366 More Great Songs for Better Living. Arranged by Jim Beloff, Liz Belof...(+)
366 More Great Songs
for Better Living.
Arranged by Jim Beloff,
Liz Beloff. Fake Book.
Country, Pop,
Standards. Softcover. 416
pages. Published by Hal
Leonard (HL.212971).
Choral TBB chorus SKU: CF.CM9588 Composed by Tomas Luis de Victoria. Arra...(+)
Choral TBB chorus
SKU:
CF.CM9588
Composed by
Tomas Luis de Victoria.
Arranged by Jeb Mueller.
Fold. Performance Score.
8 pages. Duration 1
minute, 59 seconds. Carl
Fischer Music #CM9588.
Published by Carl Fischer
Music (CF.CM9588).
ISBN 9781491154106.
UPC: 680160912605. 6.875
x 10.5 inches. Key: Eb
major. Latin. Traditional
Latin.
Tomas Luis
de Victoria (15481611) is
widely considered the
greatest Spanish
Renaissance composer and
one of the most
influential musicians of
his time. Included in his
oeuvre are two settings
of the Pange
lingua, both
produced in 1581. This
motet is excerpted from
the first of those and
incorporates the original
Roman melody, or cantus
firmus. (He composed his
second Pange
lingua based on a
Spanish melody.) The
baritones anchor the
motet by singing the tune
in augmentation. This
line should be intoned
with a flowing, legato
articulation that
incorporates subtle
phrasing and text
stresses. The more
rhythmic tenor and bass
lines complement the
melody and illustrate the
hopeful nature of its
text. Singing this piece
with two pulses per
measure will encourage a
steady and vital
performance. Composers
provided minimal
performance details in
their scores during this
period in music history,
so I added a time
signature, bar lines,
dynamics, and metronome
markings in order to
facilitate performances
that musicologists
believe mimic those of
Victorias time. It should
be noted that dynamics
are largely subjective,
so performers may make
alternative choices. Each
tenuto indicates
word stress; the most
musical performances will
incorporate gentle
crescendos and
decrescendos before and
after each of them.
Lastly, using minimal
vibrato, especially at
cadences, will imbue this
wonderful motet with
style and clarity.
PRONUNCIATION GUIDE
Victoria received much of
his training in Italy,
therefore making
Italianate Latin most
appropriate. Pure vowels
are critical to correct
pronunciation, and those
phonemes remain constant
without exceptions. The
most problematic of the
vowels is o, which sounds
similar to the English
words bought and got. The
letter t should be
produced dentally: lift
the tongue to the top of
the mouth as in English,
but aspirate less on the
release. All occurrences
of s should be soft and
never hardened to [z],
such as in praise. Verbum
caro, panem verum,
[v??bum k??? p?n?m v?rum]
verbo carnem efficit:
fitque sanguis Christi
merum. [v??b? k??n?m
??fit?it fitkw? s??gwis
k?isti m??um] Et si
sensus deficit, ad
firmandum cor sin cerum.
[?t si s?nsus ?d?fit?it,
?d fi??m?ndum k?? sin
t???um] Jeb
Mueller. TomA!s Luis
de Victoria (1548a1611)
is widely considered the
greatest Spanish
Renaissance composer and
one of the most
influential musicians of
his time. Included in his
oeuvre are two settings
of the Pange
lingua, both
produced in 1581. This
motet is excerpted from
the first of those and
incorporates the original
Roman melody, or cantus
firmus. (He composed his
second Pange
lingua based on a
Spanish melody.) The
baritones anchor the
motet by singing the tune
in augmentation. This
line should be intoned
with a flowing, legato
articulation that
incorporates subtle
phrasing and text
stresses. The more
rhythmic tenor and bass
lines complement the
melody and illustrate the
hopeful nature of its
text. Singing this piece
with two pulses per
measure will encourage a
steady and vital
performance. Composers
provided minimal
performance details in
their scores during this
period in music history,
so I added a time
signature, bar lines,
dynamics, and metronome
markings in order to
facilitate performances
that musicologists
believe mimic those of
Victoriaas time. It
should be noted that
dynamics are largely
subjective, so performers
may make alternative
choices. Each
tenuto indicates
word stress; the most
musical performances will
incorporate gentle
crescendos and
decrescendos before and
after each of them.
