What follows is the best I can do from home, with the Library of Congress name authority file (which you can search for yourself at http://authorities.loc.gov) as my only reference source.
The Nocturne is one of the Pesy, Op. 35, written in 1908 for various instruments. Since Polekh was born in 1918, I think it's a lead pipe cinch none of them were written for him. Pesy, in this instance, means Pieces or something like that. The Gliere Op. 35 consists of the following: No. 1: Melody for flute and piano No. 2: Waltz for flute and piano No. 3: Song for oboe and piano No. 4: Andante in F-sharp minor for oboe and piano No. 5: Moment musical for violoncello and piano No. 6: Romance for clarinet and piano No. 7: Valse triste for clarinet and piano No. 8: Humoresque for bassoon and piano No. 9: Impromptu for bassoon and piano No. 10: Nocturne for horn and piano No. 11: Intermezzo for horn and piano I believe that the arrangements of nos. 6 & 7 for horn and piano are by the composer, but would want to do more research to be sure. IIRC--and, increasingly, I don't--the works list in Grove Music Online explains all the variant mediums of performance. HTH. Howard Sanner [email protected] "Pessimists are surprised as often as optimists, but always pleasantly"--The Giant Rat of Sumatra, by Richard L. Boyer, p. 61. _______________________________________________ post: [email protected] unsubscribe or set options at https://pegasus.memphis.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/options/horn/archive%40jab.org
