Partita No. 2 Piccolo [Conducteur] Theodore Presser Co.
Chamber Music Piccolo SKU: PR.114422450 Composed by Johann Sebastian Bach...(+)
Chamber Music Piccolo
SKU: PR.114422450
Composed by Johann
Sebastian Bach. Arranged
by Nicola Mazzanti. Sws.
Full score. 20 pages.
Duration 17 minutes.
Theodore Presser Company
#114-42245. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.114422450).
ISBN
9781491134986. UPC:
680160685974. 9 x 12
inches.
Bachâs
colossal Partita No. 2
for Solo Violin has been
crowned by many masters
as one of musicâs
greatest achievements,
and even its famous
Chaconne movement alone
is a mountain many
performers dare not
scale. While the
literature of several
other instruments has
been enriched by
transcriptions of the
Chaconne, Mazzantiâs
heroic adaptation of the
complete Partita is the
culmination of many
yearsâ work, and the
only transcription
specifically for the
piccoloâs unique
range. THE
INSPIRATIONEver since my
childhood, Johann
Sebastian Bachâs
solo violin music (like
his works for solo cello)
has always held a charm
and mystery for me.
Thereâs something
about this repertoire
that sparks an
inextinguishable
questioning in my musical
and human soul.It is
music without spatial
limits or temporal cages,
a music as essential as
it is masterfully
complex, in which the
solitary voice of man
meets the
all-encompassing voice of
God. It is a music whose
vertical and horizontal
dimensions, already
admirably fused, are
faceted into new and
mysterious realities. For
every violinist, the
study of these
compositions is at the
apex of tenacious
technical study and
interpretative
effort.Violinist Joshua
Bell has said the
Ciaccona (Bach did write
the Partitaâs
movement titles in
Italian) is ânot
just one of the greatest
pieces of music ever
written, but one of the
greatest achievements of
any man in history.
Itâs a spiritually
powerful piece,
emotionally powerful,
structurally
perfect.âTranscribin
g and performing
Bachâs PARTITA NO.
2, BWV 1004 on piccolo
was a feat that took
years of work. The famous
Ciaccona movement is, of
course, the piece that
alone occupied most of
this time. How does one
honor and elevate such
high music with such a
âsmallâ
instrument, devoid of the
enormous expressive
potential of the violin,
devoid of its chords and
its polyphony? How might
I transform the piccolo
into an instrument with,
like the violin,
full-bodied low notes and
subtle high notes? Above
all, why undertake such a
demanding and
extraordinary journey?The
first reason is obvious:
by transcribing,
studying, and performing
such an admirable piece,
we assimilate it, it
becomes part of us, it
enormously enriches our
musical interior.In
addition, it forces us
technically to expand the
colors, agility, and
flexibility of the
instrument; it makes us
think in a polyphonic
way.Finally, the daily
study, especially of the
Ciaccona, is an
extraordinary gymnasium
in which to consolidate
and strengthen our
general technique.THE
TRANSCRIPTIONThe whole
Partita was transcribed
in the key of A minor, a
fifth above the original
in D minor. This was
necessary for the lowest
note of the violin (G) to
correspond to the lowest
note of the piccolo (D).
This version exploits the
full range of the
piccolo, from the D of
the first octave to the B
of the third octave.
However some octave
adjustments were
needed.The chords,
particularly in the
Sarabanda and the
Ciaccona, have been left
with the same notational
system used by Bach in
his version for violin. I
chose to respect
Bachâs presentation
and did not transcribe
these into grace notes
breaking the chords. I
advocate that we must at
least try to think of
this music in its
vertical dimension,
trying to make the notes
resonate as if they were
being played together,
deciding the speed of the
arpeggio based on musical
needs.While some woodwind
editions of Bachâs
string solos do indicate
broken chords as grace
notes, this implies that
the most important note
is necessarily the
highest one, while
sometimes it is precisely
in the lower pitches that
the theme is voiced.In
this piccolo adaptation,
many of Bachâs
original articulations
have been respected. Some
have been changed, when
needing to adapt them to
the specific needs of
flute playing.The two
passages in the Ciaccona
where Bach indicates
âarpeggioâ were
rendered trying to
respect the most
consolidated and virtuous
violin traditions, and at
the same time the
possibilities that the
piccolo offers us. For
this purpose, in some
cases, different
revoicings of the chords
have been used.I thank
all those who patiently
listened to me and were
close to me during this
period, for their
observations and advice.