Lastly, using minimal
vibrato, especially at
cadences, will imbue this
wonderful motet with
style and clarity.
PRONUNCIATION GUIDE
Victoria received much of
his training in Italy,
therefore making
Italianate Latin most
appropriate. Pure vowels
are critical to correct
pronunciation, and those
phonemes remain constant
without exceptions. The
most problematic of the
vowels is ao,a which
sounds similar to the
English words bought and
got. The letter ata
should be produced
dentally: lift the tongue
to the top of the mouth
as in English, but
aspirate less on the
release. All occurrences
of asa should be soft and
never hardened to [z],
such as in praise. Verbum
caro, panem verum, [vEE
3/4 bum kEE 3/4 E pEnEm
vErum] verbo carnem
efficit: fitque sanguis
Christi merum. [vEE 3/4
bE kEE 3/4 nEm EEfitEit
fitkwE sEAgwis kE 3/4
isti mEE 3/4 um] Et si
sensus deficit, ad
firmandum cor sin cerum.
[Et si sEnsus EdEfitEit,
Ed fiE 3/4 EmEndum kEE
3/4 sin tEEE 3/4 um] Jeb
Mueller. Tomas Luis de
Victoria (1548-1611) is
widely considered the
greatest Spanish
Renaissance composer and
one of the most
influential musicians of
his time. Included in his
oeuvre are two settings
of the Pange
lingua, both
produced in 1581. This
motet is excerpted from
the first of those and
incorporates the original
Roman melody, or cantus
firmus. (He composed his
second Pange
lingua based on a
Spanish melody.) The
baritones anchor the
motet by singing the tune
in augmentation. This
line should be intoned
with a flowing, legato
articulation that
incorporates subtle
phrasing and text
stresses. The more
rhythmic tenor and bass
lines complement the
melody and illustrate the
hopeful nature of its
text. Singing this piece
with two pulses per
measure will encourage a
steady and vital
performance. Composers
provided minimal
performance details in
their scores during this
period in music history,
so I added a time
signature, bar lines,
dynamics, and metronome
markings in order to
facilitate performances
that musicologists
believe mimic those of
Victoria's time. It
should be noted that
dynamics are largely
subjective, so performers
may make alternative
choices. Each
tenuto indicates
word stress; the most
musical performances will
incorporate gentle
crescendos and
decrescendos before and
after each of them.
Lastly, using minimal
vibrato, especially at
cadences, will imbue this
wonderful motet with
style and clarity.
PRONUNCIATION GUIDE
Victoria received much of
his training in Italy,
therefore making
Italianate Latin most
appropriate. Pure vowels
are critical to correct
pronunciation, and those
phonemes remain constant
without exceptions. The
most problematic of the
vowels is o, which sounds
similar to the English
words bought and got. The
letter t should be
produced dentally: lift
the tongue to the top of
the mouth as in English,
but aspirate less on the
release. All occurrences
of s should be soft and
never hardened to [z],
such as in praise. Verbum
caro, panem verum,
[verbum karo panem verum]
verbo carnem efficit:
fitque sanguis Christi
merum. [verbo karnem
'efitSit fitkwe saNGgwis
kristi merum] Et si
sensus deficit, ad
firmandum cor sin cerum.
[et si sensus 'defitSit,
ad fir'mandum kor sin
tSerum] Jeb
Mueller. Tomas Luis de
Victoria (1548-1611) is
widely considered the
greatest Spanish
Renaissance composer and
one of the most
influential musicians of
his time. Included in his
oeuvre are two settings
of the Pange lingua, both
produced in 1581. This
motet is excerpted from
the first of those and
incorporates the original
Roman melody, or cantus
firmus. (He composed his
second Pange lingua based
on a Spanish melody.) The
baritones anchor the
motet by singing the tune
in augmentation. This
line should be intoned
with a flowing, legato
articulation that
incorporates subtle
phrasing and text
stresses. The more
rhythmic tenor and bass
lines complement the
melody and illustrate the
hopeful nature of its
text. Singing this piece
with two pulses per
measure will encourage a
steady and vital
performance. Composers
provided minimal
performance details in
their scores during this
period in music history,
so I added a time
signature, bar lines,
dynamics, and metronome
markings in order to
facilitate performances
that musicologists
believe mimic those of
Victoria's time. It
should be noted that
dynamics are largely
subjective, so performers
may make alternative
choices. Each tenuto
indicates word stress;
the most musical
performances will
incorporate gentle
crescendos and
decrescendos before and
after each of them.
