- 4 Romantic Pieces Op.75 (piano and violin)
- 8 Waltzes Op.54
- Adagio from The Concerto Op.53 (for violin and piano)
- Dumka Op.12 No.1
- Dumka Op.35
- Etude No.1
- Five Minuets Op.26
- Furiant Op.12 No.2
- Humoresque Op.101 No.7
- Humoresque Op.101 No.7 for violin and piano
- Impromptu Op.52
- Klagendes Gedenken Op.85 No.6 for violin and piano
- Largo From Symphony No.9 (from The New World) for violin and piano
- Mazurek Op.49 (violin and piano)
- Piano concerto In G Minor Op.33
- Piano Quintet Op.81
- Rondo Op.94 for cello and piano
- Scottish Dances Op.41
- Silhouette No.7
- Silhouetten Op.8 (No.3 missing first page)
- Slavonic Dance Op.72 No.7 for violin and piano
- Tema con Variazioni Op.36
- Waldesruhe Op.62 for violin and piano
- Waltz Op.54 No.7 for violin and piano
- Waltzes Op.54
- Slavonic Dances Op.72 (2 books) arr Keller
- Symphony No.9 from the New World (piano solo by Juon)
- String Quartet Op.96 (four hands by Lkengel)
- Streichquartett Op.105
- Strichquartett Op.106
- Humoresuqe 1949 version by Art Tatum
Dvorak, Antonin
$17.50
Antonín Leopold Dvořák (September 8, 1841 – May 1, 1904) was a Czech composer. Following the nationalist example of Bedřich Smetana, Dvořák frequently employed features of the folk musics of Moravia and his native Bohemia (then parts of the Austrian Empire and now constituting the Czech Republic). Dvořák’s own style has been described as ‘the fullest recreation of a national idiom with that of the symphonic tradition, absorbing folk influences and finding effective ways of using them’.
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