Orchester of plucked instruments - intermediate to advanced SKU: M7.GHE-915(+)
Orchester of plucked
instruments -
intermediate to advanced
SKU: M7.GHE-915
The Complete
Repertoire composed and
arranged for Lira
Orfeo. Edited by
Stefano Grondona.
Arranged by Miguel
Llobet. This edition:
Saddle-wire stitching.
Sheet music. 112 pages.
MDS (Music Distribution
Services) #GHE 915.
Published by MDS (Music
Distribution Services)
(M7.GHE-915).
Composed by
Cooper Minnis. Sps. Set
of Score and Parts.
1+8+8+4+1+8+8+8+2+2+2+2+2
+2+2+3+3+3+2+2+2+2+3+3+3+
3+2+3+1+2+2+1+2+2+24
pages. Duration 7:48.
Carl Fischer Music
#SPS94. Published by Carl
Fischer Music (CF.SPS94).
ISBN 9781491161449.
UPC:
680160920037.
On
November 5th, 2017, a
mass shooting took place
at the First Baptist
Church in Sutherland
Springs, Texas.
Twenty-six innocent
people lost their lives
that day, including an
unborn child. Overture to
a Small Town is dedicated
to these victims and the
loved ones they left
behind. From the biggest
cities to the smallest
towns, the senseless
bloodshed must end.
Despite the darkness of
this tragedy, it is my
intent through this music
to portray a sense of
hope, dignity, and
innocence deserved by all
America's cities and
towns. The opening
moments of this piece
should be treated
delicately, ensuring that
the brass section moves
together in one unified
voice, and that the
crotales evoke distant
flickers of light.
Similarly, in mm.
120-127, articulations in
the flutes, trumpets and
mallets should be strong
enough to be heard, but
without being aggressive.
The textural layering in
mm. 48-53 should be
executed with
machine-like precision of
both rhythm and
articulation. This
passage should evoke the
sound of many voices
rising together. There
should be a great
contrast between the
opening Piano dynamic and
the final Forte dynamic.
In mm. 65-69, both mallet
percussionists may play
the indicated notes in
any octave they choose.
Both players should move
rapidly between notes in
any order. This passage
should sound fluid and
ethereal. In mm. 69-73:
If there is no English
Horn available to the
ensemble, the Trumpet
should play this passage
solo. If there is an
English Horn, both
instruments should play
the passage together.
This impressionistic
composition about these
vanished structures,
although written for more
advanced ensembles, has
only one flute, clarinet,
trumpet, horn and
trombone part. As a
result, smaller bands can
play this composition
without having to look
for a flex-band
arrangement. Use this to
develop the essential
skills of syncopation and
counting while also
offering the security of
only having one part for
each instrument voice. An
exciting contrasting
selection for bands
looking for a
harmonically interesting
composition, this also
works well as a contest
selection.  . On
November 5th, 2017, a
mass shooting took place
at the First Baptist
Church in Sutherland
Springs, Texas.
Twenty-six innocent
people lost their lives
that day, including an
unborn child. Overture to
a Small Town is dedicated
to these victims and the
loved ones they left
behind. From the biggest
cities to the smallest
towns, the senseless
bloodshed must end.
Despite the darkness of
this tragedy, it is my
intent through this music
to portray a sense of
hope, dignity, and
innocence deserved by all
America’s cities
and towns.  The
opening moments of this
piece should be treated
delicately, ensuring that
the brass section moves
together in one unified
voice, and that the
crotales evoke distant
flickers of light.
Similarly, in mm.
120-127, articulations in
the flutes, trumpets and
mallets should be strong
enough to be heard, but
without being
aggressive.  The
textural layering in mm.
48-53 should be executed
with machine-like
precision of both rhythm
and articulation. This
passage should evoke the
sound of many voices
rising together. There
should be a great
contrast between the
opening Piano dynamic and
the final Forte
dynamic.  In mm.
65-69, both mallet
percussionists may play
the indicated notes in
any octave they choose.
Both players should move
rapidly between notes in
any order. This passage
should sound fluid and
ethereal.  In mm.
69-73: If there is no
English Horn available to
the ensemble, the Trumpet
should play this passage
solo. If there is an
English Horn, both
instruments should play
the passage together.This
impressionistic
composition about these
vanished structures,
although written for more
advanced ensembles, has
only one flute, clarinet,
trumpet, horn and
trombone part. As a
result, smaller bands can
play this composition
without having to look
for a flex-band
arrangement. Use this to
develop the essential
skills of syncopation and
counting while also
offering the security of
only having one part for
each instrument voice. An
exciting contrasting
selection for bands
looking for a
harmonically interesting
composition, this also
works well as a contest
selection. .
