SKU: SP.TS171
ISBN 9781585604531. UPC: 649571101718.
Music has always been an integral part of the holiday season. As everyone knows, there is no better way to celebrate than with a song. Re-live your childhood memories and share your love of music this holiday season with Santa's Little Helper published by Santorella Publications. Santa's Little Helper for Trumpet is written as solos or duets in accommodating keys for Flute, Clarinet, Alto Sax or Trombone. This complete collection of Christmas songs from Santorella Publications includes an accompaniment CD and lyrics for the whole family to enjoy. The Piano Accompaniment book for Brass and Reed instruments is sold separately. Santorella's String Edition is also available for violin, viola, cello and bass. Angels We Have Heard on High - Away in a Manger - Birthday of a King - Deck the Halls - God Rest Ye, Merry Gentlemen - Good King Wenceslas - Hark! The Herald Angels Sing - I Saw Three Ships - It Came Upon a Midnight Clear - Jingle Bells - Jolly Old Saint Nicholas - Joy to the World - O Christmas Tree - O Come All Ye Faithful - O, Holy Night - O Little Town of Bethlehem - Silent Night - We Wish You A Merry Christmas - Good Christian Men Rejoice - I Heard The Bells On Christmas Day - We Three Kings Of Orient Are - Star Of The East - The First Noel - Here We Come Awassailing.
SKU: AP.IF9528
ISBN 9780897246835. UPC: 029156158038. English. E. Y. Harburg.
Here are the top ten tunes from one of the most memorable movies of all time. The titles are: Ding-Dong! The Witch Is Dead * If I Only Had a Brain * If I Were King of the Forest * Lullaby League and Lollypop Guild * The Merry Old Land of Oz * Munchkinland * Optimistic Voices * Over the Rainbow * We're Off to See the Wizard.
SKU: AP.1-ADV1108
UPC: 805095011081. English.
Solo transcriptions can be an interesting document of a person's style, but are also so personal and idiosyncratic that one can get frustrated in trying to play them without mistakes. 20 Melodic Jazz Studies for Trumpet contains a series of studies to extend the playing and reading techniques, to illustrate harmonic and melodic shapes and possibilities, bolster endurance, and most of all---train the ear to hear moving and often intricate melodic lines in a musical sense. These pieces are structured in a way that challenges the registers of the instrument, but also allows the student to learn how to pace him/herself. The shapes of the line will naturally show the practitioner where and how he/she can rest while still playing. The studies could serve as tutti passage or solis for brass and/or saxophones.
SKU: CY.CC2881
5-Minute Lessons for Trumpet Method by David Brubeck is comprised of 12 progressive lessons for beginners, featuring fun but simple melodies. The lessons concentrate on: a) getting a steady stream of air going, b) good posture and relaxation of the body c) working with the teacher, d) scales and some of their modes, e) articulation, f) learning about rest, g) rhythm, h) duple and triple meters, i) fun songs to play, j) slurring and legatoPresented in a handsome coil-bound booklet, this method book is an excellent way to introduce a beginning young performer to the artistry of learning the Trumpet.Mr. Brubeck composes some of his own songs as well as using more familiar traditional melodies.
SKU: CF.W2686
ISBN 9781491150948. UPC: 680160908448. 9x12 inches.
This new edition of Jean Baptiste Arban's Fourteen Characteristic Studies for Trumpet in Bb, edited by Thomas Hooten and Jennifer Marotta, 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) will end.There are things which appear clear enough when stated verbally but which when written downon paper cause confusion, seem obscure, and even sometimes appear trivial.There are other things of such an elevated and subtle nature that neither speech nor wordcan 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 of perfection,should above all things, always try to hear good music well interpreted. They must seek out,among singers and instrumentalists, the most illustrious models, and by doing this purifytheir taste, develop their sentiments, and bring themselves as near as possible to that which isbeautiful. Perhaps then the innate spark which may someday be destined to demonstrate theirown talent, will reveal itself and render them worthy of being, in their turn, cited and imitatedin the future.
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