Alt-Wiener Tanzweisen (Old Viennese Dances) is a set of three short pieces for violin and piano composed by Austrian-American violinist and composer Fritz Kreisler (1875-1962).
Kreisler wrote a number of pieces for the violin, including solos for encores, such as "Liebesleid" and "Liebesfreud".
Marc Chagall | La Danse
The three pieces are titled:
╰┈➤ Liebesfreud (Love's Joy),
╰┈➤ Liebesleid (Love's Sorrow),
╰┈➤ Schön Rosmarin (Lovely Rosemary).
David Garrett plays "Love's Joy" by Fritz Kreisler 🎻
It is not known when the pieces are written, but they were published in 1905, deliberately misattributed to Joseph Lanner.
The pieces had become parts of Kreisler's repertoire well before September 1910, when he copyrighted them under his own name.
Kreisler often played these pieces as encores at his concerts, though the pieces are usually performed separately.
In 1911, he published solo piano arrangements of the pieces as Alt-Wiener Tanzweisen.
The pieces have since appeared in numerous settings for other instruments, or orchestrated.
Two of the pieces, Liebesfreud and Liebesleid, were the subject of virtuoso transcriptions for solo piano by Kreisler's friend Sergei Rachmaninoff (1931), who also recorded these transcriptions.
René-Xavier Prinet | The Kreutzer Sonata, 1901
Alt-Wiener Tanzweisen (Vecchie melodie viennesi) è un gruppo di tre brani brevi per violino e pianoforte, scritto dal violinista e compositore Austriaco naturalizzato Statunitense Fritz Kreisler (1875-1962).
I tre brani vengono generalmente eseguiti od ascoltati separatamente e si intitolano:
╰┈➤ Liebesfreud (Gioia d'Amore),
╰┈➤ Liebesleid (Pena d'Amore),
╰┈➤ Schön Rosmarin (Rosmarino delizioso).
Marc Chagall