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阿尔坎作品编号列表  发帖心情 Post By:2005-7-22 1:20:17 [只看该作者]

Op. Name of Work (for keyboard unless otherwise noted) No.

1 Variations on a theme from Steibelt's Orage Concerto - 1826 2 Les omnibus, variations - 1829 3 Il était un p'tit homme, rondoletto - c1830 4 Rondo brillant for piano with string quartet ad lib - c1833 5 Rondo on Rossini's Largo al factorum from Il barbiere di Siviglia - c1883 8 See Op. 16 10/1 Concerto da camera No. 1 - c1832 10/2 Concerto da camera No. 2 - c1832 12 Rondeau chromatique - 1833 12 Trois Improvisations (dans le style brillant) - 1837 * List to be added later 13 Trois Andantes romantiques - 1837 * List to be added later 15 Souvenirs: Trois morceaux dans le genre pathétique - 1837 * List to be added later 16 Trois études de bravoure, ( Scherzi) - 1837 * * Published as a series, numbered Books 1-4. also known collectively as 12 Caprices List to be added later 16/4 Variations on Donizetti's Ah segnata è mia morte [sorte] from Anna Bolena - 1834 16/5 Variations on Bellini's La tremenda ultrice spada from I Capuleti èi Montecchi - 1834 16/6 Variations quasi fantasie sur une barcarolle napolitaine - 1834 16 Six morceaux characteristiques - c1838 - published later as Op. 8 and also as numbers 1, 4 ,5, 7, 8, and 12 of aaaaaaaaaaLesfmois (Op. 74) 17 Les preux, étude de concert - 1844 {17} See Finale below {18} (Actually Op. 13) 22 Nocturne - 1844 23 Salterelle - 1844 24 Gigue et air de ballet dans le style ancien - 1844 {24} See Op 27 below 25 Alleluia - 1844 26 Marche funèbre - 1844 (or 1846) {26} See Fantasie à quatre mains sur Mozart's Don Juan See 26b/c & Op. 32/1 3 and 1 below 27 Marche triomphale, 1844 (1846) - called "Marche héroique" before being published. Op. 27 is on the title ---------------page, but the music indicates Op 24 27 Le chemin de fer, étude - 1844 29 Bourée d'Auvergne, étude - 1846 31 25 Préludes, ( Piano/Organ) List to be added later 32/1 4 Impromptus - 1849 1 Vaghezza - Published separately in 1847 and may appear as Op. 26c 2 L'amitié - Published in 1845 3 Fantasietta alla moresca - Published in 1847 and may appear as Op. 26b 32/2 Deuxième recueil d'impromptus - Trois airs à cinq temps et un à sept temps - 1849 List to be added later 33 Grande sonate - 1847 {34} Scherzo focoso - 1847 - Was published without an Op. No. 35 Douze études in all the major keys - 1847 1 étude in A 2 étude in D 3 étude in G 4 étude in C 5 étude in F "Allegro barbaro" 6 étude in Bb 7 étude in Eb "L'incendie au village voisin" 8 étude in Ab 9 étude in C# "Contrapunctus" 10 étudeGb "Chant d'amour - Chant de mort" 11 étude in B 12 étude in E 37 Trois Marches quasi cavalleria - 1857 38 Deuxième recuiel de chants - 1857 Book One 1 Assez vite 2 Sérénade 3 Choeur 4 L'offrande 5 ??? 6 Barcarolle Book Two 1 Hymne 2 Fa 3 Chant de guerre 4 Procession-Nocturne 5 ??? 6 Barcarolle en choeur Book Three 1 Untitled (Vivement) 2 Esprits follets 3 ??? 4 ??? 5 ??? 6 Barcarolle Book Four 1 Niege et lave 2 Chanson de la bonne veille 3 Bravement 4 Doucement 5 Appasionatta 6 Barcarolle Book Five 1 Duetto 2 Andantino 3 Allegro vivace ??? 4 La voix de l'instrument 5 Scherzo-coro ??? 6 Barcarolle 39 Douze études in all the minor keys - 1857 1 Comme le vent 2 En rythme molossique 3 Scherzo diabolico 4-7 Symphonie for piano solo 4 Allegro moderato 5 Marche funèbre 6 Menuet 7 Finale 8-10 Concerto for piano solo 8 Allegro assai 9 Adagio 10 Allegro alla barbaresca 11 Ouverture 12 Le festin d'ésope - Variations 40 Trois Marches for piano duet - 1857 41 Trois petits fantasies - 1857 List to be added later 42 Réconciliation, petit caprice - 1857 45 Salut, cendre du pauvre ! - 1856 47 Finale - Saltarelle fron the Cello Sonata arranged for piano duet - c1869 50 Capriccio alla soltadesca - 1859 50bis Le tambour bat aux champs, esquisse - 1859 52 Super flumina Babylonis, paraphrase of Psalm 137 - 1859 53 Quasi-caccia, caprice - 1859 54 Bénédictus - pour pédalier ou piano, trois mains- 1859 55 Une fusée, introduction et impromptu - 1859 57 Deuxième nocturne - 1859 57 Troisième nocturne - 1859 60 Ma chère liberté et ma chère servitude: Deux petites pieces - 1859 60 bis Le grillon - quatreième nocturne - 1859 61 Sonatine - 1861 Movements to be added later 63 48 Esquisses (Motifs) - 1861 List to be added later 64 13 prières pour organ/pédalier/piano trois mains - c1869 List to be added later 65 Troisième recueil de chants - c 1869 List to be added later 66 11 Grandes preludes and a transcription from Handel's Messiah pour pédalier or piano trois mains List to be added later 67 Quatrième recuil de chants - Possibly c1837 List to be added later 69 Impromptu sur le choral de Luther "Un fort rampart est notre Dieu" pour Pédalier/Piano trois mains 70 Cinquième recueil de chants - c1872 List to be added later 72 11 pièces dans le style religieux and a transcription from Handel's Messiah, organ/harmonium/piano - 1867 {74} Les mois - possibly late 1830's. Opus Number and title later given to the 12 morceaux caractéristiques List to be added later 75 Toccatina - c1872 {76} Trois grandes études - c1838-40 1 Fantasie - pour le main droit seul (right hand) 2 Introduction, variations et finale - pour le main gauche seul (left hand) 3 étude a mouvement sembable et perpetuel pour les mains réunits (both hands)

