✨ New Arrivals Just Dropped!Explore
Erkin: Symphony No. 2, Violin Concerto, Kocekce & Dance Rhapsody / Buswell, Kuchar
HomeStore

Erkin: Symphony No. 2, Violin Concerto, Kocekce & Dance Rhapsody / Buswell, Kuchar

Erkin: Symphony No. 2, Violin Concerto, Kocekce & Dance Rhapsody / Buswell, Kuchar

Ulvi Cemal Erkin was one of the ‘Turkish Five’, contemporaries who established the foundations of twentieth-century Turkish music by combining Western forms with their own folk traditions. His most performed work is Kocekce, a dance suite inspired by the traditional kocek dancers of his native country. The Violin Concerto employs a classical Western structure but also includes a taksim section in its final movement, typical of improvisatory Turkish violin music. The evocative Symphony No. 2 is the apex of Erkin’s symphonic works, its last movement consisting entirely of folk tunes he himself discovered.

$13.99
Erkin: Symphony No. 2, Violin Concerto, Kocekce & Dance Rhapsody / Buswell, Kuchar
$13.99

More Images

Erkin: Symphony No. 2, Violin Concerto, Kocekce & Dance Rhapsody / Buswell, Kuchar - Image 2

Erkin: Symphony No. 2, Violin Concerto, Kocekce & Dance Rhapsody / Buswell, Kuchar

Ulvi Cemal Erkin was one of the ‘Turkish Five’, contemporaries who established the foundations of twentieth-century Turkish music by combining Western forms with their own folk traditions. His most performed work is Kocekce, a dance suite inspired by the traditional kocek dancers of his native country. The Violin Concerto employs a classical Western structure but also includes a taksim section in its final movement, typical of improvisatory Turkish violin music. The evocative Symphony No. 2 is the apex of Erkin’s symphonic works, its last movement consisting entirely of folk tunes he himself discovered.

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

Ulvi Cemal Erkin was one of the ‘Turkish Five’, contemporaries who established the foundations of twentieth-century Turkish music by combining Western forms with their own folk traditions. His most performed work is Kocekce, a dance suite inspired by the traditional kocek dancers of his native country. The Violin Concerto employs a classical Western structure but also includes a taksim section in its final movement, typical of improvisatory Turkish violin music. The evocative Symphony No. 2 is the apex of Erkin’s symphonic works, its last movement consisting entirely of folk tunes he himself discovered.