In particular, I thank my
daughter Sara for her
assistance and skill in
entering this edition
into music writing
software.
Chamber Music String Quartet SKU: PR.144404550 Composed by Sydney F. Hodk...(+)
Chamber Music String
Quartet
SKU:
PR.144404550
Composed
by Sydney F. Hodkinson.
Set of Score and Parts.
With Standard notation.
Composed 2002.
53+20+16+16+16 pages.
Duration 22 minutes.
Theodore Presser Company
#144-40455. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.144404550).
UPC:
680160030859.
After
finishing a serious
woodwind quintet in the
fall of 2001 [Tela
Lacerata], I found, in
the ensuing months, that
its cinders/ashes were
still impregnating my
eardrums. Therefore, when
I set out to write the
present string piece, I
realized that the musical
veins of the quartet,
like related cousins,
were sharing the same
blood as the earlier wind
composition. The
resultant Fifth Quartet
evolved into two large,
extended movements, each
one containing seven
parts that are played
without pause. As the
list of the various
sub-sections clearly
indicates, the formal
structure of the
movements appear to be
identical: each with
three main parts
enveloped by interludes,
plus an introduction and
coda. However, the
principal segments of the
first (slow) movement
gradually decrease in
length, while those of
the second (fast)
movement increase. In
addition, there is a
goodly amount of sonic
material stolen from the
first movement which
reappears -- stitched
together in a new guise
-- into the world of the
second. for example, the
bulk of Parts B and C of
Movement II are lifted
bodily, although
elaborately modified,
from their first
appearances in the
Introduction and Part A
of the fist movement.
This offers, I suppose at
least a hint of a
traditional
recapitulation. As was
true in the earlier
woodwind piece -- both
harmonically and
melodically -- the
embryonic growth of the
musical fabric (primarily
the tritone and perfect
fifth) is omnipresent,
almost obsessively,
throughout the course of
the whole work. These two
intervals, not unlike
plasticine, habitually
transform themselves into
the scales, chords, and
melodic lines that
pervade the texture of
the quartet. Owing to the
largely unrelieved
dramatic flow, the
shifting speed, and the
often fervent intensity,
the quartet places
considerable demands on
the dexterity,
virtuosity, and stamina
of the four performers.
String Quartet No. 5 is
approximately 22 minutes
in duration and
affectionately dedicated
to my violinist wife
Elizabeth, as a gift for
our 47 years together. It
was commissioned by the
Corigliano String
Quartet, New York, NY. --
Sydney Hodkinson.
Chamber Music String Quartet SKU: PR.14440455S Composed by Sydney F. Hodk...(+)
Chamber Music String
Quartet
SKU:
PR.14440455S
Composed
by Sydney F. Hodkinson.
Large Score. With
Standard notation. 53
pages. Duration 22
minutes. Theodore Presser
Company #144-40455S.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.14440455S).
UPC:
680160030873.
After
finishing a serious
woodwind quintet in the
fall of 2001 [Tela
Lacerata], I found, in
the ensuing months, that
its cinders/ashes were
still impregnating my
eardrums. Therefore, when
I set out to write the
present string piece, I
realized that the musical
veins of the quartet,
like related cousins,
were sharing the same
blood as the earlier wind
composition. The
resultant Fifth Quartet
evolved into two large,
extended movements, each
one containing seven
parts that are played
without pause. As the
list of the various
sub-sections clearly
indicates, the formal
structure of the
movements appear to be
identical: each with
three main parts
enveloped by interludes,
plus an introduction and
coda. However, the
principal segments of the
first (slow) movement
gradually decrease in
length, while those of
the second (fast)
movement increase. In
addition, there is a
goodly amount of sonic
material stolen from the
first movement which
reappears -- stitched
together in a new guise
-- into the world of the
second. for example, the
bulk of Parts B and C of
Movement II are lifted
bodily, although
elaborately modified,
from their first
appearances in the
Introduction and Part A
of the fist movement.
