32 Quartets That Can Be Played by Any Combination of String Instruments. Compose...(+)
32 Quartets That Can Be
Played by Any Combination
of String Instruments.
Composed by Bernard De La
Monnoye, Christopf Von
Gluck, etc., J. Spilman,
Spiritual American, Willy
Geisler, Stephen Foster
(1826-1864), Edvard Grieg
(1843-1907), Engelbert
Humperdinck (1854-1921),
French carol,
Traditional, English Folk
Song, American Folk Hymn,
Henry Carey, and
Catalonian Carol.
Arranged by Doris Gazda.
SWS. Back To School.
Book. With Standard
notation. Carl Fischer
Music #BF72. Published by
Carl Fischer Music
Ave Maria 4 Contrebasses - Intermédiaire Yorke Edition
Double Bass Quartet - Grade 3-5 SKU: BT.YE0063 Composed by Wilhelm Fitzen...(+)
Double Bass Quartet -
Grade 3-5
SKU:
BT.YE0063
Composed by
Wilhelm Fitzenhagen. Set
(Score and Parts). Yorke
Edition #YE0063.
Published by Yorke
Edition (BT.YE0063).
Four Double
Basses. 'A marvellous
piece for inculcating
good intonation in the
young'. The Strad. A
short lyrical quartet of
medium diffilty showing
the cantabile of the
instrument to good
advantage. Everyone has
something to do, but the
first part is more
challenging.
Lauber's
193 catalogued works are
many and varied. He wrote
for all instruments and
in every genre except
oratorio and opera. Among
his output areseveral
works for double bass,
most written for Prof.
Hans Fryba, a personal
friend with whom he
worked as a double bass
and piano recital duo.
Fryba was one of the
leading players in Europe
in his day and was
principal of the Berlin
Philharmonic Orchestra.
First was Theme and
Variations (1936-7) and a
Rhapsodie with orchestra
(1937). Three Walzes
followed in 1939, a
Gavotte and Gigue, a
Sonata and then in 1943
Fantasie de Concert,
written for the Geneva
Competition. Four
Caprices appeared in
1942, the same date as
the Quartet for double
basses which was
dedicated to Fryba and
written for the Berlin
Philharmonic Double Bass
Quartet, one of the first
ever such ensembles to
exist.
The
Quartet for double basses
was revived by Klaus
Stoll in the 1970s for
the Philharmonic Double
Bass Quartet at that time
to play. It was
subsequently published in
1975 by Yorke Edition by
kind permission of the
composer's son Edmund
Lauber.