| O Shenandoah! Cello, Piano Faber Music Limited
(And Other Songs from the New World). By Polly Waterfield. For Cello and Piano. ...(+)
(And Other Songs from the New World). By Polly Waterfield. For Cello and Piano. Book; Solo; String - Cello Studies or Collection. Faber Edition. Folk. Elementary. 24 pages. Published by Faber Music
$11.99 - See more - Buy onlinePre-shipment lead time: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Cantica Cello, Piano Music Sales
Cello and Piano SKU: HL.14006097 Composed by Per Norgard. Music Sales Ame...(+)
Cello and Piano SKU: HL.14006097 Composed by Per Norgard. Music Sales America. Classical. Book and Part(s). Music Sales #KP00873. Published by Music Sales (HL.14006097). ISBN 9788759872222. Danish. Programme Note CANTICA for cello and piano (1977)When in 1975 I had finished composing my Symphony no. 3 (begun in 1973), I wrote three simple melodies for two psalm texts by Ole Sarvig: The Year and Choral Hymn. These three tunes were derived from the same material as the second movement of the symphony and could be harmonized together in several different tempo relationships, like proportional canons. For this reason they inspired me to write several choral and instrumental works in the following decade: Frost Psalm, Winter Cantata, the tuba octet Now all the earth is white with snow, Canticles (and others).Cantica, meaning song or singing, was composed (forthe Danish musicians Hans Erik Dechert og Kjeld Hansen) as a instrumental little brother the long, polyphonic choral pieces. As in these the canonical melodies in Cantica drift from foreground to background, from cello to piano. The melodies are simple, diatonic and in traditional rhythms and the surface of the music in a way traditional. The intention of the composer with this easily understood expression is to lead the listeners ears to the many internal, proportional developments. The story is in a way hidden between the lines. In the myriads of rhythmic and tempo relations the Golden Mean (near to 2:3:5:8: et cetera) plays an important role, like in nature. Among the experiences giving by this natural phenomenon are - perhaps - the musical points to be found (?).Per Norgard(1997). $16.50 - See more - Buy onlinePre-shipment lead time: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Beneath The Starry Sky Cello, Piano EMB (Editio Musica Budapest)
Score and Parts Bassoon; Cello; Piano Accompaniment (Score & Parts) SKU: HL.5...(+)
Score and Parts Bassoon; Cello; Piano Accompaniment (Score & Parts) SKU: HL.50606503 For Basoon, Cello, and Piano (or 2 Cellos and Piano) Score and Pa. Composed by Máté Bella. EMB. Classical, Contemporary. Softcover. 16 pages. Editio Musica Budapest #Z15196. Published by Editio Musica Budapest (HL.50606503). ISBN 9781705190661. UPC: 196288126799. A special piece - a special story: In 2020, a renowned architect approached a composer to create a new piece of music for his daughter's wedding, which the happy father could give to the young couple as a wedding present. In earlier eras of private patronage, such a story would have been natural, but in the 21st century it is an odd story. The composition subtly alludes to the occasion: against the background of the piano, a duet of two instruments tells the story of a serene love (the piece can either be performed with a bassoon and a violoncello, or with two violoncellos). Mate Bella, who moves at home among different musical styles, shapes the song of lovers longing for each other in a way reminiscent of barcarolas sung by Venetian gondoliers. $16.95 - See more - Buy online | | |
| Moeran: Sonata For Cello & Piano Cello, Piano Music Sales
Cello and Piano SKU: HL.14030693 Composed by Ernest John Moeran. Music Sa...(+)
Cello and Piano SKU: HL.14030693 Composed by Ernest John Moeran. Music Sales America. Post-1900. Book [Softcover]. Music Sales #NOV120092. Published by Music Sales (HL.14030693). 8.25x11.75x0.466 inches. In the second half of his life, Moeran greatly extended his sensibilities and his musical palate to include more energetic and vigorous rhythms, harmonic colours and tonalities. In the Sonata for ViolonCello and Piano, the listener will find grandeur in the first movement and an intricate rondo in the finale. It is a piece by a composer who has taken an expansive step beyond his immediate surroundings and first influences.E J Moeran was a 20th century British composer of Anglo-Irish background who spent his early years in Norfolk and influences of folksong and programmatic elements can be easily heard in this composer's main body of work. Moeran tended toward thesmaller ensembles in his compositions, which gave an appropriate frame for his lyric gifts. $21.00 - See more - Buy onlinePre-shipment lead time: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Franz Liszt - Csardas Obstinee Cello, Piano EMB (Editio Musica Budapest)
Cello; Piano Accompaniment SKU: HL.50512037 Cello and Piano. Compo...(+)
