Tre Klaverstykker (Three Piano Pieces), FS 131, Op. 59, is a sequence of three pieces for solo piano by Carl Nielsen. Among the composer's last works, they were published in 1937 in Copenhagen.
Tre Klaverstykker | |
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Piano pieces by Carl Nielsen | |
![]() The composer in 1928 | |
Catalogue | FS 131 |
Opus | 59 |
Composed | 1928 (1928) |
Published | 1937 (1937) |
Nielsen composed the first two movements in January and February 1928, dating the second 1 March 1928. He turned then to the composition of the Clarinet Concerto, and finished the third piano movement on 6 November 1928.[1][2] The first two pieces were initially performed in April 1928.[3] The three pieces were published after his death in 1937 by Edition Dania in Copenhagen.[1]
The three pieces are marked:
The beginning is reminiscent of Impressionism, but moves to "more abrupt and dissonant material", according to the musicologist Chris Morrison.[3] Nielsen commented on the last pages: "Think of a tipsy fellow trying to keep his dignity and upright position by holding on to a lamp-post!"[3] Morrison writes that the Adagio shows "sudden outbursts" in mostly "tender and haunting music".[3] In the last movement, which he describes as "tough-minded, forceful", Nielsen at times approaches atonality.[3] The pieces are related to the music of Bartók and Schönberg's early twelve-tone music.[3] The musicologist Daniel Grimley notes that the pieces convey a "dual sense of childlike innocence and devilish improvisation".[2]
The pieces have been recorded in collections of Nielsen's works, such as a 1980 recording by pianist Elisabeth Westenholz, Carl Nielsen: The Complete Piano Music, a 1996 album Carl Nielsen / Keyboard works", and a 2008 collection Carl Nielsen: Complete Piano Music with pianist Martin Roscoe.[3] Mina Miller played them on a 2007 recording of piano music by Nielsen.[2]
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