(Words and Chords to Nearly 1200 Songs 9x12 Spiral Bound). Edited by Annie Patte...(+)
(Words and Chords to
Nearly 1200 Songs 9x12
Spiral Bound). Edited by
Annie Patterson and Peter
Blood. For Vocal. Vocal.
Softcover. 304 pages.
Published by Hal Leonard
(Words and Chords to Nearly 1200 Songs Spiral-Bound). Edited by Annie Patterson ...(+)
(Words and Chords to
Nearly 1200 Songs
Spiral-Bound). Edited by
Annie Patterson and Peter
Blood. For Vocal. Vocal.
Softcover. 304 pages.
Published by Hal Leonard
SATB choir SKU: BP.2129 Composed by David Schwoebel. Arranged by David Sc...(+)
SATB choir
SKU:
BP.2129
Composed by
David Schwoebel. Arranged
by David Schwoebel.
Sacred octavos. Sacred.
Octavo. Beckenhorst Press
#2129. Published by
Beckenhorst Press
(BP.2129).
Composed
by Lowell Liebermann.
Full score. Duration 15
minutes. Theodore Presser
Company #116-41139S.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.11641139S).
UPC:
680160682119.
Barca
rolles for a Sinking City
was inspired by the city
of Venice, a place that
has long held the
fascination of artists,
writers and composers,
and which I have been
lucky enough to visit on
several occasions. Sadly
it seems that future
generations may not be so
lucky: in addition to the
city's slow sinking and
recently discovered
tilting, studies predict
that if global warming
and the resultant rise of
ocean levels is unabated,
the entire city (as well
as many other coastal
cities around the globe)
will be under water by
2100. I. Funeral
Gondola The late, cryptic
piano works of Franz
Liszt made a profound
impression on me as a
young composer, among
them two works he
entitled La Lugubre
Gondola (usually
translated as The Funeral
Gondola ) which were said
to be a premonition of
Wagner's death in Venice,
his coffin transported
through the canals in a
black gondola. These late
pieces of Liszt acquired
even greater significance
to me after I spent two
summers in Bayreuth under
the patronage of
Friedelind Wagner, the
granddaughter of Wagner
and great-granddaughter
of Liszt. This movement
is a meditation on
Wagner, Liszt, Venice and
its own evanescence. II.
Barcarolle/Quodlibet The
Quodlibet (Latin for what
pleases) is a musical
form dating back to the
15th century where many
disparate melodies are
juxtaposed. Popular in
the Renaissance, sacred
and secular melodies were
combined, often to
comical effect due to the
resultant incongruity of
the words. The form was
considered the ultimate
test of a composer's
mastery of counterpoint.
The most famous Quodlibet
is without doubt the
final Variation of Bach's
Goldberg Variations. As a
form the Quodlibet is
less common in more
recent music, although
examples can be found in
the works of Kurt Weill
and David Del Tredici.
My own
Barcarolle/Quodlibet was
inspired by the (perhaps
apocryphal) story of the
funeral where musicians
were asked to play a Bach
Choral, but due to
miscommunication played
instead the Bacarolle
from The Tales of
Hoffmann. Here, the Bach
Choral Allen Menschen
mussen sterben (All Men
Must Die) is heard in the
strings pizzicato, with a
tempo indication In slow
motion. The alto line of
the Bach suggests a
phrase from Beethoven's
Ninth Symphony (Alle
Menchen werden Bruder)
heard in the muted
trombone. Before long,
the famous tune from
Offenbach's opera is
heard, followed by
quotations from iconic
Barcarolles by Chopin,
Mendelssohn and Faure, as
well as two Venetian
popular songs and more
Beethoven. III.
Barcarola/Ostinato/Carill
on An ostinato is a
repeated musical figure,
and carillon is Italian
for music box. This
movement references the
obsolete genre of salon
pieces that imitated
music boxes: such works
by composers like Liadov
and Gretchaninov used to
be a mainstay of
pianists' encore
repertoire. This movement
is however much darker in
conception than those
pleasant trifles.
Utilizing the full
battery of percussion,
the carefully notated
temporal slowing of the
ostinato becomes
overwhelmed by a poignant
chorale melody before
this box is snapped shut.
IV. Barcarolle
Oubliee (Forgotten
Barcarolle) Marked
limpido (still) the final
movement begins with the
sound of rain produced by
a percussion instrument
called (appropriately) a
rain stick. Halting
phrases in the harp
coalesce into the
accompaniment for a
plangent melody heard in
the clarinet. The central
Adagio of this movement
leads to a shattering
climax, before the
opening phrases return
and dissipate into
nothingness.
Composed
by Lowell Liebermann.
Large Score. Duration 15
minutes. Theodore Presser
Company #116-41139L.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.11641139L).
UPC:
680160682126.