Cello; Piano Accompaniment SKU: HL.50512037 Cello and Piano. Composed by Franz Liszt. Edited by Csiky Boldizsar. Arranged by Csí, ky Boldizsá, and r. Romantic. EMB. Classical. Softcover. 14 pages. Editio Musica Budapest #Z14779. Published by Editio Musica Budapest (HL.50512037). ISBN 9790080147795. UPC: 884088668723. 9.0x12.0x0.079 inches. Ferenc Liszt; Boldizsar Csiky. The arranger of this work (a well-known Hungarian composer living in Romania) writes: +This piece has always excited my imagination, from several points of view. First of all, its name. The German title, the obstinate one, may refer to its ostinato character. This is close to Liszt's programme concept, but the French word 'obstine' is closer in meaning to stubborn. There is just a shade of difference, but to me it is important, because the latter suggests the description of a type of behaviour, the emotional state of a dancer's inner frame of mind abstracted into movements, expressed in dance movements, and this is a fascinating interpretation. The demonstration of stubborn resistance and defiance to the point of exhaustion was not a frequently occurring phenomenon with Liszt. Secondly, at the beginning of the seventies Zoltan Kocsis played the piece in Transylvania. At that time, I asked the composer, +Is the character of the continuous staccato in the left hand sharp, short, or an accompanying background like a constant shadow? Is it a weighty Brahmsian staccato, an ominous knocking? - and so on. Then there are the Bartokian false relations that keep recurring in the work, the B-E flat-G, etc. That foreshadows Debussy, creating harmonic thrills that, when I hear the work, keep my continuing interest alive for it. Finally, my immediate reason for arranging the work was of a family nature: in connection with Liszt's jubilee year, my daughter, who is a cellist, wanted a 'more energetic' piece to play at a bicentenary concert an addition to the existing slow, lyrical, or sombre works written by Liszt for the cello.+. $27.45 - See more - Buy onlinePre-shipment lead time: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Csardas obstinee Cello, Piano EMB (Editio Musica Budapest)
Cello and Piano SKU: BT.EMBZ14779 Composed by Franz Liszt. Book Only. Com...(+)
Cello and Piano SKU: BT.EMBZ14779 Composed by Franz Liszt. Book Only. Composed 2011. 16 pages. Editio Musica Budapest #EMBZ14779. Published by Editio Musica Budapest (BT.EMBZ14779). The arranger of this work (a well-known Hungarian composer living in Romania) writes: This piece has always excited my imagination, from several points of view. First of all, its name. The German title, the obstinate one, may refer to its ostinato character. This is close to Liszt's programme concept, but the French word 'obstiné' is closer in meaning to stubborn. There is just a shade of difference, but to me it is important, because the latter suggests the description of a type of behaviour, the emotional state of a dancer's inner frame of mind abstracted into movements, expressed in dance movements, and this is a fascinating interpretation. The demonstration ofstubborn resistance and defiance to the point of exhaustion was not a frequently occurring phenomenon with Liszt. Secondly, at the beginning of the seventies Zoltán Kocsis played the piece in Transylvania. At that time, I asked the composer, Is the character of the continuous staccato in the left hand sharp, short, or an accompanying background like a constant shadow? Is it a weighty Brahmsian staccato, an ominous knocking? - and so on. Then there are the Bartókian false relations that keep recurring in the work, the B-E flat-G, etc. That foreshadows Debussy, creating harmonic thrills that, when I hear the work, keep my continuing interest alive for it. Finally, my immediate reason for arranging the work was of a family nature: in connection with Liszt's jubilee year, my daughter, who is a cellist, wanted a 'more energetic' piece to play at a bicentenary concert an addition to the existing slow, lyrical, or sombre works written by Liszt for the cello.
The arranger of this work, the well-known Romania-based Hungarian composer Cs ky Boldizsár writes: This piece has always excited my imagination, from several points of view. First of all, its name. The German title, the obstinateone, may refer to its ostinato character, this is close to Liszt's programme concept, but the French word 'obstiné' is closer in meaning to stubborn. There is just a shade of difference, but to me it is important, because the lattersuggests the description of a type of behaviour, the emotional state of a dancer's inner frame of mind abstracted into movements, expressed in dance movements, and this is a fascinating interpretation. The demonstration of stubbornresistance , defiance to the point of exhaustion, was not a frequently occurring phenomenon with Liszt. Secondly, at the beginning of the seventies Zoltán Kocsis played the piece here in Transylvania (Romania).
Der Bearbeiter des Werkes, der renommierte ungarische Komponist aus Rumänien, schreibt: Dieses Stück reizte immer schon meine Phantasie, sogar in vielerlei Hinsicht. Als erstes sein Name. Der deutsche Titel ‚Hartnäckiger' kann auf den ihm innewohnenden ostinativen Charakter hinweisen, was der Liszt'schen Programm-Konzeption näher kommt, das französische ,obstiné' steht jedoch eher dem Wort ‚dickköpfig' nah. Das sind nur geringfügige Unterschiede, mir ist das dennoch wichtig, weil aus Letzterem die Darstellung eines Verhaltens, der in Tanzgesten ausgedrückte, zur Bewegung abstrahierte innere emotionale Zustand eines Tänzers durchscheint, und das ist eine überaus beeindruckendeErklärung. Die Demonstration des bis zur Erschöpfung reichenden Trotzes, der störrischen Kraft erscheint bei Liszt selten. Der zweite Aspekt: Zu Beginn der 70er Jahre spielte bei uns Zoltán Kocsis das Stück. Schon damals (und seitdem) frage ich den Komponisten:. $18.95 - See more - Buy onlinePre-shipment lead time: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
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