SKU: SU.50011740
Published by: Seesaw Music.
SKU: SU.28090100
Cloud Metamorphosis is a textural piece in a sequence of four continuous sections drawn from separate cloud formation types. Unique motifs establish each section of the piece which is scored for Clarinet Sextet: Eb, 3 Bb, Bass, and Contra Alto Clarinets (alternate version with two Bass). Each musical texture is developed in a musical, rather than, programmatic way.Set includes alternate Bass Clarinet part for Contra Alto ClarinetClarinet Sextet (Eb, 3 Bb, Bcl, Contra-alto) Duration: 9' Composed: 2018 Published by: James Marshall.
SKU: AY.CC3168PM
ISBN 9790543577480.
This Canzon was originally included as part of the collection Canzoni per sonare con ogni sorte di stromenti, a volume of 36 canzoni by 13 different composers, first published in 1608. The publisher, Alessandro Raverii, was based in Venice, and though he only printed music between 1606 and 1609, more than 50 of his volumes have survived until today. This Canzon à 16 for four SATB choirs, has been arranged here for clarinet choir by Matt Johnston. It can be performed as a clarinet choir or as a quadruple clarinet quartet.
SKU: P2.30083
Beethoven's Sextet for Two Horns and String Quartet, Op. 81b is a bit of an oddity in the composer's catalog. The sextet for the very old-fashioned instrumentation of two horns, two violins, viola and cello, is especially rare. The work seems to have been written around 1795, in the period when Beethoven was beginning to make his way in Viennese society as a composer and keyboard virtuoso after a period of study with Haydn. The work has the light-hearted, easy-going tone of the serenade/divertimento tradition, although the way that Beethoven writes for the horns makes the Sextet unusual. In this work, the horns are featured, with brilliant fanfares and technically challenging passages, while the four strings are relegated to a subsidiary role. In this arrangement, the Eb clarinet and a solo Bb clarinet play the role of the horns, while the rest of the choir assume the position of the string parts.
SKU: P2.30029
Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750) wrote the cantata Nun Komm, der Heiden Heiland BWV 62 based on the chorale by Martin Luther of the same name. Its first performance was in Leipzig in 1724. This arrangement is the first movement of the six-movement work, which was originally scored for chorus and orchestra. The inspiration for arranging this work was the pure desire to play Bach in a group that could otherwise not. In using four Bb clarinets, three A clarinets, and two Bb bass clarinets, I hoped to achieve a diversity of timbre like that of the original instrumentation.
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