Works Completed but without Opus Numbers

Album-leaf, "Praeludium" in c, for Organ - 1850 L'amitié - 1845 - See Op. 32/1 2 Bambardo-carillon pour Pédalier +0872 - 4 feet (duet) Chapeau bas! - 1844 Concerto da Camera #3 - (Reconstructed by Hugh Macdonald) Douze études for pedals only - for Organ or Pedalier Fantasie a quatre mains sur Mozart's Don Juan - 1844 - Later referred to as Op. 26 Fantasticheria - c1867 Finale - c1838-40 - later referred to as Op. 17 Trois grandes études - See Op. 76 Impromptu in F# - 1844 Jean qui pleur et Jean qui rit, due fughe da camera - c1838- 40 Douze morceaux caractéristiques - late 1830's - Later called Les Mois - also see Op. 74 Petit Conte - 1859 Petites préludes sur les huit gammes du plain chant pour Orgue - 1859 List to be added later Pro Organo in c, album-leaf for Organ - 1850 Souvenirs de musique de chambre - c1869? i Rigaudons des petits violons de Louis XIV ii Bach: Flute Sonata in Eb, BWV 1031- Siciliano iii Haydn: String Quartet in d, Op 76/2 - Minuet iv Mozart: String Quartet in A, K464 - Andante v Beethoven: String Quartet in Bb, Op 130 - Cavatina vi Weber: Piano Trio - Scherzo Souvenirs des concerts du Conservatoire - Partitions pour piano seul - 1847 i Marcell Psalm 18, "I cieli immensi narrano" ii Gluck: Armide - "Jamais dans ces beaux lieux" iii Gluck: Iphigenie en Tauride - "Choeur des scythes" iv Haydn: Symphony No 36 - Andante v Gretry: Les deux avares - "La garde passe, il est minuit" vi Mozart: Symphony No 40 in g, K550 - Menuet - As early as 1844 Souvenirs des concerts du Conservatoire - Deuxième série - 1861 i Handel: Samson - "Choeur des pretres de Dagon" ii Gluck: Orphée - Gavotte iii Haydn: String Quartet in D, Op 64/5 - Finale iv Mozart: Motet Ne pulvis et cinis (Thamos, Konig in Agypten) - "Ihr Kinder des Staubes" K345/336a v Beethoven: Bundeslied Op 122 vi Weber: Oberon - "Choeur des filles de la mer" Variations a la vielle - Variations on a theme from Donizetti's Ugo conte di Parigi, (not from L'elsir d'amore) - ...............c1838-40