This offers, I suppose at
least a hint of a
traditional
recapitulation. As was
true in the earlier
woodwind piece -- both
harmonically and
melodically -- the
embryonic growth of the
musical fabric (primarily
the tritone and perfect
fifth) is omnipresent,
almost obsessively,
throughout the course of
the whole work. These two
intervals, not unlike
plasticine, habitually
transform themselves into
the scales, chords, and
melodic lines that
pervade the texture of
the quartet. Owing to the
largely unrelieved
dramatic flow, the
shifting speed, and the
often fervent intensity,
the quartet places
considerable demands on
the dexterity,
virtuosity, and stamina
of the four performers.
String Quartet No. 5 is
approximately 22 minutes
in duration and
affectionately dedicated
to my violinist wife
Elizabeth, as a gift for
our 47 years together. It
was commissioned by the
Corigliano String
Quartet, New York, NY. --
Sydney Hodkinson.
For Piano. Contains a newly engraved, complete music score, printed on high-qual...(+)
For Piano. Contains a
newly engraved, complete
music score, printed on
high-quality ivory paper;
and a digital stereo
compact disc containing a
complete reference
version of the quartet,
then a recording of the
accompaniments minus you,
the soloist!. Published
by Music Minus One.
Chamber Music Clarinet,
Viola, Violin 1, Violin
2, Violoncello
SKU:
PR.114417500
For
Clarinet And String
Quartet. Composed by
Shulamit Ran. Premiered
by Anthony McGill,
clarinet, and Brentano
String Quartet; Kimmel
Center, Philadelphia, PA.
Contemporary. Set of
Score and Parts. With
Standard notation.
Composed 2016.
32+12+12+12+12+12 pages.
Duration 16 minutes.
Theodore Presser Company
#114-41750. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.114417500).
UPC:
680160634910. 9.5 x 13
inches.
Stream for
Clarinet and String
Quartet (2015) was
commissioned by the
Philadelphia Chamber
Music Society in
celebration of its 30th
Anniversary Season,
through support of The
William Penn Foundation.
The first performance was
in April 2016 at the
Kimmel Center in
Philadelphia. Notes from
the composer: The 'line'
in Stream is often
threaded together into a
chain made up of separate
'points' played by the
strings, and sometimes by
the string and the
clarinet. An analogy
might be that each
instrument, at times,
produces a single 'ray of
light' from within the
larger light source.
Moreover, there are many
passages where the
intended effect is that
of the strings providing
a 'halo' surrounding the
solo clarinet. Similarly,
the clarinet often
dovetails with, as well
as emerges or submerges
in and out of, a strand
in the string
music.. What's in a
name? Â Â In my
titles, I generally aim
to capture something that
I believe to be essential
about the particular
work. Â At some level
this is to offer an
entry-point for the
listener, a glimpse of
the composition in its
totality. Â STREAM as a
title came to be when
much of the music was
already fully composed,
and it encapsulates much
of what I wish to say in
words about this work: it
suggests flow - whether
gentle or forceful; it
implies a journey, one
that could take us onto
unexpected terrains yet
is always moving forward;
embedded into this word
is also the idea of
stream of consciousness,
and with it, free
association and
unexpected twists of
fancy. Approximately
16 minutes in duration,
STREAM is to be played
without a break, yet
there are strong elements
of a three-movement
structure here. An
expository
quasi-first-movement lays
out important materials
of varying character; the
middle part, suggesting
contrast and repose, is
initially slow and
reflective, but then
embarks on new
explorations of the
notion of stasis, while
the final movement is
dominated by fast-moving
music of high energy that
consolidates the previous
materials. Important
throughout is the way in
which seemingly
transitional stretches of
music emerge and propel
the music onward in ways
that are at once
unexpected and
fantastical. A
composer's statement
about this work would not
be complete without
acknowledging the degree
to which the work was
inspired by the awareness
that it was being created
for a quintet of
extraordinary performers
of the most beautiful and
flowing musicianship -
clarinet virtuoso Anthony
McGill and the intrepid
Brentano
Quartet. Shulamit
Ran .