Lastly, using minimal
vibrato, especially at
cadences, will imbue this
wonderful motet with
style and clarity.
PRONUNCIATION GUIDE
Victoria received much of
his training in Italy,
therefore making
Italianate Latin most
appropriate. Pure vowels
are critical to correct
pronunciation, and those
phonemes remain constant
without exceptions. The
most problematic of the
vowels is o, which sounds
similar to the English
words bought and got. The
letter t should be
produced dentally: lift
the tongue to the top of
the mouth as in English,
but aspirate less on the
release. All occurrences
of s should be soft and
never hardened to [z],
such as in praise. Verbum
caro, panem verum,
[verbum karo panem verum]
verbo carnem efficit:
fitque sanguis Christi
merum. [verbo karnem
'efitSit fitkwe saNGgwis
kristi merum] Et si
sensus deficit, ad
firmandum cor sin cerum.
[et si sensus 'defitSit,
ad fir'mandum kor sin
tSerum] Jeb
Mueller. Tomas Luis de
Victoria (1548-1611) is
widely considered the
greatest Spanish
Renaissance composer and
one of the most
influential musicians of
his time. Included in his
oeuvre are two settings
of the Pange lingua, both
produced in 1581. This
motet is excerpted from
Pange lingua more
hisapano. The baritones
anchor the motet by
singing the tune in
augmentation. This line
should be intoned with a
flowing, legato
articulation that
incorporates subtle
phrasing and text
stresses. The more
rhythmic tenor and bass
lines complement the
melody and illustrate the
hopeful nature of its
text. Singing this piece
with two pulses per
measure will encourage a
steady and vital
performance. Composers
provided minimal
performance details in
their scores during this
period in music history,
so I added a time
signature, bar lines,
dynamics, and metronome
markings in order to
facilitate performances
that musicologists
believe mimic those of
Victoria's time. It
should be noted that
dynamics are largely
subjective, so performers
may make alternative
choices. Each tenuto
indicates word stress;
the most musical
performances will
incorporate gentle
crescendos and
decrescendos before and
after each of them.
Lastly, using minimal
vibrato, especially at
cadences, will imbue this
wonderful motet with
style and clarity.
PRONUNCIATION GUIDE
Victoria received much of
his training in Italy,
therefore making
Italianate Latin most
appropriate. Pure vowels
are critical to correct
pronunciation, and those
phonemes remain constant
without exceptions. The
most problematic of the
vowels is o, which sounds
similar to the English
words bought and got. The
letter t should be
produced dentally: lift
the tongue to the top of
the mouth as in English,
but aspirate less on the
release. All occurrences
of s should be soft and
never hardened to [z],
such as in praise. Verbum
caro, panem verum,
[verbum karo panem verum]
verbo carnem efficit:
fitque sanguis Christi
merum. [verbo karnem
'efitSit fitkwe saNGgwis
kristi merum] Et si
sensus deficit, ad
firmandum cor sin cerum.
[et si sensus 'defitSit,
ad fir'mandum kor sin
tSerum] Jeb
Mueller. Tomás Luis
de Victoria
(1548–1611) is
widely considered the
greatest Spanish
Renaissance composer and
one of the most
influential musicians of
his time. Included in his
oeuvre are two settings
of the Pange lingua, both
produced in 1581. This
motet is excerpted from
Pange lingua more
hisapano.The baritones
anchor the motet by
singing the tune in
augmentation. This line
should be intoned with a
flowing, legato
articulation that
incorporates subtle
phrasing and text
stresses. The more
rhythmic tenor and bass
lines complement the
melody and illustrate the
hopeful nature of its
text. Singing this piece
with two pulses per
measure will encourage a
steady and vital
performance.Composers
provided minimal
performance details in
their scores during this
period in music history,
so I added a time
signature, bar lines,
dynamics, and metronome
markings in order to
facilitate performances
that musicologists
believe mimic those of
Victoria’s time.