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  发帖心情 Post By:2005-7-22 8:47:55 [只看该作者]

Alkan作品中最具重要性的莫过于Op39这部练习曲了,共12首:

No.1~3: 三首没有联系的小曲子,分别名为:像风, 莫罗西斯节奏,魔鬼谐谑曲

No. 4~7 钢琴独奏交响曲

No. 8~10 钢琴独奏协奏曲

No. 11 序曲

No. 12 伊索的盛会变奏曲

(Alkan作品名似乎没有官方中文翻译,我就都按意思翻了)

我终于把他们都凑齐了,送给所有喜爱Alkan的朋友!这是四合一版本,集合了4个优秀的Alkan诠释者有代表性的演奏:

Marc-Andre Hamelin的交响独奏,

John Ogdon 的协奏独奏,

Raymond Lewenthal的No.12变奏曲,和

Ronald Smith的No. 1,2,3,11 (比较难找的几首)。

这些有的是我从其他月光朋友提供的下载里找到的(多谢!^^),有的是我自己帖过的,No. 1,2,3,11是新的=)今天突发奇想就把他们凑在一起了,想来如果能有空闲的几个小时把它连贯听下来那应该是件很过瘾的事 =)

我就把这帖藏在这里了,只和对Alkan感兴趣的朋友分享,音乐和资料都弄了超~~~久 :)

12首分别详细介绍如下 – 是从allmusic.com上一首首找到筛筛选选剪剪贴贴拼出来的资料。我先把英文的整理好,中文的日后再续吧。大家先看个大概,读后会对理解这部作品, 甚至广义上理解Alkan的音乐有很大帮助的!

Op. 39 总介绍:

Alkan's etudes — in particular the Op. 39 Minor-Key Etudes — are the preserve of pianistic supermen. It is at once their bane and their glory that only when animated by the few pianistic wizards of each generation — Busoni, Petri, John Ogdon, Marc-André Hamelin — do their unique qualities come into focus. For the adventure of the Minor-Key Etudes is to achieve by means of ten fingers on a keyboard a power and magnificence rivaling that of a full orchestra, and to do so, moreover, within the constraints of the exceedingly sec, rhythmically precise style sévère. Four of the Etudes comprise a substantial symphony in which the formal procedures of Classical sonata form are knowingly wrought by an eminently Gothic sensibility, including a second-movement "Marche funèbre," which evokes funeral marches by Beethoven, Berlioz, and Chopin. Three more etudes make a Concerto in which alternations of "solo" and "tutti" are cunningly suggested. Playing nearly 30 minutes, and wrought in a veritable fury of invention, the Concerto's first movement is arguably the most resplendent pianistic creation of the nineteenth century. Technical matters explored in previous etudes are subsumed in the momentum of the Symphony and the Concerto, as well as in that of the penultimate number, an ambitious "Ouverture," as studies in the projection of vast and subtly inwrought designs embracing a colossal range of expression. Examples of this projection are the Concerto's tensely brooding second-movement nocturne, and the mordant, skirling majesty of its third movement polonaise. Capping the Minor-Key Etudes, the 25 racily succinct variations of "Le Festin d'Ésope" ("Aesop's feast") index the technical keys to Alkan's unique pianistic universe as they highlight his often puzzling vein of bizarre humor. The set was published in 1857, not quite a decade after the Major-Key Etudes and six years after Liszt's final recension of his ranscendental Etudes, to which the Minor-Key Études are, in a sense, a reply. Nothing in Liszt's pianistic oeuvre, and only the first movement of his Faust Symphony, approaches the seemingly sprawling but tightly integrated and triumphantly powerful architecture of Alkan's Concerto's first movement.

Though these "etudes" are anything but etude-like, they rival and surpass Liszt's Transcendental Etudes in sheer poetry while pushing the Romantic piano technique to its absolute limits. As their titles indicate, these pieces reflect a desire, typical of virtuosos reaching for super-human power, to rival the expressive and dynamic power of the orchestra. Not until new aural prehensions — pre-eminently those of Debussy and late Scriabin — compelled new approaches to the keyboard would Alkan's achievement brook any real challenge. Alkan might be dismissed as a mordant satirist, a miniaturist of genius, and a freakish rival of Liszt's in fashioning a transcendental keyboard technique were it not for a handful of works looming as an avenue of astounding, colossal, enigmatic sphinxes. Those works include "Quasi-Faust" (from the Grande Sonate); the late, misleadingly named Impromptu, Op. 69, for pédalier; the Symphonie for solo piano; or that comic masterpiece Le festin d'Ésope. Towering above them — and above nearly all of the piano literature of the nineteenth century — the Concerto for solo piano.

