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VIV 1811


 

Six Lessons for Harpsichord or Piano
By Elizabeth Hardin • Edited by Barbara Harbach

Elizabeth Hardin was the organist of St. Peter-le-Poor, on Broad Street in London. This volume was originally published in 1770. These charming lessons—generally two movements—have a music box quality. They feature hand crossovers in the Scarlatti fashion. Medium Difficulty. Recorded on CD, Sonatas by Elizabeth, Hester Park CD 7702.
VIV 1811, 52 pages, $18.95

 

Sforzando
“Hardin's pieces are equally reserved and smartly construed, and ring like a brilliant female student who has been told not to show-off her abilities.”

Fanfare, January/February 1996
“Hardin is a discovery, and her music is worth the price of the disc [Hester Park 7702]”

 

Click here to view a page of the score.

 

A Brief Bio of the Editor

Dr. Barbara Harbach, Professor of Music at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, has toured extensively as both concert organist and harpsichordist. She holds academic degrees from Pennsylvania State University (B.A.), Yale University (M.M.A.), Musikhochschule (Konzertdiplom) in Frankfurt, Germany, and the Eastman School of Music (D.M.A.). In 2002, Harbach received an honorary doctorate in music, honoris causa, from Wilmington College, Ohio for her lifetime achievement as a composer, performer, editor, and publisher.

Her lively performances and recordings have captured the imagination of many American composers, and the body of work written for and dedicated to Harbach is substantial. Musical America has called her "nothing short of brilliant" and Gramophone has cited her as an "acknowledged interpreter -- and, indeed, muse -- of modern harpsichord music."

She was host of the weekly television music series Palouse Performance seen throughout the Inland Northwest.

As a composer, Harbach has written symphonies, works for chamber ensemble, string orchestra, organ, harpsichord; musicals, choral anthems, film scores, modern ballets, and many arrangements for brass and organ of various Baroque works. She is also involved in the research, editing and publication of manuscripts of eighteenth-century keyboard composers as well as historical and contemporary women composers. Her work is available in both recorded and published form through Naxos Records, Gasparo Records, Kingdom Records, Albany Records, Northeastern Records, Hester Park, Robert King Music, Elkan-Vogel, Augsburg Publishing, Agape Music and Vivace Press. In addition, Harbach is the editor of Women of Note Quarterly.

Harbach initiated Women in the Arts-St. Louis, a celebration featuring over 800 events with various cultural organizations in the St. Louis region. This initiative heightened the awareness and understanding of the achievements of women creators while providing audiences with new and historical examples of the work of women writers, composers and artists.

 

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