Barca
rolles for a Sinking City
was inspired by the city
of Venice, a place that
has long held the
fascination of artists,
writers and composers,
and which I have been
lucky enough to visit on
several occasions. Sadly
it seems that future
generations may not be so
lucky: in addition to the
city's slow sinking and
recently discovered
tilting, studies predict
that if global warming
and the resultant rise of
ocean levels is unabated,
the entire city (as well
as many other coastal
cities around the globe)
will be under water by
2100. I. Funeral
Gondola The late, cryptic
piano works of Franz
Liszt made a profound
impression on me as a
young composer, among
them two works he
entitled La Lugubre
Gondola (usually
translated as The Funeral
Gondola ) which were said
to be a premonition of
Wagner's death in Venice,
his coffin transported
through the canals in a
black gondola. These late
pieces of Liszt acquired
even greater significance
to me after I spent two
summers in Bayreuth under
the patronage of
Friedelind Wagner, the
granddaughter of Wagner
and great-granddaughter
of Liszt. This movement
is a meditation on
Wagner, Liszt, Venice and
its own evanescence. II.
Barcarolle/Quodlibet The
Quodlibet (Latin for what
pleases) is a musical
form dating back to the
15th century where many
disparate melodies are
juxtaposed. Popular in
the Renaissance, sacred
and secular melodies were
combined, often to
comical effect due to the
resultant incongruity of
the words. The form was
considered the ultimate
test of a composer's
mastery of counterpoint.
The most famous Quodlibet
is without doubt the
final Variation of Bach's
Goldberg Variations. As a
form the Quodlibet is
less common in more
recent music, although
examples can be found in
the works of Kurt Weill
and David Del Tredici.
My own
Barcarolle/Quodlibet was
inspired by the (perhaps
apocryphal) story of the
funeral where musicians
were asked to play a Bach
Choral, but due to
miscommunication played
instead the Bacarolle
from The Tales of
Hoffmann. Here, the Bach
Choral Allen Menschen
mussen sterben (All Men
Must Die) is heard in the
strings pizzicato, with a
tempo indication In slow
motion. The alto line of
the Bach suggests a
phrase from Beethoven's
Ninth Symphony (Alle
Menchen werden Bruder)
heard in the muted
trombone. Before long,
the famous tune from
Offenbach's opera is
heard, followed by
quotations from iconic
Barcarolles by Chopin,
Mendelssohn and Faure, as
well as two Venetian
popular songs and more
Beethoven. III.
Barcarola/Ostinato/Carill
on An ostinato is a
repeated musical figure,
and carillon is Italian
for music box. This
movement references the
obsolete genre of salon
pieces that imitated
music boxes: such works
by composers like Liadov
and Gretchaninov used to
be a mainstay of
pianists' encore
repertoire. This movement
is however much darker in
conception than those
pleasant trifles.
Utilizing the full
battery of percussion,
the carefully notated
temporal slowing of the
ostinato becomes
overwhelmed by a poignant
chorale melody before
this box is snapped shut.
IV. Barcarolle
Oubliee (Forgotten
Barcarolle) Marked
limpido (still) the final
movement begins with the
sound of rain produced by
a percussion instrument
called (appropriately) a
rain stick. Halting
phrases in the harp
coalesce into the
accompaniment for a
plangent melody heard in
the clarinet. The central
Adagio of this movement
leads to a shattering
climax, before the
opening phrases return
and dissipate into
nothingness.
By Matt Turner. For string orchestra (violin I, violin II, violin III (viola T.C...(+)
By Matt Turner. For
string orchestra (violin
I, violin II, violin III
(viola T.C.), viola,
cello, bass, drums,
piano). Score and parts.
Duration 3 minutes, 06
seconds. Published by
Carl Fischer
Lemminkainen palaa
kotitienoille - Urtext
based on the Complete
Edition Jean Sibelius
Works (JSW). Composed
by Jean Sibelius. Edited
by Tuija Wicklund.
Orchestra; stapled.
Partitur-Bibliothek
(Score Library).
Symphonic poem; Suite;
Late-romantic; Early
modern. Full score. 68
pages. Duration 7'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #PB
5585. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.PB-5585).
ISBN
9790004213957. 10 x 12.5
inches.
Little is
known about the actual
composition process of
Lemminkainen and the
performance and
publication history is
rather complex, resulting
in a first complete
printing of all the four
movements en suite
through the complete
edition of Jean Sibelius
Works only in 2013.In
summer 1894 Sibelius went
to Central Europe,
carrying among others a
plan for an opera freely
based on the Kalevala in
his mind. But during this
trip he reassessed his
composing: I think I have
found my old self again,
musically speaking. I
think I really am a tone
painter and a poet. As a
result he abandoned his
opera plans, but musical
material may have found
its way into the
Lemminkainen pieces which
he started composing
during that time.
Lemminkainen became
popular from the
beginning and has
attained a fixed position
in the concert
repertoire.On
Lemminkainen's Return
Sibelius commented: I
would like to see more
pride in us Finns. Why
should we be ashamed?
This is the underlying
thought in Lemminkainen's
Return. Lemminkainen is
just as good as the
noblest of earls. He is
an aristocrat, without
question an
aristocrat!.
