English version
Parcourir Free-scores.com
--INSTRUMENTS--
ACCORDEON
ALTO
AUTOHARPE
BANJO
BASSE
BASSON
BATTERIE
BOUZOUKI
CHORALE - CHAN…
CITHARE
CLAIRON
CLARINETTE
CLAVECIN
CLOCHES
COR
COR ANGLAIS
CORNEMUSE
CORNET
DEEJAY
DIDGERIDOO
DULCIMER
EUPHONIUM
FANFARE - BAND…
FLUTE A BEC
FLUTE DE PAN
FLUTE TRAVERSI…
FORMATION MUSI…
GUITARE
GUITARE LAP ST…
HARMONICA
HARPE
HAUTBOIS
LIVRES
LUTH
MANDOLINE
MARIMBA
OCARINA
ORCHESTRE
ORGUE
PERCUSSION
PIANO
SAXOPHONE
SYNTHETISEUR
TROMBONE
TROMPETTE
TUBA
UKULELE
VIBRAPHONE
VIOLON
VIOLONCELLE
XYLOPHONE
New York, New York
Non classifié
117
Piano & claviers
Piano seul
109
Piano, Voix et Guitare
29
Instruments en Do
19
Piano, Voix
17
Orgue
2
Piano Trio: piano, violon, violoncelle
1
Piano Facile
1
+ 2 instrumentations
Retracter
Guitares
Guitare
9
Guitare notes et tablatures
9
Ligne De Mélodie, (Paroles) et Accords
3
Basse electrique
2
Piano, Guitare (duo)
1
4 Guitares (Quatuor)
1
+ 1 instrumentations
Retracter
Voix
Chorale SATB
24
Chorale TTBB
13
Chorale 3 parties
5
Chorale SSAA
4
Voix Baryton, Piano
3
Voix Tenor, Piano
2
Chorale Unison
1
Voix haute
1
Voix duo, Piano
1
+ 4 instrumentations
Retracter
Vents
Quintette de Saxophone: 5 saxophones
16
Ensemble de saxophones
15
Quatuor de Saxophones: 4 saxophones
9
Ensemble de Clarinettes
6
Saxophone Tenor et Piano
6
Flûte traversière
5
Clarinette
5
Quintette à Vent: flûte, Hautbois, basson, clarinette, Cor
4
Ensemble de Flûtes
4
Saxophone Tenor
4
Saxophone
3
Clarinette et Piano
3
Saxophone Alto
2
Saxophone Alto et Piano
2
Flûte et Guitare
2
Hautbois, Piano (duo)
2
Quintette de Flûte : 5 flûtes
2
Flûte traversière et Piano
2
Hautbois (partie séparée)
1
Flûte, Hautbois, Clarinette, Basson
1
Clarinette, Guitare (duo)
1
Saxophone Soprano
1
Quatuor de Clarinettes: 4 clarinettes
1
Clarinette Basse, Piano
1
+ 19 instrumentations
Retracter
Cuivres
Quintette de Cuivres: 2 trompettes, Cor, trombone, tuba
21
Quatuor de Cuivres : 2 trompettes, trombone, tuba
18
Quatuor de Cuivres: 2 trompettes, Cor, trombone
15
Ensemble de Trombones
6
Trompette
4
Trombone
3
Ensemble de Trompettes
3
Trombone et Piano
2
Cor et Piano
1
Trompette, Piano
1
Euphonium, Piano (duo)
1
+ 6 instrumentations
Retracter
Cordes
Quatuor à cordes: 2 violons, alto, violoncelle
17
Violon
5
Trio à Cordes: violon, alto, violoncelle
4
Violon et Piano
3
Alto, Piano
3
2 Violons (duo)
2
Violon, Guitare (duo)
2
Violoncelle, Piano
2
Trio à Cordes: 2 violons, violoncelle
2
Ensemble d'Altos
2
Ensemble de Violons
2
Alto, Guitare (duo)
1
Contre Basse
1
Violon, Violoncelle (duo)
1
Quintette à cordes: 2 violons, alto, violoncelle, basse
1
Violoncelle , Guitare (duo)
1
Alto seul
1
+ 12 instrumentations
Retracter
Orchestre & Percussions
Orchestre d'harmonie
17
Ensemble Jazz
15
Orchestre
9
Ensemble de cuivres
8
Orchestre à Cordes
7
Jazz combo
3
Orchestre de chambre
2
+ 2 instrumentations
Retracter
Autres
Partitions Gratuites
Instruments
ACCORDEON
ALTO
AUTRES INST…
BALALAIKA
BANJO
BASSE
BASSON
BATTERIE
BOUZOUKI
BUGLE
CHANT - CHO…
CHARANGO
CITHARE
CLAIRON
CLARINETTE
CLAVECIN
CLOCHES
CONTREBASSE
COR
COR ANGLAIS
CORNEMUSE
CORNET
DOBRO - GUI…
DULCIMER
EUPHONIUM
FANFARE - B…
FLUTE
FLUTE A BEC
FLUTE A DIX…
FLUTE DE PA…
FORMATION M…
GUITARE
GUITARE PED…
HARMONICA
HARPE
HAUTBOIS
LIVRES
LUTH, THEOR…
MANDOLINE
MARIMBA
ORCHESTRE
ORGUE
OUD
PARTITIONS …
PAS DE PART…
PERCU. ORCH…
PERCUSSION
PIANO
SAXOPHONE
SYNTHE
TROMBONE
TROMPETTE
TUBA
UKULELE
VIBRAPHONE
VIELLE A RO…
VIOLE DE GA…
VIOLON
VIOLONCELLE
XYLOPHONE
Page d'accueil
Instrumentations
Top Téléchargements
Compositeurs
Nouveautés
Partitions de Noël
Genres Musicaux
Genres Musicaux
Autres Services
Autres Services
Top 100
Portées musicales
Metronome
Achats pour Musiciens
Partitions Numériques
Librairie Musicale
Matériel de musique
Idées cadeaux
A propos de free-scores.com
Partitions Gratuites
0
