SKU: FZ.6392
ISBN 9790049063920. 24.00 x 33.00 cm inches.
These early music methods are in facsimile in four books. Francesco GEMINIANI - Giuseppe TARTINI - F. A. W. ANONYME - Johann Adam HILLER - Ignaz SCHWEIGL (2) - George Simon LoHLEIN. Table of contents: Geminiani Francesco: Grundliche Anleitung oder Violin Schule 1782. Tartini Giuseppe: Brief des Joseph Tartini an Magdalena Lombardini 1786. Anonyme: Anmerkungen uber die Violin und den Violinspieler 1788. Hiller Johann Adam: Anweisung zum Violinspielen, fur Schulen, und zum Selbstunterrichte c. 1792. Schweigl Ignaz: Grundlehre der Violin. Erster Theil 1794. Schweigl Ignaz: Grundlehre der Violin. Zweiter Theil 1795. Lohlein George Simon: George Simon Lohlein's Anweisung zum Violinspielen (. . . ) mit Verbesserungen und Zusatzen - 1797. Collection supervised by the musicologist Jean Saint-Arroman, professor at the Conservatoire National Superieur de Musique et de Danse of Paris and at the CEFEDEM Ile de France (Training Centre for Music Teachers). He is the author of the majority of our prefaces and has also been involved in library searches. Facsimile of copies from: - British Library of London (England). - Royal Library of Brussels (Belgium). - Bayerische Staatsbibliothek of Munich (Germany). Anne Fuzeau Classique propose the complete theoretic documentation, methods, classical music scores on the violin.
SKU: PR.114422260
ISBN 9781491133866. UPC: 680160683352. 9 x 12 inches.
Legends of the phoenix are found in stories from ancient Egypt and Greece. While each culture possesses a range of stories encompassing the myth, these tales tend toward similar traits: a sacred bird with brilliantly colored plumage and melodious call lives for typically 500 years, then dies in a nest of embers, only to be reborn among the flames. Phoenix Rising consists of two movements: I. Dying in Embers represents an old phoenix settling on top of a pile of embers and breathing its last breath; II. Reborn in Flames depicts the newly-born phoenix getting its first taste of flight.Legends of the phoenix are found in stories from ancient Egypt and Greece. While each culture possesses a range of stories encompassing the phoenix myth, these tales tend to share similar traits: a sacred bird with brilliantly colored plumage and melodious call lives for typically five hundred years; then the bird dies in a nest of embers, only to be reborn among the flames.In Egyptian stories, the phoenix gathers scented wood and spices for its funeral/rebirth pyre, then collects the ashes from its earlier incarnation and flies them to the temple of the sun in Heliopolis to offer as a tribute to the sun god.In Greek myths, the phoenix was approximately the size of an eagle and was adorned with red and gold feathers; it would fly from either India or Arabia to Heliopolis to give its offering. The bird’s association with immortality and resurrection are particularly intriguing aspects of these tales, giving numerous writers (including William Shakespeare, C.S. Lewis, and J.K. Rowling) a rich resource for their own stories.Phoenix Rising consists of two movements. I. Dying in embers represents an old phoenixwho is settling on top of a pile of embers and breathing its last breath. II. Reborn in flames depicts the newly-born phoenix getting its first taste of flight.Phoenix Rising was commissioned by saxophonist Christopher Creviston, who has recorded the work on the Blue Griffin label. The composer has also made editions of the work for flute and for clarinet (also available from Theodore Presser Company).
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