Lyrics and Chords. Composed by Radiohead. This edition: Lyric and Chord Book. ...(+)
Lyrics and Chords.
Composed by
Radiohead. This edition:
Lyric and Chord Book.
Artist/Personality; Book;
Personality Book. Faber
Edition. Rock. Leadsheet.
Published by Faber Music
Orchestra Orchestra SKU: PR.11641373S Composed by Peter Schickele. Full s...(+)
Orchestra Orchestra
SKU: PR.11641373S
Composed by Peter
Schickele. Full score.
Duration 24 minutes.
Theodore Presser Company
#116-41373S. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.11641373S).
UPC:
680160680344.
The
concerto has always
seemed an especially
attractive medium to me,
not necessarily because
of its expectations of
virtuosity (although
flaunting it when you've
got it certainly has its
place), and emphatically
not because of the
perception of a concerto
as a contest, but because
so much of what I write
feels song-like; I'm very
much at home with the
age-old texture of melody
and accompaniment. I
hope, before I move on,
to have the opportunity
to write concertos for
all the major
instruments, and perhaps
some of the rarer ones as
well. The oboe is not
only one of the major
instruments, it is one of
my favorite instruments.
I've always loved its
sound, but since moving
to New York I have gotten
to hear and, in some
cases, know some
extremely fine oboists
who broadened my
appreciation of the
instrument's
possibilities. I
especially remember a
concert, probably in the
late 1960's, in which
Humbert Lucarelli played
a Handel concerto,
filling out large melodic
leaps with cascading
scale passages in a way
that raised the hair on
the back of your neck,
somewhat in the way that
John Coltrane's sheets of
sound did. The sweeping
scales in the second
movement of my concerto
were definitely inspired
by Bert Lucarelli's
performance. The first,
third and fifth movements
of the Concerto for Oboe
and Orchestra are
song-like, whereas the
second and fourth have
strong scherzo and dance
qualities, including a
couple of sections that
sound like out-and-out
pirate dances to me. The
hymn-like tune at the
beginning of the middle
movement was originally
begun as a vocal piece to
be sung by my wife, son
and daughter at my
brother's wedding, but I
couldn't come up with
good works for it, so it
ended up as an
instrumental chant. The
opening and closing of
the concerto make use of
the oboe's uniquely
soulful singing. I had
not heard Pamela Woods
Pecha's solo playing in
person when she
approached me about
writing a concerto, but I
had heard her fine
recording of chamber
music for oboe and
strings by the three B's
(English, that is: Bliss,
Bax and Britten) with the
Audubon Quartet. I
actually already had some
oboe concerto ideas in my
sketchbooks; although I
didn't end up using any
of those earlier ideas,
it's interesting that
most of them tended to
share the general feeling
and tonality of the
eventual opening of the
concerto. The work was
completed on October 13,
1994. I hate the
compromises involved in
making piano reductions
-- perhaps I would feel
differently if I were a
more accomplished pianist
-- so I often decide to
make piano reductions for
four hands rather than
two. My good friend Jon
Kimura Parker is a
terrific sight-reader,
and I roped him into
coming over to my place
on February 17, 1995, to
help me accompany Pamela
on the first read-through
of the piece. The first
performance of the work
took place on July 21,
1995, at the American
Music Festival in Duncan,
Oklahoma, with Mark
Parker conducting the
Festival Orchestra.
Orchestra Orchestra SKU: PR.11641373L Composed by Peter Schickele. Large ...(+)
Orchestra Orchestra
SKU: PR.11641373L
Composed by Peter
Schickele. Large Score.
Duration 24 minutes.
Theodore Presser Company
#116-41373L. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.11641373L).
UPC:
680160680337.
The
concerto has always
seemed an especially
attractive medium to me,
not necessarily because
of its expectations of
virtuosity (although
flaunting it when you've
got it certainly has its
place), and emphatically
not because of the
perception of a concerto
as a contest, but because
so much of what I write
feels song-like; I'm very
much at home with the
age-old texture of melody
and accompaniment. I
hope, before I move on,
to have the opportunity
to write concertos for
all the major
instruments, and perhaps
some of the rarer ones as
well. The oboe is not
only one of the major
instruments, it is one of
my favorite instruments.