Partitions Numériques
1
Librairie Musicale
0
Matériel de Musique
451
Partitions numériques
Accès après achat
Expédition postale
Téléchargement
← INSTRUMENTATIONS
TRI ET FILTRES
TRI ET FILTRES
Tri et filtres :
--INSTRUMENTS--
ACCORDEON
ALTO
AUTOHARPE
BANJO
BASSE
BASSON
BATTERIE
BOUZOUKI
CHORALE - CHAN…
CITHARE
CLAIRON
CLARINETTE
CLAVECIN
CLOCHES
COR
COR ANGLAIS
CORNEMUSE
CORNET
DEEJAY
DIDGERIDOO
DULCIMER
EUPHONIUM
FANFARE - BAND…
FLUTE A BEC
FLUTE DE PAN
FLUTE TRAVERSI…
FORMATION MUSI…
GUITARE
GUITARE LAP ST…
HARMONICA
HARPE
HAUTBOIS
LIVRES
LUTH
MANDOLINE
MARIMBA
OCARINA
ORCHESTRE
ORGUE
PERCUSSION
PIANO
SAXOPHONE
SYNTHETISEUR
TROMBONE
TROMPETTE
TUBA
UKULELE
VIBRAPHONE
VIOLON
VIOLONCELLE
XYLOPHONE
style (tous)
AFRICAIN
AMERICANA
ASIE
BLUEGRASS
BLUES
CELTIQUE - IRISH - S…
CHANSON FRANÇAISE
CHRISTIAN (contempor…
CLASSIQUE - BAROQUE …
COMEDIES MUSICALES -…
CONTEMPORAIN - 20-21…
CONTEMPORAIN - NEW A…
COUNTRY
EGLISE - SACRE
ENFANTS : EVEIL - IN…
FILM - TV
FILM WALT DISNEY
FINGERSTYLE - FINGER…
FLAMENCO
FOLK ROCK
FOLKLORE - TRADITION…
FUNK
GOSPEL - SPIRITUEL -…
HALLOWEEN
JAZZ
JAZZ MANOUCHE - SWIN…
JEUX VIDEOS
KLEZMER - JUIVE
LATIN - BOSSA - WORL…
LATIN POP ROCK
MARIAGE - AMOUR - BA…
MEDIEVAL - RENAISSAN…
METAL - HARD
METHODE : ACCORDS ET…
METHODE : ETUDES
METHODE : TECHNIQUES
NOËL
OLD TIME - EARLY ROC…
OPERA
PATRIOTIQUE
POLKA
POP ROCK - POP MUSIC
POP ROCK - ROCK CLAS…
POP ROCK - ROCK MODE…
PUNK
RAGTIME
REGGAE
SOUL - R&B - HIP HOP…
TANGO
THANKSGIVING
Vendeurs (tous)
Musicnotes
Note4Piano
Noviscore
Profs-edition
Quickpartitions
SheetMusicPlus
Tomplay
Virtualsheetmusic
Pertinence
Ventes
Prix - au +
Prix + au -
Nouveautes
A-Z
difficulté (tous)
débutant
facile
intermédiaire
avancé
expert
avec audio
avec vidéo
avec play-along
Vous avez sélectionné:
New York, New York
avancé
Trompette, Piano
Partitions à imprimer
1 partition trouvée
The Girl from Ipanema for Solo Trumpet & Piano
Trompette, Piano
By Various. Arranged by Keith Terrett. Score, Set of Parts. 8 pages. Published by Musi…
(+)
By Various. Arranged by Keith Terrett. Score, Set of Parts. 8 pages. Published by Music for all Occasions
Arranged for Solo Bb Brass & Piano "Garota de Ipanema" ("The Girl from Ipanema") is a Brazilian bossa nova and jazz song. It was a worldwide hit in the mid-1960s and won a Grammy for Record of the Year in 1965. It was written in 1962, with music by Antônio Carlos Jobim and Portuguese lyrics by Vinícius de Moraes. English lyrics were written later by Norman Gimbel.<br> <br> The first commercial recording was in 1962, by Pery Ribeiro. The Stan Getz recording featuring the vocal debut of Astrud Gilberto became an international hit. This version had been shortened from the version on the album Getz/Gilberto (recorded in March 1963, released in March 1964) which had also included the Portuguese lyrics sung by Astrud's then husband João Gilberto. In the US, the single peaked at number five on the Billboard Hot 100, and went to number one for two weeks on the Easy Listening chart. Overseas it peaked at number 29 in the United Kingdom, and charted highly throughout the world.<br> <br> Numerous recordings have been used in films, sometimes as an elevator music cliché. It is believed to be the second most recorded pop song in history, after "Yesterday" by The Beatles. The song was inducted into the Latin Grammy Hall of Fame in 2001. In 2004, it was one of 50 recordings chosen that year by the Library of Congress to be added to the National Recording Registry. In 2009, the song was voted by the Brazilian edition of Rolling Stone as the 27th greatest Brazilian song.<br> <br> Ipanema is a fashionable seaside neighborhood located in the southern region of the city of Rio de Janeiro.<br> <br> <br> Helô Pinheiro, the woman who inspired the song, in 2006.