Description
Bagattella per mandolino solo
Performance time: Approximately 5 minutes
Orchestration: Mandolin
Composed in 2016, commissioned by Kyoko Kato, a mandolinist currently living in Italy. The first performance was held on April 29 of the same year at the graduation concert of the Italian conservatory where she studied abroad.
This piece is a short piece, just under five minutes long, and the title was given in Italian to suit the environment in which it was premiered. Translated into Japanese, it means “Bagatelle for solo mandolins,” but “bagatelle” originally meant “something trivial or trivial.” Beethoven seems to have liked this title for his piano pieces.
(Quoted from Kokusaku Sakai Mandolin Works Explanation Collection )
Performance time: Approximately 5 minutes
Orchestration: Mandolin
Composed in 2016, commissioned by Kyoko Kato, a mandolinist currently living in Italy. The first performance was held on April 29 of the same year at the graduation concert of the Italian conservatory where she studied abroad.
This piece is a short piece, just under five minutes long, and the title was given in Italian to suit the environment in which it was premiered. Translated into Japanese, it means “Bagatelle for solo mandolins,” but “bagatelle” originally meant “something trivial or trivial.” Beethoven seems to have liked this title for his piano pieces.
(Quoted from Kokusaku Sakai Mandolin Works Explanation Collection )