It should be noted that
dynamics are largely
subjective, so performers
may make alternative
choices. Each tenuto
indicates word stress;
the most musical
performances will
incorporate gentle
crescendos and
decrescendos before and
after each of them.
Lastly, using minimal
vibrato, especially at
cadences, will imbue this
wonderful motet with
style and
clarity.PRONUNCIATION
GUIDEVictoria received
much of his training in
Italy, therefore making
Italianate Latin most
appropriate. Pure vowels
are critical to correct
pronunciation, and those
phonemes remain constant
without exceptions. The
most problematic of the
vowels is
“o,†which
sounds similar to the
English words bought and
got. The letter
“t†should be
produced dentally: lift
the tongue to the top of
the mouth as in English,
but aspirate less on the
release. All occurrences
of “s†should
be soft and never
hardened to [z], such as
in praise.Verbum caro,
panem
verum,[vɛɾbum
kɑɾɔ
pɑnɛm
vɛrum]verbo carnem
efficit: fitque sanguis
Christi
merum.[vɛɾbɔ
kɑɾnɛm
ˈɛfitʃit
fitkwÉ›
sɑŋgwis kɾisti
mɛɾum]Et si sensus
deficit, ad firmandum cor
sin cerum.[ɛt si
sɛnsus
ˈdɛfitʃit,
É‘d
fiɾˈmɑndum
kɔɾ sin
tʃɛɾum]Jeb
Mueller.
For C instrument and voice. Format: fakebook (spiral bound). With chord names, v...(+)
For C instrument and
voice. Format: fakebook
(spiral bound). With
chord names, vocal melody
and lyrics. Jazz. Series:
Hal Leonard Fake Books.
448 pages. 9x12 inches.
Published by Hal Leonard.
Fakebook for Eb instrument and voice. With vocal melody, lyrics and leadsheet no...(+)
Fakebook for Eb
instrument and voice.
With vocal melody, lyrics
and leadsheet notation.
Series: Hal Leonard Fake
Books. 448 pages.
Published by Hal Leonard.
(4th Edition ) For voice and C instrument. Format: fakebook. With vocal melody, ...(+)
(4th Edition ) For voice
and C instrument. Format:
fakebook. With vocal
melody, lyrics and chord
names. Pop rock, rock and
pop. Series: Hal Leonard
Fake Books. 584 pages.
9x12 inches. Published by
Hal Leonard.
Composed by Miguel Llobet. Edited by Stefano Grondona. This edition: Saddle-wi...(+)
Composed by Miguel
Llobet.
Edited by Stefano
Grondona.
This edition: Saddle-wire
stitching. Sheet music.
1048
pages. MDS (Music
Distribution
Services) #GHE 900.
Published
by MDS (Music
Distribution
Services)
Composed by Various. For Piano/Keyboard. Hal Leonard Fake Books. Classical. Diff...(+)
Composed by Various. For
Piano/Keyboard. Hal
Leonard Fake Books.
Classical. Difficulty:
medium to
medium-difficult.
Fakebook. Melody line,
chord names and lyrics
(on some songs). 413
pages. Published by Hal
Leonard
Ligne De Mélodie, Paroles et Accords [Fake Book] - Intermédiaire Hal Leonard
For voice and C instrument. Format: fakebook. With vocal melody, lyrics, chord n...(+)
For voice and C
instrument. Format:
fakebook. With vocal
melody, lyrics, chord
names and guitar chord
chart. Gospel and
worship. Series: Hal
Leonard Fake Books. 295
pages. 9x12 inches.
Published by Hal Leonard.
Piano, Voix et Guitare [Partition] - Débutant Hal Leonard
Keyboard/vocal/chords songbook for voice and keyboard. With lyrics, chord names,...(+)
Keyboard/vocal/chords
songbook for voice and
keyboard. With lyrics,
chord names, big note
notation and registration
guide. Series: Hal
Leonard E-Z Play Today.