<br> The song was composed for a musical comedy titled Dirigível (Blimp), then a work-in-progress of Vinicius de Moraes. The original title was "Menina que Passa" ("The Girl Who Passes By"); the first verse was different. Jobim composed the melody on his piano in his new house in Rua Barão da Torre, in Ipanema. In turn, Moraes had written the lyrics in Petrópolis, near Rio de Janeiro, as he had done with "Chega de Saudade" ("No More Blues") six years earlier.<br> <br> During a recording session in New York with João Gilberto, Antonio Carlos Jobim and Stan Getz, the idea of cutting an English-language version came up. Norman Gimbel wrote the English lyrics. João's wife, Astrud Gilberto, was the only one of the Brazilians who could speak English well and was chosen to sing. Her voice, without trained singer mannerisms, proved a perfect fit for the song. Ethel Ennis and Nat King Cole have also both recorded the song.<br> <br> The song was inspired by Heloísa Eneida Menezes Paes Pinto (now known as Helô Pinheiro), a seventeen-year-old girl living on Montenegro Street in Ipanema. Daily, she would stroll past the Veloso bar-café, not just to the beach ("each day when she walks to the sea"), but in the everyday course of her life. She would sometimes enter the bar to buy cigarettes for her mother and leave to the sound of wolf-whistles. In the winter of 1962, the composers saw the girl pass by the bar. Since the song became popular, she has become a celebrity.<br> <br> In Revelação: a verdadeira Garôta de Ipanema ("Revealed: The Real Girl from Ipanema") Moraes wrote that she was "the paradigm of the young Carioca: a golden teenage girl, a mixture of flower and mermaid, full of light and grace, the sight of whom is also sad, in that she carries with her, on her route to the sea, the feeling of youth that fades, of the beauty that is not ours alone—it is a gift of life in its beautiful and melancholic constant ebb and flow."<br> <br> Ella Fitzgerald recorded this song on her two-disc set of Brazilian music Ella Abraca Jobim, released on the label [[Pablo today}] in 1981.<br> <br> The legacy of "The Girl from Ipanema" was acknowledged by multiple aspects of the 2016 Summer Olympics and Paralympics held in Rio de Janeiro: the Olympic and Paralympic mascots were respectively named Vinicius and Tom after the song's co-writers by a public vote, while the Olympics' opening ceremony featured a segment themed around the song and the architecture of Oscar Niemeyer. Jobim's grandson Daniel performed the song during the segment, which also featured an appearance by Brazilian supermodel Gisele Bündchen. Spotify reported that the song had been streamed on its service 40,000 times per-day in the days following the ceremony (a 1200% increase), while in the U.S., the song reached #5 on Billboard's World Digital Songs chart the following week.Arranged for Solo Bb Brass & Piano "Garota de Ipanema" ("The Girl from Ipanema") is a Brazilian bossa nova and jazz song. It was a worldwide hit in the mid-1960s and won a Grammy for Record of the Year in 1965. It was written in 1962, with music by Antônio Carlos Jobim and Portuguese lyrics by Vinícius de Moraes. English lyrics were written later by Norman Gimbel.<br> <br> The first commercial recording was in 1962, by Pery Ribeiro. The Stan Getz recording featuring the vocal debut of Astrud Gilberto became an international hit. This version had been shortened from the version on the album Getz/Gilberto (recorded in March 1963, released in March 1964) which had also included the Portuguese lyrics sung by Astrud's then husband João Gilberto. In the US, the single peaked at number five on the Billboard Hot 100, and went to number one for two weeks on the Easy Listening chart. Overseas it peaked at number 29 in the United Kingdom, and charted highly throughout the world.