Schubert at the piano, with his inexhaustible wealth of dance melodies, his friends around him dancing and playing jokes – this is one of the traditional images of Schubert that we so cherish. The term Schubertiade invented for this kind of get-together is now solidly established. This volume contains more than 200 dances, minuets, waltzes (including the famous 34 Valses sentimentales op. 50 and the 12 Valses nobles op. 77), ländler, écossaises, German dances – each lovelier than the next. They were written in the years 1816-1826. In the Appendix one can find another 32 dances, of which only the melodies are transmitted or that were originally most likely intended for other scorings
- 6 Ecossaises D 421
- Ecossaise D 511
- 8 Ecossaises D 529
- Minuet D 600
- Trio to be regarded as lost son of a Minuet D 610
- German Dance and Ecossaise D 643
- 8 Ländler D 681
- 5 Ecossaises D 697
- Variation on a Waltz by A. Diabelli D 718
- German Dance D 722
- 16 Ländler and two Ecossaises op. 67 D 734
- 8 Ecossaises op. 49 D 735
- Galopp op. 49 D 735
- 2 German Dances D 769
- 34 Valses sentimentales op. 50 D 779
- 11 Ecossaises D 781
- Ecossaise D 782
- 16 German Dances and two Ecossaises op. 33 D 783
- 12 German Dances named Ländler op. post. 171 D 790
- 3 Ecossaises D 816
- 6 German Dances D 820
- 2 German Dances D 841
- Waltz named “Albumblatt” D 844
- 12 Grazer Waltzes op. 91 D 924
- Grazer Galopp D 925
- 12 Valses nobles op. 77 D 969
- 6 German Dances D 970
- 3 German Dances D 971
- 3 German Dances D 972
- 3 German Dances D 973
- 2 German Dances D 974
- German Dance D 975
- Cotillon D 976
- 8 Ecossaises D 977
- Waltz D 978
- Waltz D 979
- 2 Waltzes D 980
- 2 Ländler D 679 (980B)