SKU: FG.042-13557-0
ISBN 979-0-042-13557-0.
SKU: BT.PWM5262030
ISBN 9788322420393.
SKU: M7.DOHR-90006
ISBN 9790202000069.
SKU: BT.PWM495030
ISBN 9788322417430.
SKU: VD.ED90006
ISBN 9790202000069. 11.69 x 8.26 inches.
SKU: HL.1335421
ISBN 9798350113891. UPC: 196288187721.
Commissioned by the Dayton Philharmonic Orchestra, Isaiah Jackson, Music Director, in celebration of its 60th Anniversary. This work has also been rewritten to function as the first movement of Ricardo Lorenz' KING MANGOBERRY: FIVE ALLEGORIES FOR WIND SYMPHONY, though this version remains unrevised to maintain its suitability as a stand-alone work.
SKU: CA.4012911
ISBN 9790007217693. Language: German/English.
Mendelssohn composed his first oratorio Paulus under the impression of his own revival of J. S. Bach's St. Matthew Passion in 1829. He integrated chorale settings into St. Paul, for which he was accused by his contemporaries of making a stylistic break, using an element unsuitable to church music. In spite of these reservations, during Mendelssohn's lifetime St. Paul was one of his most popular works, which received numerous performances throughout Europe. Robert Schuman praised the inextinguishable color of the instrumentation and the brilliant play with all the forms of composition. He described it as a jewel of the present.. Score and part available separately - see item CA.4012900.
SKU: CA.4012915
ISBN 9790007217730. Language: German/English.
SKU: BT.SY-2232
In this series European Guitar and Lute Music, seven albums will be published on original 16th to 18th century music. Each album will be devoted to music from one country. Choice of pieces for transcription for the guitar, selected from the vast amount of tablature available, has been made with consideration for their particular musical merit and for their suitability for the instrument in use today. In der Reihe Europa sche Gitarren- und Lautenmusik erscheinen originale Werke des 16. bis 18. Jahrhunderts in sieben nach Ländern geordneten Heften. Aus der Fülle überlieferter Gitarren- und Lautentabulaturen wurden solche Werke ausgewählt, die musikalisch wertvoll sind und sich ohne Schwierigkeit auf der heutigen Gitarre spielen lassen. Nella serie Musica europea per chitarra e liuto appaiono composizioni originali del 16°, 17° e 18° secolo raccolte in sette fascicoli ordinati secondo i paesi. Dalle numerose intavolature disponibili per chiatarra e liuto sono state scelte le opere musicalmente più valide e che si possono suonare senza difficolt sulle chitarre d'oggi.
SKU: HL.289843
UPC: 888680917234. 6.75x10.5 inches.
This adventure with Mary Poppins gets off to a suitably magical and delightful start with this bubbly bath-time number. Choirs will have a blast with the tongue-in-cheek text and exhilarating music!
SKU: CA.4012919
ISBN 9790007097158. Language: German/English.
Mendelssohn composed his first oratorio Paulus under the impression of his own revival of J. S. Bach's St. Matthew Passion in 1829. He integrated chorale settings into St. Paul, for which he was accused by his contemporaries of making a stylistic break, using an element unsuitable to church music. In spite of these reservations, during Mendelssohn's lifetime St. Paul was one of his most popular works, which received numerous performances throughout Europe. Robert Schuman praised the inextinguishable color of the instrumentation and the brilliant play with all the forms of composition. He described it as a jewel of the present.. Score and parts available separately - see item CA.4012900.
SKU: CF.W2687
ISBN 9781491150955. UPC: 680160908455. 9x12 inches.
This new edition of Jean Baptiste Arban's Fourteen Characteristic Studies for Trombone, edited by Alan Raph, was specifically written to provide the student with suitable material with which to test his powers of endurance, according to Arban himself.The following fourteen studies have been specifically written to provide the student withsuitable material with which to test his powers of endurance. In taking up these studies, he willdoubtless be fatigued, especially at the outset, by those numbers requiring an unusual length ofbreath. However, through careful study and experience he will learn to overcome the difficultiesand will acquire the resources which will enable him to master this particular phase of playingwith ease. As a means to this end, attention is drawn to cantabile passages in particular, whichshould be played with the utmost expression, yet at the same time with as much modified toneas possible. On the cornet, as with the voice, clear tones may be obtained by widening thelips and veiled tones by contracting them. This happy circumstance allows the performer anopportunity to rest while still continuing to play, and at the same time enables him to introduceeffective contrasts into the execution. It should be noted that by little artifices of this kind, andby skillfully conserving his resources, the player will reach the end of the longest and mostfatiguing pieces, not only without difficulty, but even with a reserve of strength and power,which, when brought to bear on the final measures of a performance, never fails to impress anaudience.At this point my task as professor (using the written instead of the spoken word) willend. There are things which appear clear enough when stated verbally but which when writtendown on paper cause confusion, seem obscure, and even sometimes appear trivial.There are other things of such an elevated and subtle nature that neither speech norword can clearly explain them. They are felt, they are conceived, but they are not to be explained;and yet these things constitute the elevated style, the grand ecole, which it is my ambition toestablish for the cornet, just as they already exist for singing and for the various kinds of otherinstruments.Those of my readers who are ambitious and who want to attain this high level ofperfection, should above all things, always try to hear good music well interpreted. Theymust seek out, among singers and instrumentalists, the most illustrious models, and by doingthis purify their taste, develop their sentiments, and bring themselves as near as possible tothat which is beautiful. Perhaps then the innate spark which may someday be destined todemonstrate their own talent, will reveal itself and render them worthy of being, in their turn,cited and imitated in the future.
