Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "Alexander Scriabin's Prelude in C-sharp minor, Op. 11, No. 10, is 20 bars long and takes under a minute and a half to be played. It is marked at Andante. It has two sections of mysterious major seventh intervals and tritone harmonies, split up by a lyrical E major section. Like many of Scriabin's slower pieces, it is played very rubato. This Prelude, together with No. 9 in E major, can be played as neo-romantic, impressionistic, and twentieth-century repertoire in a Royal Conservatory of Music grade nine exam."@en }
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- Prelude_in_C-sharp_minor,_Op._11,_No._10_(Scriabin) abstract "Alexander Scriabin's Prelude in C-sharp minor, Op. 11, No. 10, is 20 bars long and takes under a minute and a half to be played. It is marked at Andante. It has two sections of mysterious major seventh intervals and tritone harmonies, split up by a lyrical E major section. Like many of Scriabin's slower pieces, it is played very rubato. This Prelude, together with No. 9 in E major, can be played as neo-romantic, impressionistic, and twentieth-century repertoire in a Royal Conservatory of Music grade nine exam.".
- Q7240081 abstract "Alexander Scriabin's Prelude in C-sharp minor, Op. 11, No. 10, is 20 bars long and takes under a minute and a half to be played. It is marked at Andante. It has two sections of mysterious major seventh intervals and tritone harmonies, split up by a lyrical E major section. Like many of Scriabin's slower pieces, it is played very rubato. This Prelude, together with No. 9 in E major, can be played as neo-romantic, impressionistic, and twentieth-century repertoire in a Royal Conservatory of Music grade nine exam.".