I've always loved its
sound, but since moving
to New York I have gotten
to hear and, in some
cases, know some
extremely fine oboists
who broadened my
appreciation of the
instrument's
possibilities. I
especially remember a
concert, probably in the
late 1960's, in which
Humbert Lucarelli played
a Handel concerto,
filling out large melodic
leaps with cascading
scale passages in a way
that raised the hair on
the back of your neck,
somewhat in the way that
John Coltrane's sheets of
sound did. The sweeping
scales in the second
movement of my concerto
were definitely inspired
by Bert Lucarelli's
performance. The first,
third and fifth movements
of the Concerto for Oboe
and Orchestra are
song-like, whereas the
second and fourth have
strong scherzo and dance
qualities, including a
couple of sections that
sound like out-and-out
pirate dances to me. The
hymn-like tune at the
beginning of the middle
movement was originally
begun as a vocal piece to
be sung by my wife, son
and daughter at my
brother's wedding, but I
couldn't come up with
good works for it, so it
ended up as an
instrumental chant. The
opening and closing of
the concerto make use of
the oboe's uniquely
soulful singing. I had
not heard Pamela Woods
Pecha's solo playing in
person when she
approached me about
writing a concerto, but I
had heard her fine
recording of chamber
music for oboe and
strings by the three B's
(English, that is: Bliss,
Bax and Britten) with the
Audubon Quartet. I
actually already had some
oboe concerto ideas in my
sketchbooks; although I
didn't end up using any
of those earlier ideas,
it's interesting that
most of them tended to
share the general feeling
and tonality of the
eventual opening of the
concerto. The work was
completed on October 13,
1994. I hate the
compromises involved in
making piano reductions
-- perhaps I would feel
differently if I were a
more accomplished pianist
-- so I often decide to
make piano reductions for
four hands rather than
two. My good friend Jon
Kimura Parker is a
terrific sight-reader,
and I roped him into
coming over to my place
on February 17, 1995, to
help me accompany Pamela
on the first read-through
of the piece. The first
performance of the work
took place on July 21,
1995, at the American
Music Festival in Duncan,
Oklahoma, with Mark
Parker conducting the
Festival Orchestra.
Piano/Keyboard SKU: HL.1438561 Composed by Various. Super Easy Songbook. ...(+)
Piano/Keyboard
SKU:
HL.1438561
Composed
by Various. Super Easy
Songbook. Classic Rock,
Pop, Standards.
Softcover. Published by
Hal Leonard (HL.1438561).
ISBN 9798350123715.
UPC:
196288204916.
The
'80s brought on an
electrifying surge of
musical innovation,
marked by the rise of
genres such as synth-pop,
hair metal, and the early
beginnings of hip-hop.
This dynamic period was
distinguished by the
revolutionary influence
of MTV, which changed the
way we consume music and
turned musicians in
visual legends. The
decade's spirited vibe
made a lasting impact on
the music scene, etching
its presence into the
cultural fabric forever.
Grab your hairspray and
teasing comb and jump
into this new Super Easy
songbook, featuring 46
simple arrangements of
the decade's best to
start playing your
favorite songs in no
time! Each song is
arranged with simple
right-hand melody, letter
names inside each note,
basic left-hand chord
diagrams, and no page
turns. Songs include:
Africa ⢠All Outof
Love ⢠Beat It
⢠Danger Zone â¢
Don't Dream It's Over
⢠Ebony and Ivory
⢠Everybody Wants to
Rule the World â¢
Flashdance... What a
Feeling ⢠Footloose
⢠Girls Just Want to
Have Fun ⢠Higher
Love ⢠Hurts so Good
⢠Into the Air
Tonight ⢠Jump
⢠Owner of a Lonely
Heart ⢠Running Up
That Hill ⢠Sweet
Dreams (Are Made of This)
⢠Total Eclipse of
the Heart ⢠You're
the Inspiration â¢
and more!
(A Sheet Music Compendium (Piano/Vocal/Guitar)). For Guitar; Keyboard; Piano; Vo...(+)
(A Sheet Music Compendium
(Piano/Vocal/Guitar)).
For Guitar; Keyboard;
Piano; Voice. This
edition:
Piano/Vocal/Guitar. Book;
P/V/C Mixed Folio;
Piano/Vocal/Chords.
Billboard Magazine.
Pop/Rock. 304 pages.
Published by Alfred Music
Publishing
Instruments en Do [Fake Book] - Intermédiaire Hal Leonard
C Edition. Composed by Various. Fake Book. Jazz. Fakebook (softcover). With voca...(+)
C Edition. Composed by
Various. Fake Book. Jazz.
Fakebook (softcover).
With vocal melody,
lyrics, chord names,
black and white photos,
discography and
introductory text. 400
pages. Hal Leonard
#FBM0003. Published by
Hal Leonard
Just Jazz Real Book - Bb Edition. (B-Flat Edition). For Bb instrument and voice....(+)
Just Jazz Real Book - Bb
Edition. (B-Flat
Edition). For Bb
instrument and voice.
This edition: B-Flat
Edition. Fake Book. Just
Real Books Series. Jazz.
Difficulty: easy-medium
to medium. Fakebook
(spiral bound).
Introductory text, vocal
melody, lyrics, chord
names, discography and
black and white photos.
400 pages. Published by
Alfred Music Publishing