Adolf von Henselt (1814–1889)

Four Impromptus

Opp. 7, 17, 34 & 37

Urtext Edition

A newly engraved edition of Henselt’s four Impromptus for piano solo, prepared from historical sources and designed for practical use at the piano.

PDF: € 9 / Printed: € 18

Composer

Adolf von Henselt

Work

Four Impromptus

Pages

24

Level of difficulty

5/10, 9/10, 6/10, 9/10

Edition

Urtext Edition

Four Impromptus

Adolf von Henselt’s four Impromptus span more than twenty years of his creative life, from the late 1830s to the end of the 1850s. Written for piano solo, they show a composer concerned with singing tone, refined legato, layered textures and pianistic colour. This Felix Editions publication brings the four works together in a newly engraved edition for pianists who want to explore Henselt beyond the better-known études and concert works.

About this edition

This edition has been prepared as part of Felix Editions’ Henselt piano series, with the aim of making this repertoire practical to read, study and perform. The music is newly engraved, avoiding the compromises of old scans and making the dense textures clearer on the page.

The edition is intended for real use at the piano: spacious notation where needed, consistent layout decisions, and a presentation suited to advanced players working through demanding Romantic repertoire. The publication is based on historical source research and includes editorial context where available.

The music

The four Impromptus form a compact but varied group within Henselt’s piano output. Although composed at different points in his career, they share a recognisable musical language: lyrical melodic writing, careful voice-leading, expressive inner parts and figuration that often serves a cantabile line rather than mere display.

Henselt’s pianism asks for a particular kind of control. Wide-spread textures, legato touch, double notes, inner voices and rich accompanimental writing must be balanced so that the music remains transparent. The later Impromptus show greater contrapuntal complexity and a broader sense of structure, while the third Impromptu, Illusion perdue, is especially notable for its concentrated, elegiac atmosphere.

These pieces are not light salon miniatures in the casual sense. They belong to the more demanding side of the Romantic character piece: poetic, technically exacting, and rewarding for pianists interested in repertoire where virtuosity is bound closely to tone, voicing and expression.

Who is it for?

This edition is suited to advanced pianists, conservatoire students, teachers and repertoire researchers looking beyond the familiar nineteenth-century piano canon. It will be useful for players interested in Romantic character pieces, in the relationship between technical difficulty and lyrical expression, or in repertoire connected with the wider Central European and Russian piano traditions.

For teachers, the Impromptus offer material for work on voicing, finger legato, tonal layering and controlled virtuosity. For performers, they provide distinctive recital possibilities: concise enough to programme flexibly, but substantial enough to make a clear musical impression.

Available formats

This publication is available as a digital PDF download and as a printed edition. The PDF is suitable for immediate study and tablet use; the printed edition is intended for pianists who prefer a physical score for practice, teaching and performance.

About Felix Editions

I am an editor based in Amsterdam. I founded Felix Editions because much of the Romantic piano repertoire I wanted to study survived only in dense, error-filled nineteenth-century prints or modern editions that feel mechanically set. Each volume is prepared from primary sources, with a critical commentary documenting the editorial decisions.

Read more

Newsletter

You have successfully subscribed to our newsletter.