Michael Kurth
Brahms: Sonata No. 2 in F Major for double bass and piano, op. 99 (arr. Michael Kurth)
Brahms: Sonata No. 2 in F Major for double bass and piano, op. 99 (arr. Michael Kurth)
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About the Composition
Finally, a playable version of the mighty F Major cello sonata!
But wait, there's more!
TWO VERSIONS! One in Brahms' original F major, for orchestra tuning, and another played a whole step lower if you're playing with solo tuning strings!
But Michael, you may ask, why not just transpose the piano part up a whole step so the bass can stay in F in etiher tuning?
Have you ever seen the piano part to this sonata? It's freakin crazy. I suppose I could have transposed the piano part, but then I'd need to charge like a thousand dollars or something. I don't have that kind of time, and you don't have that kind of money.
Your purchase only includes the double bass parts in both keys. Piano part linked below.
Piano Accompaniment
Download the piano accompaniment here.
About the Arranger
Kurth has been a member of the Atlanta Symphony bass section since 1994.
Michael Kurth thinks most artist biographies are pretentious and boring, and feels a welcome sense of liberation, not to mention mischief, when writing about himself in the third person. He further believes that all artist biographies should include whether the artist prefers cats or dogs, or is ambivalent. He allows that there is room for ambivalence on this issue.
Kurth prefers dogs.
He also enjoys shrimp burritos, dive bars, road trips, thrift stores, found art, shiny pants, folk plumbing, collecting odd musical instruments, neologism, and bourbon.
Kurth was born in 1971 in Virginia and grew up near Baltimore. He started playing the bass in fourth grade, went to public schools, and got his Bachelor’s Degree at Peabody Conservatory, where he studied bass with Harold Robinson. He also studied cello and viola at Peabody, and did okay at cello, but his ham-fisted viola playing caused his roommate Rick to forbid him from ever practicing it in their dorm room.
He once stole one of those convex security mirrors, just to savor the irony, but he feels a lingering sense of guilt, even though it was laying in a pile of stuff that was probably destined for the dumpster anyway. But still.
Kurth has been a member of the Atlanta Symphony bass section since 1994.
The ASO has commissioned and premiered many of his orchestral and choral works. A recording on the ASO Media label is scheduled for commercial release on CD and digital platforms in February 2019, including Everything Lasts Forever, A Thousand Words, May Cause Dizziness, and Miserere featuring Grammy Award-winning mezzo-soprano Kelley O’Connor.
He frequently collaborates with Atlanta poet Jesse Breite on vocal works, including Miserere, Tenebrae, and Magnificat.
He was named “Best New Composer” by Atlanta Magazine in 2017.
He has been awarded Artist-in-Residence fellowships from the Hermitage and Serenbe.
Many Atlanta-area artists have commissioned and performed his works, including the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Chorus and Chamber Chorus, the Atlanta Chamber Players, the Atlanta Young Singers, the Gwinnett Young Singers, the Morehouse College Glee Club, the Peachtree String Quartet, the Franklin Pond String Quartet, the Atlanta Contemporary Ensemble, Concert Artist Guild Award-winning violist Jennifer Stumm, the Georgia Sinfonia, the Atlanta Community Symphony Orchestra, the DeKalb Symphony, the Georgia State University Wind Ensemble, and movement artists gloATL.
He teaches bass at Emory University.


