Petite Suite (Borodin) in the context of Marie-Clotilde-Elisabeth Louise de Riquet, comtesse de Mercy-Argenteau


Petite Suite (Borodin) in the context of Marie-Clotilde-Elisabeth Louise de Riquet, comtesse de Mercy-Argenteau

⭐ Core Definition: Petite Suite (Borodin)

The Petite Suite is a suite of seven piano pieces, written by Alexander Borodin, and acknowledged as his major work for the piano. It was published in 1885, although some of the pieces had been written as far back as the late 1870s. After Borodin's death, Alexander Glazunov orchestrated the work, and added his orchestration of another of Borodin's pieces as an eighth number.

The suite was dedicated to the Belgian Countess Louise de Mercy-Argenteau, who had been instrumental in having Borodin's First Symphony performed in Verviers and Liège. She had also arranged for French translations of some of his songs and excerpts from Prince Igor; and had initiated the sponsorship of Camille Saint-Saëns and Louis-Albert Bourgault-Ducoudray for Borodin's membership of the French Society of Authors, Composers and Editors.

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Petite Suite (Borodin) in the context of Scherzo in A-flat major (Borodin)

Alexander Borodin's Scherzo in A-flat major is a lively piece written in 1885, while Borodin was in Belgium for an early performance of his then incomplete opera Prince Igor. It was originally written for solo piano, but in 1889 Alexander Glazunov orchestrated it, along with the Petite Suite. Borodin dedicated the piece to Théodore Jadoul, who made a four-hand piano arrangement of it.

View the full Wikipedia page for Scherzo in A-flat major (Borodin)
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