488 pages. Published by
Hal Leonard.
Guitar - Intermediate SKU: DY.DO-1522 Composed by Francis Bebey. Arranged...(+)
Guitar - Intermediate
SKU: DY.DO-1522
Composed by Francis
Bebey. Arranged by Ingrid
Riollot. Score. Les
Editions Doberman-Yppan
#DO 1522. Published by
Les Editions
Doberman-Yppan
(DY.DO-1522).
Francis
Bebey was born in Douala
in July 1929, into a
large family where his
father, a pastor,
struggled to feed his
children. But Francis had
the opportunity to go to
school. Admiring his
elder brother, Marcel
Eyidi Bebey, he educated
himself, distinguished
himself, and eventually
received a scholarship to
go and take his
baccalaureate in
France. We approached
the end of the 1950s when
he arrived in La
Rochelle. More than ever,
in this France where
Africans were looked at
with curiosity,
condescension, or
disdain, Francis relied
on his intellectual
resources. A diligent
worker, he obtained his
Baccalaureate, then moved
to Paris where he started
English studies at the
Sorbonne. One day, he
knew what truly attracted
him: he wanted to do
radio. Francis learned
his craft in France and
in the USA. After
working for a few years
as a reporter, he was
hired in 1961 as an
international civil
servant in the UNESCO
Information
Department. In
parallel, Francis had
always been drawn to
musical creation. His
very serious daytime
activity didnâ??t
prevent him from
frequenting jazz clubs in
the evenings. In Paris,
the Jazz, the trendy
music of that time, but
also rumba and salsa
attracted him. He
collected records and
attended numerous
concerts. With his
accomplice Manu Dibango,
Francis took the stage
and played
music. Francis liked
classical music since his
childhood. He grew up
listening to the cantatas
and oratorios of Bach or
Handel that his father
had sung in the temple.
He became passionate
about the guitar,
impressed by the Spanish
and South American
masters, and decided to
learn to strum the
instrument himself. He
started composing guitar
pieces, blending the
various influences that
flow through him with the
traditional African music
he had carried within
since childhood. His
approach captivated the
director of the American
Cultural Center (then
located in the
Saint-Germain
neighborhood of Paris),
who offered him the
opportunity to perform in
front of an audience.
Francis gave his first
guitar recital there
(1963) in front of a
mesmerized audience. His
first solo album was
released shortly
thereafter. Gradually,
Francis became recognized
as a musician and
composer. Several albums
of the African guitar
ambassador, as described
by the press, were
released. He also wrote
books, to the point that
his artistic career
became challenging to
reconcile with his career
as a civil servant. In
1974, even though he had
become the General
Manager in charge of
music at UNESCO, he took
the bold leap and
resigned from this
prestigious institution
to dedicated himself to
the three activities that
interested him: music,
literature, and
journalism. He
explored the traditional
musical heritage of the
African continent,
notably through the thumb
piano sanza, and the
polyphonic music of the
Central African pygmies,
or singing in his native
language and composing
humoristic songs in
French! Success
followed. Francis Bebey
traveled the world: from
France to Brazil,
Cameroon to Sweden,
Germany to the Carribean,
or Morocco to Japan...
the list of countries
where he was invited to
perform, gives lectures,
or meets readers is very
long. In addition to
public recognition, he
enjoyed the recognition
of his fellow musicians,
such as guitarist John
Williams or Venezuelan
Antonio Lauro, who
invited him to be a part
of the jury for a
classical guitar
competition in
Caracas. His life was
the journey of an African
pioneer, a man rooted in
his cultural heritage and
carrying a message of
sharing and hope for the
world. His originality
continues to vibrate
around the world since
his passing at the end of
May 2001.
Composed by Paolo Ugoletti Andrea Vezzoli. Edited by Piero Bonaguri and Raffae...(+)
Composed by Paolo
Ugoletti
Andrea Vezzoli. Edited by
Piero Bonaguri and
Raffaello
Ravasio. Saddle
stitching.
Piero Bonaguri
Collection.
Classical. Ut Orpheus #CH
254.
Published by Ut Orpheus