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BALFE – Poem (concert piece based on the song ‘The Day is Done’) – DOUBLE BASS SOLOIST WITH STRING ORCHESTRA OR STRING QUARTET

Other Identification:
Michael William Balfe (15th May 1808 – 20th October 1870) was an Irish composer, born in Dublin, and best remembered for his operas, especially ‘The Bohemian Girl’.

His initial success took place some months later, with the premiere of ‘The Siege of Rochelle’ on 29 October 1835 at Drury Lane. Encouraged by his success, he produced The Maid of Artois in 1836; which was followed by more operas in English. In July 1838, Balfe composed a new opera, ‘Falstaff’, for The Italian Opera House, based on ‘The Merry Wives of Windsor’.

In 1841, Balfe founded the National Opera at the Lyceum Theatre, but the venture was a failure. The same year, he premiered his opera, ‘Keolanthe’. He then moved to Paris, presenting ‘Le Puits d’amour’ (1843) in early 1843, followed by his opera based on ‘Les quatre fils Aymon’ (1844) for the Opéra-Comique (also popular in German-speaking countries for many years as ‘Die vier Haimonskinder’) and ‘L’étoile de Seville’ (1845). In 1843, Balfe returned to London where he produced his most successful work, ‘The Bohemian Girl’, on 27th November 1843 at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane. The work ran for over 100 nights, and more productions were soon mounted in New York, Dublin, Philadelphia, Vienna (in German), Sydney, and indeed throughout Europe and elsewhere. In 1854, an Italian adaptation called ‘La Zingara’ was mounted in Trieste with great success, and it too was performed internationally in both Italian and German. In 1862, a four-act French version, entitled ‘La Bohemienne’ was produced in France and was again a success.

In a career spanning more than 40 years, he composed at least 29 operas, almost 250 songs, several cantatas and other works. He also wrote several cantatas (including Mazeppa in 1862) and a symphony (1829). Balfe’s only large-scale piece that is still performed today is ‘The Bohemian Girl’.

A most interesting composer who we should not lose sight of!
Movements or sections:
Adapted by David Johnstone into a concert piece, marked ‘Moderato molto’
Instrumentation: 2 Options:
DOUBLE BASS SOLO with String Orchestra
DOUBLE SOLO SOLO with String Quartet

Arranged by David Johnstone

This music is in 3 PDFs:
[1 – Double Bass soloist
[2 – Ensemble String Parts
[3 – Score
Approximate difficulty: MEDIUM
Double Bass soloist – MEDIUM (medium to difficult)
String Parts – MEDIUM (easy to medium)
Dedicatee of this presentation (if applicable): To the fine double bassist Piotr Piotrowski

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Johnstone Music has been performed by orchestras and conservatories worldwide, earning international recognition in cello repertoire.