String Quartet (fem vce - str quar - electronics (tape) and projection of lyrics...(+)
String Quartet (fem vce -
str quar - electronics
(tape) and projection of
lyrics ad lib.)
SKU:
BR.KM-2483-07
Holderlin lesen
IV. Composed by Hans
Zender. Chamber music;
stapled.
Kammermusik-Bibliothek
(Chamber Music Library).
Music post-1945; New
music (post-2000). Study
Score. Composed 2000. 56
pages. Duration 40'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #KM
2483-07. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.KM-2483-07).
ISBN
9790004502587. 9 x 12
inches.
Friedrich
HolderlinMnemosyne Ein
Zeichen sind wir,
deutungslos,Schmerzlos
sind wir und haben
fastDie Sprache in der
Fremde verloren.Wenn
namlich uber MenschenEin
Streit ist an dem Himmel
und gewaltigDie Monde
gehn, so redetDas Meer
auch und Strome mussenDen
Pfad sich suchen.
ZweifellosIst aber Einer,
derKann taglich es
andern. Kaum bedarf
erGesetz. Und es tonet
das Blatt und Eichbaume
wehn dann nebenDen
Firnen. Denn nicht
vermogenDie Himmlischen
alles. Namlich es
reichenDie Sterblichen eh
an den Abgrund. Also
wendet es sich, das
Echo,Mit diesen. Lang
istDie Zeit, es ereignet
sich aberDas Wahre. Wie
aber Liebes?
SonnenscheinAm Boden
sehen wir und trockenen
StaubUnd heimatlich die
Schatten der Walder und
es bluhetAn Dachern der
Rauch, bei alter KroneDer
Turme, friedsam; gut sind
namlich,Hat gegenredend
die SeeleEin Himmlisches
verwundet, die
Tageszeichen.Denn Schnee,
wie MaienblumenDas
Edelmutige, woEs seie,
bedeutend, glanzet aufDer
grunen WieseDer Alpen,
halftig, da, vom Kreuze
redend, dasGesetzt ist
unterwegs
einmalGestorbenen, auf
hoher StrassEin
Wandersmann geht
zornigFern ahnend mitDem
andern, aber was ist
dies?Am Feigenbaum ist
meinAchilles mir
gestorben,Und Ajax
liegtAn den Grotten der
See,An Bachen, benachbart
dem Skamandros.An
Schlafen Sausen einst,
nachDer unbewegten
Salamis steterGewohnheit,
in der Fremd, ist
grossAjax
gestorben,Patroklos aber
in des Koniges Harnisch.
Und es starbenNoch andere
viel. Am Kitharon aber
lagEleuthera, der
Mnemosyne Stadt. Der
auch, alsAblegte den
Mantel Gott, das
Abendliche nachher
losteDie Locken.
Himmlische namlich
sindUnwillig, wenn einer
nicht die Seele schonend
sichZusammengenommen,
aber er muss doch;
demGleich fehlet die
TrauerIn meinen Holderlin
lesen-Stucken ging es mir
darum, Wege zu finden,
die gewaltigen
Sprachstrukturen
Holderlins so in die
zeitliche Form der Musik
zu integrieren, dass sie
Funktionen der
musikalischen Form
ubernehmen, ohne in ihrer
Eigenkraft (sowohl
akustisch wie auch im
Sinne expressiver
,,Deutung) im geringsten
geschmalert zu werden.