<br> <br> Numerous recordings have been used in films, sometimes as an elevator music cliché. It is believed to be the second most recorded pop song in history, after "Yesterday" by The Beatles. The song was inducted into the Latin Grammy Hall of Fame in 2001. In 2004, it was one of 50 recordings chosen that year by the Library of Congress to be added to the National Recording Registry. In 2009, the song was voted by the Brazilian edition of Rolling Stone as the 27th greatest Brazilian song.<br> <br> Ipanema is a fashionable seaside neighborhood located in the southern region of the city of Rio de Janeiro.<br> <br> <br> Helô Pinheiro, the woman who inspired the song, in 2006.<br> The song was composed for a musical comedy titled Dirigível (Blimp), then a work-in-progress of Vinicius de Moraes. The original title was "Menina que Passa" ("The Girl Who Passes By"); the first verse was different. Jobim composed the melody on his piano in his new house in Rua Barão da Torre, in Ipanema. In turn, Moraes had written the lyrics in Petrópolis, near Rio de Janeiro, as he had done with "Chega de Saudade" ("No More Blues") six years earlier.<br> <br> During a recording session in New York with João Gilberto, Antonio Carlos Jobim and Stan Getz, the idea of cutting an English-language version came up. Norman Gimbel wrote the English lyrics. João's wife, Astrud Gilberto, was the only one of the Brazilians who could speak English well and was chosen to sing. Her voice, without trained singer mannerisms, proved a perfect fit for the song. Ethel Ennis and Nat King Cole have also both recorded the song.<br> <br> The song was inspired by Heloísa Eneida Menezes Paes Pinto (now known as Helô Pinheiro), a seventeen-year-old girl living on Montenegro Street in Ipanema. Daily, she would stroll past the Veloso bar-café, not just to the beach ("each day when she walks to the sea"), but in the everyday course of her life. She would sometimes enter the bar to buy cigarettes for her mother and leave to the sound of wolf-whistles. In the winter of 1962, the composers saw the girl pass by the bar. Since the song became popular, she has become a celebrity.<br> <br> In Revelação: a verdadeira Garôta de Ipanema ("Revealed: The Real Girl from Ipanema") Moraes wrote that she was "the paradigm of the young Carioca: a golden teenage girl, a mixture of flower and mermaid, full of light and grace, the sight of whom is also sad, in that she carries with her, on her route to the sea, the feeling of youth that fades, of the beauty that is not ours alone—it is a gift of life in its beautiful and melancholic constant ebb and flow."<br> <br> Ella Fitzgerald recorded this song on her two-disc set of Brazilian music Ella Abraca Jobim, released on the label [[Pablo today}] in 1981.<br> <br> The legacy of "The Girl from Ipanema" was acknowledged by multiple aspects of the 2016 Summer Olympics and Paralympics held in Rio de Janeiro: the Olympic and Paralympic mascots were respectively named Vinicius and Tom after the song's co-writers by a public vote, while the Olympics' opening ceremony featured a segment themed around the song and the architecture of Oscar Niemeyer. Jobim's grandson Daniel performed the song during the segment, which also featured an appearance by Brazilian supermodel Gisele Bündchen. Spotify reported that the song had been streamed on its service 40,000 times per-day in the days following the ceremony (a 1200% increase), while in the U.S., the song reached #5 on Billboard's World Digital Songs chart the following week.
$7.99
7.37 €
#
Trompette, Piano
#
Various
#
Keith Terrett
#
The Girl from Ipanema for Solo Trumpet & Piano
#
Music for all Occasions
#
SheetMusicPlus
© 2000 - 2024
Accueil
-
Nouveautés
-
Compositeurs
Mentions légales
-
Version intégrale