Alkan's Op. 39, is dedicated to Belgian historian, theoretician, and critic François-Joseph Fétis (1784-1871), whom he met as a student prodigy — Berlioz encountered him at about the same time — in the halls of the Paris Conservatoire where Fétis taught counterpoint and fugue from 1821. Fétis' reviews show him to have taken an appreciative interest in Alkan from his youth. Fétis concludes a notice of the Marche funèbre, the Marche triomphale, and the Préludes (25) in the Revue et Gazette musicale for July 25, 1847, with the admonition, "An artist owes it to himself, his time and his century to allow his faculties full free rein. God does not grant these gifts without obligation." Alkan had already been absent from the concert hall for three years and would not appear again publicly until 1873. He answered Fétis on the day the review appeared, apprising him of a number of compositions held back. "They include a long sonata, a large scale scherzo, an overture for piano and studies, some of which are fashioned on a rather large scale," works, Alkan promised, "whose development is quite unlike those you have so kindly described." The Grande Sonate would be published by Brandus the following year.

No.1

Just as Liszt's Études d'exécution transcendante begins with a presto Preludio of cascading arpeggios, scorrevole passagework, punched-out chords, and prominent trills — which, in two packed pages, strut the oft-remarked character of limbering the hands or testing the instrument — Alkan's Études (12) dans les tons mineurs opens with the one-upping prestissamamente "Comme le vent" (not to be confused with the campy "Le Vent" from the early Op. 15 Souvenirs (3), morceaux dans le genre pathétique) whose demands must challenge all but those with pianistic super powers. As Alkan's chief chronicler and one of his most persuasive interpreters Ronald Smith remarked, "like the wind it goes, set at a hair-raising speed of 160 2/16 bars to the minute, or 16 notes to the second, [it is] a kind of nightmare tarantella." The first, nearly impossible version of Liszt's Études d'exécution transcendante took shape in the late 1830s, very likely in response to Alkan's contemporary early etudes, Opp. 12, 13, 15, and 16, in which the exploration of a specific technical difficulty has been swept aside for a canvas of often eldritch allusiveness presupposing an omnicompetent technique capable of encompassing every conceivable demand. Alkan's Études (12) dans les tons majeurs, Op. 35, published by Brandus in 1848, continued this gambit with greater refinement and greater audacity. Liszt, during the same years, was refashioning his etudes, paring their unplayable writing to the grandiose effectiveness of their final 1851 version. There can be no doubt that both composers, and sometime friends, shared a tacit rivalry whose statement-and-response pattern is often revealing. Where Liszt's Preludio is sketch-like, brief, and a grandiose gesture, "Comme le vent" is an essay in Alkan's obsessive vein. A relentless stream of thirty-second notes in triplet pattern of two to the bar moves from one hand to the other, sometimes appearing in both to outline two subjects in a brief but torrential development and sudden recapitulation suggesting a compact sonata first movement. The startled listener, however, is less likely to notice such formal ingenuities in their coruscating perpetual motion rush rather than the shifting, shimmering textures laced with frantic drama. Alkan's formal tightness stands in contrast to unconstrained Lisztian abundance and foreshadows the stupendous architecture of the Symphonies No. 4-7 and the solo concerto (Nos. 8-10) forming the bulk of the Études (12) dans les tons mineurs and lifting Alkan above the enigmatic curiosity suggested by his posthumous reputation to confirm his place among the greatest of the Romantic composers.

No.2

For the second of his Études dans les tons mineurs, Op. 39, En rhythme molossique, his reference to the arcane reaches of ancient Greek prosody — molossus is a foot of three long syllables — is as curious as his translation of it into an unrelenting 6/4 pattern of quarter notes followed by four eighth notes. Such a straitjacket would have crushed the life from a lesser composer, but Alkan's invention thrives in constraint. A big-boned rondo, realized in textures ranging from massive chords and octave salvos to purling gossamer spread over the keyboard's extremities, the successive episodes generate a monumental, inexorable momentum limned in plangent melodic oddments that paradoxically attain their greatest compression with a most gracious resolution in a recapitulation deftly combining the two preceding variations before a long, quiet coda in which the "molossic" beat sinks to the lowest bass register as the filigree spins itself out in an exquisite smorzando. It ends, after so much major blitheness, with three enigmatically minor chords. Busoni included En rhythme molossique in his concerts from 1901, for which he was indignantly abused by the Berlin critics. As with so much of Alkan's finest work, it is not the outsized virtuoso demands that keep the piece from being heard, but its bizarre grandeur, at once captivating and disturbing. In the series of Études (12), its monumentality provides a foil for the frantic fleetness of the opening "Comme le vent" and sets the stage, so to speak, for the obligatory Romantic essay in deviltry, the "Scherzo-diabolico." It was published in 1857.