Das hiess zunachst:
Sprechen, nicht singen! -
Aber das wurde nur
bedeuten, dass es nicht
um die Musikalisierung
von Text geht; ebenso
wichtig ist es, dass es
auch nicht um
melodramatisch
,,erzahlende Musik geht.
Sondern: Zwei autonome
Kunste durchdringen sich
auf diaphane Weise, ohne
sich zu uberformen oder
auszuloschen; es handelt
sich um einen Dialog,
nicht um eine
Vereinnahmung durch
Hierarchisierung.Sind wir
uns selbst zu einem
,,Zeichen...deutungslos
geworden, wie es
Holderlins Anfangszeilen
sagen, so erscheinen auch
die Zeichen, die wir
selber setzen, sich immer
mehr einer Deutbarkeit zu
entziehen. Mein Stuck,
das den vollstandigen
Text von Holderlins
Mnemosyne integriert,
stellt auf seine Weise
die Frage nach dem
,,Zeichen. ,,Was ist
dies? Klang? Wort?
Schrift? Wie sind die
Grenzen, die Ubergange,
die gegenseitigen
Beeinflussungen der
einzelnen
Zeichenregionen? Was
liegt ihnen zugrunde?
Worte und musikalische
Zeichen bewegen sich im
Medium der Zeit;
Schriftzeichen erscheinen
zunachst als
Verraumlichung, aber man
muss daran erinnern, dass
der Vorgang des
Schreibens - wie er in
der ostasiatischen
Kalligraphie zu hochster
Kunst entwickelt wurde -
auch zeitlichen Charakter
hat. Mnemosyne - die
Kraft des Sich-Erinnerns
- schafft die Zeichen,
indem sie Gestalten durch
Wiederholung fixiert und
so aus dem endlosen Fluss
der wahrgenommenen
Vorgange herauslost. Die
so entstehende
artikulierte Zeit schafft
wiederum durch das
Wechselspiel von
fixierten und sich
bewegenden Gestalten das
Bewusstsein fur
differenzierte
Formablaufe. Der
Formverlauf meines
Stuckes zeichnet solche
genetischen Prozesse
nach. Der Horer wird
schnell merken, dass die
Wortzeichen oft einer
zuerst erscheinenden
musikalischen Klangwelt
entspringen (ich stimme
Walter Benjamin zu, wenn
er sagt, dass die Sprache
in ihrer grundlegenden
Schicht expressiven - und
nicht darstellenden -
Charakter hat). Die
Schrift auf der Leinwand
folgt zunachst den
sprachlichen Aktionen der
Stimme, erhalt dann aber
auch eigene Teile der
Form zugeteilt, in der
sie sich als autonomes
Zeichen darstellt. In der
durch die drei Strophen
Holderlins
notwendigerweise
dreiteiligen Gesamtform
gibt es immer wieder
Abschnitte, in denen
entweder das musikalische
Geschehen oder die
Sprachzeichen des
Gedichtes oder das
Sich-Schreiben der
Schrift im Vordergrund
stehen; der Komponist
versteht sich also hier
auch als ,,Zusammensetzer
der in unserer
Wahrnehmung so
verschieden besetzten
Zeiten des Schreibens,
Sprechens und
Musikhorens. Es bilden
sich im Verlauf des
40-minutigen Stuckes auch
Grenzfalle, wie ,,stumme
Musik oder total
musikalisierte - ihrer
Verstehbarkeit beraubte -
Textrezitation. Auch das
Singen von Text - in
meinen bisherigen
Holderlinstucken strikt
vermieden - wird als
ausserste Moglichkeit
gegen Ende des formalen
Prozesses zugelassen. An
einigen Stellen zeigt die
Musik sozusagen direkt
auf sich selbst. Es sind
Formzustande, die ich in
meinem ,,Shir Hashirim
als ,,Koan bezeichnet
habe: ,,endlose
Wiederholungen einer
zeichenhaften
Konstellation, bei jeder
Wiederholung minimal
verandert - so wie ein
Kalligraph sein
Schriftzeichen bei jedem
Malvorgang unwillkurlich
verandert und neu
schafft. Steht im ersten
Teil der Grossform der
Aspekt des Abstrakten,
des Unsinnlichen im
Vordergrund, so wird im
zweiten Teil
Bildhaftigkeit als
Eigenschaft nicht nur der
Sprache, sondern auch der
Musik betont: die
Landschaft, halb schnee -
halb blutenbedeckt, die
der Wanderer ,,zornig
durchstreift. Am Ende
dieses Teils wird das
Schriftbild selber zur
Landschaft, die der
Leser/Horer durchwandert.
