli, Anton,|d1781-1858.|t5me grande sérénade 
       concertante 
400 1  Diabelli, Anton,|d1781-1858.|tSerenades,|mflute, viola, 
       guitar,|nop. 105,|rE minor 
400 1  Diabelli, Anton,|d1781-1858.|tGrande sérénade,|nop. 105 
400 1  Diabelli, Anton,|d1781-1858.|tGrande sérénade,|nno. 5 
667    Diabelli wrote 5 grande sérénades for flute, guitar, and 
       viola over a period of time: op. 36, 65, 66, 95, and 105. 
       Op. 36 and op. 65 are lost. Op. 105 is the only work out 
       of the remaining 3 for which there is any evidence that 
       the correct uniform title is Grande sérénade concertante. 
       It is unlikely that the composer numbered these works 1-5.
670    His Serenata concertante : op. 105, 1980:|bp. iii (Vme 
       grande sérénade concertante) 
670    Grandes sérénades : op. 66, op. 95, op. 105, p1993:
       |bcontainer (Serenata concertante : op. 105; Grande 
       sérénade : op. 95 [i.e. 105], E minor) notes, p. 8 
       (Sérénade, op. 105, written in 1817; Sérénade, op. 95, 
       published in 1814) 
670    Diabelli, A. 1ère grande sérénade, 2003?:|bpref. 
       (initially, Diabelli's 5 serenades for flute, viola, and 
       guitar, published 1810-1817, did not bear the same title: 
       op. 36 was called Sérénade no. 1; op. 65 and 66, Grande 
       sérénade; and op. 95, Trio; only op. 105, 5ème grande 
       sérénade, regrouped the preceding four in a series)