SKU: HL.14043216
ISBN 9781783056200. English.
Michael Nyman's Musique A Grande Vitesse (MGV) translates as ‘high speed music’ and was commissioned by the Festival de Lille for the inauguration of the TGV North EuropeanParis-Lille line in 1993.
This piece of sheet music runs continuously, but was conceived as an abstract, imaginary journey; or rather five inter-connected journeys, each ending with a slow, mainly stepwise melody which isonly heard in its 'genuine' form when the piece reaches its destination.
Thematic 'transformation' is a key to MGV as a whole. Throughout the piece ideas - rhythmic, melodic, harmonic, motivic, textural -constantly change their identity as they pass through different musical 'environments'.
The opening bars establish both a recurrent rhythmic principle - 9, 11, or 13-beat rhythmic cycles heard against a regular 8 - and aharmonic process - chord sequences (mainly over C and E) which have the note E in common. (Coincidentally, MGV begins in C and ends in E). A later scalic, syncopated figure (again first heard over C, E and A)begins the second section, featuring Brass, in D flat.
The topography of MGV should be experienced without reference to planning, description or timetables. Its tempo changes and unpredictable slowings downbear no logical relation to the high speed of the Paris-Lille journey, while the temptation to treat MGV as a concerto grosso, with the Michael Nyman band as the ripeno, was resisted: more suitably theband (amplified in live performance) lays down the tracks on which MGV runs.
SKU: YM.GTP01096407
ISBN 9784636964073.
CD maching folio of their Under Super Best. 46 arrangements 1. Hidarimune no Yuuki; 2. Ohkamini Kuchibuewo; 3. Namida ga Mada Kanashimidatta Koro; 4. Haruno Melody; 5. Friday the 13th; 6. Senpuuki; 7. Hatsukoi no Hitowo Imademo; 8. Umareta Mamade; 9. Kokoni Iru Riyuu; 10. Anohi Bokuwa Tossani Uso wo Tsuita; 11. Kimiwa Bokuto Awanaihoga Yokattanokana; 12. Wakaregiwa Motto Sukininaru; 13. Shitto no Kenri; 14. Futo gou; 15. Secret graffity; 16. Buranko; 17. Fusen wa Ikiteiru; 18. Under; 19. My rule; 20. Jiyu no Kanata; 21. Yokubo no Reincarnation; 22. Kimiga Aoidekureta; 23. Jibun no Koto; 24. Unubore Beach; 25. Sono Onna; 26. Dare Yori Sobani Itai.
SKU: BR.EB-6705
ISBN 9790004169063. 9 x 12 inches. German.
Though a piano can always be included, it is not an essential requirement for the performance of these settings: in some of the carols, two violins or two flutes are quite sufficient, especially if voices are used as well. The following combinations are particularly suitable for domestic music-making, whether or not voices are included as well:one violin and piano,two violins and piano,two or three violins,violins and recorders,two concert (C) flutes (and an alto flute) and - as the ideal combination for shepherds' songs - flutes, violins, cello and piano.Performing groups and music schools have the advantage of a wider choice of forces and the possibility of varying the instrumentation within the individual carols and verses. Thus large and small combinations can alternate, strings and flutes can play in turn, and finally the piano can be used by itself or to reinforce other instrumental combinations, in which case the cello can be added, too.The pieces are graded in increasing order of difficulty; the first carols are chosen so that they can be mastered by violinists after as little as 4 to 6 months of learning their instrument. The choise and sequence of the carols in this book, and also their keys, were determined, amongst other factors, by their suitability for the start of violin tuition, both in first and in third position, so that these carols make an especially good supplement of Christmas music to the violin method of Fritz and Gottfried Scharlach (with its principle of starting with the third position). The progressively increasing difficulty of the carols has resulted, for example, in the three Advent carols (nos. 23-25) being placed later in the collection.The editor hopes that these carols will be much played and sung, and thus help to fill the Christmas season with joy and splendour.Fritz Scharlach, Salzburg, December 1972Our beautiful Christmas carols, old and new, are presented here in settings, ranging from the easy to the more difficult, for various combinations of voices and instruments that may be available in domestic music-making or for a Christmas concert.
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