Er wird im dritten Teil
durch einen
Verwandlungsprozess zu
den ekstatischen
Ursprungen des
holderlinschen Dichtens
gefuhrt, und damit zur
explizit musikalischen
Ebene: Die Totenklage um
Hektor und Ajax wird zum
,,dithyrambischen Tanz,
wie es Holderlins
Schlusszeile entwirft:
,,... darum fehlet die
Trauer. Es bleibt noch
nachzutragen, dass ich
den in der Stuttgarter
Ausgabe der Werke
Holderlins in drei
Versionen abgedruckten
Text in einer
Mischversion verwendet
habe: die erste Strophe
aus der 2. Fassung, die
zweite mit Abweichungen
und Widerspruchen aus
allen drei Fassungen, und
die dritte Strophe aus
der 3. Fassung. (Hans
Zender) CD:Salome Kammer
(voice), Klangforum Wien,
cond. Hans ZenderKairos
0012522KAIBibliography:Al
lwardt, Ingrid:
Nach-Lese. Holderlins
Gesang im Resonanzraum
der Musik Hans Zenders,
in: Hans Zender.
Vielstimmig in sich,
hrsg. von Werner
Grunzweig, Jorn Peter
Hiekel und Anouk Jeschke
(= Archive zur Musik des
20. und 21. Jahrhunderts,
Band 12), Hofheim: Wolke
2008, pp. 43-60.Fuhrmann,
Wolfgang: Zender lesen.
Die Frage nach dem
Zeichen in ,,Mnemosyne,
in: ,,Ein Zeichen sind
wir, deutungslos.
Holderlin lesen, Ikkyu
Sojun horen, Musik
denken, hrsg. von
Violetta L. Waibel,
Gottingen: Wallstein
2020, S. 194-211Pragungen
im Pluralismus. Hans
Zender im Gesprach mit
Jorn Peter Hiekel, in:
Orientierungen. Wege im
Pluralismus der
Gegenwartsmusik, hrsg.
von Jorn Peter Hiekel (=
Veroffentlichungen des
Instituts fur Neue Musik
und Musikerziehung
Darmstadt, Band 47),
Mainz u. a.: Schott 2007,
pp. 130-137.Mosch,
Ulrich: Ultrachromatik
und Mikrotonalitat. Hans
Zenders Grundlegung einer
neuen Harmonik, in: Hans
Zender. Vielstimmig in
sich, hrsg. von Werner
Grunzweig, Jorn Peter
Hiekel und Anouk Jeschke
(= Archive zur Musik des
20. und 21. Jahrhunderts,
Band 12), Hofheim: Wolke
2008, pp. 61-76.Schmidt,
Dorte: Erfahrung und
Erinnerung.
Kompositorisches Material
zwischen Klang und
Bedeutung in der
Kammermusik des spaten
20. Jahrhunderts, in:
Mnemosyne. Zeit und
Gedachtnis in der
europaischen Musik des
ausgehenden 20.
Jahrhunderts, hrsg. von
Dorothea Redepenning und
Joachim Steinheuer,
Saarbrucken: Pfau 2006,
pp. 41-58.Zenck, Martin:
Holderlin lesen seiner
Stimme zuhoren.
Holderlin-Lekturen von
Klaus Michael Gruber,
Hans Zender und Bruno
Ganz, in: Neue
Zeitschrift fur Musik 172
(2011), Heft 6, pp.
25-29.Zender, Hans: Zu
meinem Zyklus Holderlin
lesen, in: Mnemosyne.
