In 1913, three years after publication of the Preludes I, another collection of twelve Preludes appeared. The pieces are longer and make use of a very wide register, which is why Debussy mainly notated them on three staves. As with the first volume of Preludes the programmatic additions only appeared at the end of each piece. The cycle closes with the virtuosic and brilliant Feux dartifice, fireworks of pianistic bravura in thetrue sense of the word. The piano writing and title of no. 11, Les tier ces alternees, already hints at the twelve Etudes of 1915 (HN 390) with which Debussy was to end his piano uvre. Edited by Ernst-Gunter Heinemann with fingerings by Hans-Martin Theopold and a preface by Francois Lesure. |