No.3

The third of Alkan's Études (12) dans le tons mineurs, the Scherzo-diabolico, is the least ambitious — though not the least demanding — of the Op. 39 set. It is diabolism tongue-in-cheek and classically proportioned where, say, Liszt's Mephistophelean gestures would swell into colossal mockery in the final movement of Eine Faust Symphonie and erotically tinged rhapsody in Der Tanz in der Dorfschenke. And where Berlioz's deviltry hovers between the grotesquery of the "Witches' Sabbath" of the Symphonie fantastique and the exquisiteness of Mephistopheles' "Voici les roses" in La Damnation de Faust, Alkan's is possessed by an athletic prestissimo prankishness, pungently grand and rising to a noble declaration in its central section with the opening reprised in a masterstroke ppp whisper. It is the world of "Les Diablotins" (imps, little devils) and the Scherzetto (Nos. 45 and 47, respectively, of the Esquisses) writ large, a world inhabited by "Jewish goblins" (as Raymond Lewenthal remarked of the latter piece), rife with bizarre apparitions and strange mischance. Only in the "Quasi-Faust" movement of the Grande Sonate did Alkan rival Berlioz and Liszt in his prehension of the diabolical titanic struggle between good and evil rather than the lingering Luciferian glamor they indulged. But if the glitter of the Scherzo-diabolico incorporates a large measure of fastidious primness in its swagger, it is nonetheless a prime document of Romanticism's fascination with figures of evil and provides a moment of relative levity between the inexorable momentum of En rhythme molossique and the stormy involvement of the Symphonie's first movement, the beginning of the ascent to the succeeding etudes' ever-richer, more demanding utterance. By the time of its publication by Richault in 1857, Alkan had been retired from public performance for over a dozen years and, without his advocacy and the example of the rhythmically precise, sec, style sévère, required to animate this piece, it fell stillborn from the press.

No. 4~7

Alkan has much in common with Berlioz," noted Bernard van Dieren, "but he also has much in common with Haydn...." No other work so aptly illustrates the justice of linking these two unlikely names more than Alkan's Symphonie for solo piano, published by Richault in that Alkanian annus mirabilis, 1857, as Nos. 4-7 of the Études (12) dans les tons mineurs, Op. 39. His most grandly visionary works took on a retrospective aura of adulation for the Classical era — which he venerated — heard in the compact richness (relative to the concerto's expansive grandeurs) of the Symphonie's first movement. Though tightly organized, it develops the brooding swagger of the initial theme and the lyrically skipping blitheness of the second through a series of ever more felicitous episodes to a cataclysmic climax. The second movement's Marche funèbre at once recalls Beethoven, Berlioz, and Chopin, though it bears its grief with a lither, more wary tread, yielding to supreme and moving eloquence — con dolore contenuto — in a central maggiore section before the return to the opening. Rounded with a powerful coda, it seems to consign its charge to oblivion with a frisson of horror. Berlioz and Haydn are in closest proximity in the hectic Minuet, combining the spirit of the Ronde du sabbat and Marche au supplice from the former's Symphonie fantastique, with a palpable debt to the Minuet from the latter's "Les Quintes" Quartet, Op. 76/2, which Alkan transcribed. Recalling Berlioz again, Raymond Lewenthal characterized the furious Presto Finale as "a wild ride in hell rather than to it."