Zeit und Gedachtnis in
der europaischen Musik
des ausgehenden 20.
Jahrhunderts, hrsg. von
Dorothea Redepenning und
Joachim Steinheuer,
Saarbrucken: Pfau 2006,
pp. 26-40.
World
premiere: Witten
(Wittener Tage fur neue
Kammermusik), May 4,
2001.
Chamber Music Violin SKU: CF.BF150 30 Easy Level Arrangements for Any ...(+)
Chamber Music Violin
SKU: CF.BF150
30 Easy Level
Arrangements for Any
Combination of String
Instruments. Composed
by Benjamin Hanby,
Bernard de la Monnoye,
Felix Bartholdy
Mendelssohn, Franz Xaver
Gruber, French carol,
James Murray, James
Pierpont, John Henry
Hopkins, John Neale, John
Wade, John Wesley Work,
III, Lowell Mason,
Melchior Franck, Mykola
Leontovich, S. Goldfarb,
Spanish Carol, and etc.
Arranged by Kathryn
Griesinger. Collection -
Part. 28 pages. Carl
Fischer Music #BF150.
Published by Carl Fischer
Music (CF.BF150).
ISBN
9781491162101. UPC:
680160920846.
Learn
ing to play chamber music
is an important milestone
in the music
student’s journey.
Playing with a teacher or
friend helps develop
rhythmic independence,
intonation, listening
skills, and sense of
pulse that are vital to
playing in an ensemble.
These progressive duets
offer beginning and
developing players the
opportunity to play along
with others, or with the
helpful support of the
teacher in a lesson. Each
duet adds new techniques
and challenges that align
with the natural
advancement of lessons,
moving from easy rhythms
and keys to staccato bow
strokes, slurs,
accidentals (low or
extended finger
patterns), and more
complex or independent
rhythms. While the melody
remains in the top line,
musicians can alternate
playing the melody as all
efforts have been made to
keep both parts at a
similar difficulty level.
This book features
familiar melodies for the
holidays, including
sacred and secular
Christmas songs, music
for Hanukkah, and folk
tunes from many
countries. Appropriate
for caroling, recitals,
or chamber holiday
concerts, there are 30
festive selections of
different tempi, styles,
and keys for variety,
while remaining in
string-friendly ranges.
Each duet is one page or
less in length, ensuring
an immediate sense of
success for young
players. Put new skills
into practice while
celebrating the
season.
For Chamber
Orchestra. Composed
by Chen Yi. Premiered by
the Idyllwild Arts
Orchestra, Peter Askim,
conductor. Contemporary.
Full score. With Standard
notation. Composed 2012.
30 pages. Duration 8
minutes. Theodore Presser
Company #416-41439.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.416414390).
UPC:
680160606917. 8.5 x 11
inches.
2 Flutes, 2
Oboes, 2 Clarinets in Bb,
2 Bassoons, 2 Horns in F,
Percussion,
Strings. The work Tone
Poem is composed for
chamber orchestra, 2
flutes, 2 oboes, 2 B-flat
clarinets, 2 bassoons, 2
French horns, 1
percussion and strings.
The length is about 8
minutes. It is inspired
by two poems by Su
Dong-po (1036-1101) about
southern Chinese
landscape paintings. The
imagination of the two
beautiful ancient Chinese
poems became the sonic
landscape pictures, to
share with my musicians
and audience. The
brimming waves, the sunny
day, The dimming hills,
the rainy haze. The West
Lake as the Beauty Xizi,
Whether she is adorned
richly or plainly. Like
spilt ink dark clouds
spread o'er the hills as
a pall; Like bouncing
pearls the raindrops in
the boat run riot. A
sudden rolling gale comes
and dispels them all,
Below Lake View Pavilion
sky-mirrored water's
quiet. The work Tone
Poem is composed for
chamber orchestra, 2
flutes, 2oboes, 2 B-flat
clarinets, 2 bassoons, 2
French horns, 1
percussion andstrings.
