- Coleridge-Taylor composed this set in 1898 or 1899.1
- Coleridge-Taylor composed this set while he was courting his future wife, Jessie Walmisley.2
- The composer told Walmisley that these waltzes weren’t meant for dancing, but rather as stylized explorations of waltz rhythm. The composer cited Brahms’s waltzes as an example.3
Movements
- Valse bohémienne (Bohemian Waltz)
- Valse rustique (Rustic Waltz)
- Valse de la reine (The Queen’s Waltz)
- Valse mauresque (Moorish Waltz)4
Sources
- Stephen Banfield and Jeremy Dibble, and Anya Laurence, “Coleridge-Taylor, Samuel,” Grove Music Online (2003), accessed July 7, 2021, https://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/grovemusic/view/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.001.0001/omo-9781561592630-e-1002248993.
- David Ades, liner notes to Samuel Coleridge-Taylor: Hiawatha Overture et al, RTE Concert Orchestra, Adrian Leaper, Marco Polo 8.223516, CD, 1995.
- Ibid.
- Banfield, Dibble, and Laurence, “Coleridge-Taylor, Samuel,” Grove Music Online.
Cut IDs
43243