No. 8~10

The Concerto for solo piano staggers the listener as much by its proportions as by its richness of invention, every rift filled with ore. Failure to secure a post as chief professor of piano at the Paris Conservatoire in 1848 deeply embittered Alkan, exacerbating his already reclusive nature. In the almost wholly undocumented years following, he realized the utmost throw of his genius in works furnishing a single player with technical and expressive resources expressly designed to rival those of an orchestra, including an ambitious Overture, the four movements of the Symphonie, and the three of the concerto, all published by Richault in 1857 in the collection of 12 Études dans les tons mineurs, Op. 39, thus dispensing with orchestra, conductor, audience, critics, and other noisome nuisances. For good or ill, he also dispensed with all but the most resourceful performers for the concerto; it is rife with the most cruelly taxing demands before the works of Busoni and Sorabji. The monumental opening movement expands the classical sonata form to a Beethovenian architectonic grandeur and it plays for nearly half an hour, with solo and tutti passages alternating effusive lyricism with sweeping power. The work's central Adagio is Alkan's pithiest, darkest nocturne, brooding and mysterious, beset by the suggestion of distant drums. And the Allegretto alla-barbaresca, a majestically skirling polonaise, crowns the concerto's cascading splendors with a viscerally compelling fiat. Alkan, evidently had doubts about the first movement's length, for he authorized an ill-advised cut of 40 of the score's 72 pages to make "un morceau de concert, d'un durée ordinaire." It was probably in this truncated form that he performed this single movement at one of his Petits Concerts in the 1870s. Thus, it remained for Egon Petri to give the concerto its proper premiere as part of a series of BBC commemorative broadcasts over 1938-39, 50 years after Alkan's death.

No. 11

The overture would not see print until Richault's issue of the minor key etudes in 1857. Playing around 15 minutes, the Overture is a big-boned piece that immediately announces its symphonic ambitions in throbbing maestoso chords. The rich succession of themes, all of large stamp, prompted Sorabji to note the Overture as "A fine example of Alkan's orchestral pianistic style; here again crop up Beethoven-like turns of thought and expression." Like late Beethoven, spacious design coupled with a terse musical argument may discourage the casual listener. Even Ronald Smith, one of Alkan's most persuasive interpreters, could write, "I must admit that I had little inkling of the work's extraordinary power and originality until I had penetrated its technical armour-plating to tap the darkly turbulent undercurrents that lie locked within.

No. 12

Le festin d'Esope is from of a group of 12 Etudes, Op. 39. The principal melody (very much like a child's nursery song) goes through every permutation possible. Like each course in Aesop's sumptuous, yet monotonous banquet of tongue, every "musical course", or variation, is different: from dark and ominous to light and playful. While very much a showpiece of pianistic virtuosity, it is also a supreme example of the art of theme and variations. Alkan displays a rarely seen, but engaging sense of humor.

http://down.whpia.com/BMweb/AlkanOp39Complete.rar



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  发帖心情 Post By:2005-7-22 12:48:22 [只看该作者]

嗯,最近还找到些他的我们不太常听到的作品,比如夜曲什么的!有了编号方便研究一些!



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  发帖心情 Post By:2005-7-22 21:38:27 [只看该作者]

呵呵,夜曲还有前奏曲等等那张?



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  发帖心情 Post By:2005-7-28 17:56:21 [只看该作者]

谢谢了~~得好好研究研究~


普希金说过:“灵感就是内心对最生动的印象的感受和思考。”只能感受艺术的人永远只是一个艺术爱好者;只能思考艺术的人会成为一个研究者和音乐学家;对表演家来说,必须把这两者很好的结合起来!
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小河马
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  发帖心情 Post By:2005-7-29 16:26:18 [只看该作者]

BM,我对你的崇拜已经快到了和对Alkan一个程度了,谢谢你!!


仰天大笑出门去,我辈岂是蓬蒿人!
鄙河马的博客http://hippowitz.blogcn.com,请多多指教~
最爱David!!

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  发帖心情 Post By:2005-8-5 17:02:40 [只看该作者]

我为了这12个练习曲的资料拉住神秘客人问了一上午,把他问疯了,现在有资料了!!再次感谢


仰天大笑出门去,我辈岂是蓬蒿人!
鄙河马的博客http://hippowitz.blogcn.com,请多多指教~
最爱David!!

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  发帖心情 Post By:2005-8-5 21:17:06 [只看该作者]

咦?问来什么要和大家分享哟~



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  发帖心情 Post By:2005-8-5 23:36:01 [只看该作者]

问出来了名字………………图片点击可在新窗口打开查看


仰天大笑出门去,我辈岂是蓬蒿人!
鄙河马的博客http://hippowitz.blogcn.com,请多多指教~
最爱David!!

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  发帖心情 Post By:2005-8-6 11:32:10 [只看该作者]

晕!!!名字。。。我不是。。。写出来了吗??您不满意呀?图片点击可在新窗口打开查看图片点击可在新窗口打开查看图片点击可在新窗口打开查看


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