The length is about 8
minutes. It is inspired
by two poems by SuDong-po
(1036-1101) about
southern Chinese
landscape paintings.The
imagination of the two
beautiful ancient Chinese
poems became thesonic
landscape pictures, to
share with my musicians
and audience.The brimming
waves, the sunny day,The
dimming hills, the rainy
haze.The West Lake as the
Beauty Xizi,Whether she
is adorned richly or
plainly.Like spilt ink
dark clouds spread o'er
the hills as a pall;Like
bouncing pearls the
raindrops in the boat run
riot.A sudden rolling
gale comes and dispels
them all,Below Lake View
Pavilion sky-mirrored
water's quiet.
String Quartet SKU: BR.EB-9271 Composed by Christian Mason. Chamber music...(+)
String Quartet
SKU:
BR.EB-9271
Composed
by Christian Mason.
Chamber music. Edition
Breitkopf. New music
(post-2000); Music
post-1945. Sheet Music.
Composed 2018. Duration
21'. Breitkopf and
Haertel #EB 9271.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.EB-9271).
ISBN 9790004185711. 0
x 0 inches.
I fell
in love with the
remarkable singing of the
Tenores di Bitti on
hearing their recordings
as a student. Their
uniquely intense vocal
timbre, their harmony,
which seemed pure and
rough at once, and the
sense that this music
was, at root, not so much
about performance as
simply being together in
the world, in a community
of spirit. At the time, I
had no intention of using
this music to my own
creative ends, but now,
here we are: Sardinian
Songbook is the second in
a cycle of works for the
Ligeti Quartet, all based
on transcriptions of
music from different
throat-singing
traditions. Like string
quartets, the tenores
usually sing in groups of
four voices, but being
free from instruments
they stand very close
together enabling the
resonances of their
voices to blend and
interact in a special
way. The quartet, of
course, can only sit so
close before their bows
clash, so I have chosen
instead to reflect this
physical closeness
inversely, by getting the
players to stand
increasingly far from one
another as the piece
progresses. In so doing,
the initial state of
sonic blend gives way to
hocketing lines, opening
up the sense of
space.Christian Mason,
2018 The four movements
may be played separately
or as a collection. If
played together the
following order should be
observed (see table of
contents).
World
premiere: Sheffield/UK,
Firth Hall, April 14,
2018, Commissioned by
Ligeti Quartet.
String Quartet SKU: BR.EB-9270 Composed by Christian Mason. Chamber music...(+)
String Quartet
SKU:
BR.EB-9270
Composed
by Christian Mason.
Chamber music. Edition
Breitkopf. New music
(post-2000); Music
post-1945. Sheet Music.
Composed 2018. 28 pages.
Duration 21'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #EB 9270.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.EB-9270).
ISBN 9790004185704. 9
x 12 inches.
I fell
in love with the
remarkable singing of the
Tenores di Bitti on
hearing their recordings
as a student. Their
uniquely intense vocal
timbre, their harmony,
which seemed pure and
rough at once, and the
sense that this music
was, at root, not so much
about performance as
simply being together in
the world, in a community
of spirit. At the time, I
had no intention of using
this music to my own
creative ends, but now,
here we are: Sardinian
Songbook is the second in
a cycle of works for the
Ligeti Quartet, all based
on transcriptions of
music from different
throat-singing
traditions. Like string
quartets, the tenores
usually sing in groups of
four voices, but being
free from instruments
they stand very close
together enabling the
resonances of their
voices to blend and
interact in a special
way. The quartet, of
course, can only sit so
close before their bows
clash, so I have chosen
instead to reflect this
physical closeness
inversely, by getting the
players to stand
increasingly far from one
another as the piece
progresses. In so doing,
the initial state of
sonic blend gives way to
hocketing lines, opening
up the sense of
space.Christian Mason,
2018 The four movements
may be played separately
or as a collection. If
played together the
following order should be
observed (see table of
contents).
World
premiere: Sheffield/UK,
Firth Hall, April 14,
2018, Commissioned by
Ligeti Quartet.