(For Orchestra and Concert Group). By Stephen Albert. For Piccolo, Flute, Oboe, ...(+)
(For Orchestra and
Concert Group). By
Stephen Albert. For
Piccolo, Flute, Oboe,
English Horn, Piccolo
Clarinet, Clarinet, Alto
Saxophone, Bassoon,
Contra Bassoon, Horn,
Cornet, Trumpet, Tenor,
Tuba, Timpani,
Percussion, Piano, Harp,
Contrabass, Violin, Vi.
full score (large).
classical.
Divertimento teatrale
in one act. Operetta for
four voices. Composed
by Antonio Salieri.
Edited by Adrian La
Salvia and Thomas
Betzwieser. This edition:
Edition of selected
works, Urtext edition.
Linen. Spectrum of
European Music Theatre in
Separate Editions 1.
Edition of selected
works, Score, Critical
commentary, USB flash
drive. Duration 1 hour,
15 minutes. Baerenreiter
Verlag #BA08811_00.
Published by Baerenreiter
Verlag (BA.BA08811).
ISBN 9790006539840.
33.1 x 26.5 cm inches.
Text Language: Italian.
Preface: Betzwieser,
Thomas. Text:
Giambattista
Casti.
A memorable
musical competition
commissioned by the
emperor Joseph II took
place on 7 February 1786
as part of a festival in
the orangery of the
Schönbrunn palace. A
German Singspiel ensemble
performed Mozart’s
“Schauspieldirektor
†whilst Antonio
Salieri’s
“Prima la musica e
poi le parole†was
performed by the Italian
court singers and
musicians. This charming
opera satire belongs to
the genre of
“metamelodrammaâ
in which the opera
itself becomes the
subject of the action.
The people who are part
of an opera production,
for example the
librettist, composer and
prima donna, appear as
characters on the stage
and are presented in a
humorous self-reflection.
In this ‘theatre
about theatre’
Salieri parodies the
music from Giuseppe
Sarti’s
“Giulio
Sabino†in his
insert arias, thus
playing on the music
which was totally
familiar with the
audience of the time. By
reflecting on the
musical-dramatic style of
that period and
discussing whether
‘the word’
or ‘the
music’ should take
priority, this
masterpiece is considered
to be an early forerunner
to Richard
Strauss’s
“Capriccioâ€.<
br> The new edition of
the score is published as
part of “opera
– Spectrum of
European Music Theatre in
Separate Editionsâ€.
There are several
alterations regarding the
libretto text, stage
directions, articulation,
ornamentation, etc. which
have been incorporated
into this newly engraved
vocal score. Furthermore,
all appendix numbers from
the score which concern
the quotations from
Giuseppe Sarti’s
“Giulio
Sabino†have also
been
incorporated.
â
¢ Urtext vocal score
based on the
historical-critical
hybrid score published as
part of “opera
– Spectrum of
European Music Theatre in
Separate Editionsâ€
edited by Thomas
Betzwieser (music
edition) and Adrian La
Salvia (text
edition). •
Original Italian libretto
with singable German
translation •
Comprehensive bilingual
foreword (Ger/Eng) on the
genesis and reception of
the work, on
metamelodramma and
intertextuality
etc. • Includes
an extensive appendix to
the quotations taken from
Giuseppe Sarti’s
“Giulio
Sabino†•
Idiomatic piano
reduction
About
Barenreiter
Urtext
What can I
expect from a Barenreiter
Urtext
edition?<
/p>
MUSICOLOGICA
LLY SOUND - A
reliable musical text
based on all available
sources - A
description of the
sources -
Information on the
genesis and history of
the work - Valuable
notes on performance
practice - Includes
an introduction with
critical commentary
explaining source
discrepancies and
editorial decisions
... AND
PRACTICAL -
Page-turns, fold-out
pages, and cues where you
need them - A
well-presented layout and
a user-friendly
format - Excellent
print quality -
Superior paper and
binding
Composed by Gustav
Mahler. Edited by
Christian Rudolf Riedel.
Voice; stapled.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library).
Symphony; Late-romantic.
Set of parts. 1116 pages.
Duration 65'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #OB 5641-60.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.OB-5641-60).
ISBN
9790004348833. 10.5 x 14
inches.
The Song of
the Earth, composed in
the summer of 1908, is
Mahler's best-known and
most personal work.
Reflecting drastic
changes in his life, its
immense emotional density
is very moving. Until the
very end, Mahler
continued to refine the
extremely differentiated
instrumentation, as is
evident in numerous
retouchings in the
autograph score and
engraver's model. It is
therefore all the more
regrettable that he was
neither able to perform
his Symphony in Songs
himself nor that he was
involved in its printing.
Unfortunately, in the
posthumously published
first edition of 1912 and
the subsequent editions
edited by Erwin Ratz and
Karl Heinz Fussl, many
questions remained
unanswered, while other
were answered in a
dubious way.The edition
is the first
text-critical one of the
work on a scientifically
sound basis. It offers
not only a more reliable
musical text, but also
systematically and
lucidly prepared
information on the
sources, their
transmission and
evaluation. All editorial
decisions have been
documented in a
transparently
comprehensible manner -
in particular those
leading to new audible
results. Work-related
notes on performance
practice, which for the
first time include
Mahler's conducting
indications, offer
valuable, indispensable
interpretive aids. In
addition to the regular
five clarinet parts, the
set of parts includes two
additional parts (3rd
clarinet/Eb clarinet,
bass clarinet/3rd
clarinet in places where
the latter plays Eb
clarinet) to allow
performances with only
four clarinets.The
completely revised piano
reduction reproduces the
orchestral texture true
to the score without
losing sight of
playability. Both
Mahler's piano autograph
and the piano reduction
by Woss, which was
commissioned by the
composer himself, served
as an inspiration for
this.