Study score (2(2picc).2.cor ang.2.Bb-clar.2 - 4.3.3.1 - timp.perc - hp - str) (+)
Study score
(2(2picc).2.cor
ang.2.Bb-clar.2 - 4.3.3.1
- timp.perc - hp - str)
SKU: BR.PB-5576-07
4 Legends - Urtext
based on the Complete
Edition Jean Sibelius
Works (JSW). Composed
by Jean Sibelius. Edited
by Tuija Wicklund.
Orchestra; Softcover.
Partitur-Bibliothek
(Score Library). Suite;
Early modern. Study
Score. Duration 50'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #PB
5576-07. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.PB-5576-07).
ISBN
9790004213865. 6.5 x 9
inches.
Little is
known about the actual
composition process of
Lemminkainen, and the
performance and
publication history is
rather complex, resulting
in a first complete
printing of all four
movements en suite
through the complete
edition of Jean Sibelius
Works only in 2013.In
summer 1894 Sibelius went
to Central Europe,
carrying among others a
plan for an opera freely
based on the Kalevala in
his mind. But during this
trip he reassessed his
composing: I think I have
found my old self again,
musically speaking. I
think I really am a tone
painter and a poet. As a
result he abandoned his
opera plans, but musical
parts may have found
their way into the
Lemminkainen pieces which
he started composing
during that time.
Definitely the overture
had, it is now known and
loved as The Swan of
Tuonela.Lemminkainen
became popular from the
beginning and has
attained a fixed position
in the concert
repertoire.On
Lemminkainen and the
Maidens on the Island a
critic opined: We do not
hesitate to award this
tone painting of
Lemminkainen's erotic
emotional world the first
prize among all the young
composer's works.
Sibelius himself said
about Lemminkainen in
Tuonela: The cradle song
at the end of the work is
maternal love, which
rakes the pieces of
Lemminkainen together
from the River Tuonela.
and commented on
Lemminkainen's Return: I
would like to see more
pride in us Finns. Why
should we be ashamed?
This is the underlying
thought in Lemminkainen's
Return. Lemminkainen is
just as good as the
noblest of earls. He is
an aristocrat, without
question an
aristocrat!.
4 Legends - Urtext
based on the Complete
Edition Jean Sibelius
Works (JSW). Composed
by Jean Sibelius. Edited
by Tuija Wicklund.
Orchestra; Softcover.
Partitur-Bibliothek
(Score Library). Suite;
Early modern. Study
Score. Duration 50'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #PB
5576. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.PB-5576).
ISBN
9790004213865. 6.5 x 9
inches.
Little is
known about the actual
composition process of
Lemminkainen, and the
performance and
publication history is
rather complex, resulting
in a first complete
printing of all four
movements en suite
through the complete
edition of Jean Sibelius
Works only in 2013.In
summer 1894 Sibelius went
to Central Europe,
carrying among others a
plan for an opera freely
based on the Kalevala in
his mind. But during this
trip he reassessed his
composing: I think I have
found my old self again,
musically speaking. I
think I really am a tone
painter and a poet. As a
result he abandoned his
opera plans, but musical
parts may have found
their way into the
Lemminkainen pieces which
he started composing
during that time.
Definitely the overture
had, it is now known and
loved as The Swan of
Tuonela.Lemminkainen
became popular from the
beginning and has
attained a fixed position
in the concert
repertoire.On
Lemminkainen and the
Maidens on the Island a
critic opined: We do not
hesitate to award this
tone painting of
Lemminkainen's erotic
emotional world the first
prize among all the young
composer's works.
Sibelius himself said
about Lemminkainen in
Tuonela: The cradle song
at the end of the work is
maternal love, which
rakes the pieces of
Lemminkainen together
from the River Tuonela.
and commented on
Lemminkainen's Return: I
would like to see more
pride in us Finns. Why
should we be ashamed?
This is the underlying
thought in Lemminkainen's
Return. Lemminkainen is
just as good as the
noblest of earls. He is
an aristocrat, without
question an
aristocrat!.
Tuonelan joutsen -
Urtext based on the
Complete Edition Jean
Sibelius Works (JSW).
Composed by Jean
Sibelius. Edited by Tuija
Wicklund. Orchestra;
stapled.
Partitur-Bibliothek
(Score Library).
Symphonic poem; Suite;
Early modern;
Late-romantic. Full
score. 24 pages. Duration
10'. Breitkopf and
Haertel #PB 5583.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.PB-5583).
ISBN 9790004213933. 10
x 12.5
inches.
Little is
known about the actual
composition process of
Lemminkainen and the
performance and
publication history is
rather complex, resulting
in a first complete
printing of all the four
movements en suite
through the complete
edition of Jean Sibelius
Works only in 2013.In
summer 1894 Sibelius went
to Central Europe,
carrying among others a
plan for an opera freely
based on the Kalevala in
his mind. But during this
trip he reassessed his
composing: I think I have
found my old self again,
musically speaking. I
think I really am a tone
painter and a poet. As a
result he abandoned his
opera plans, but musical
parts may have found
their way into the
Lemminkainen pieces which
he started composing
during that time.
Definitely the overture
had, it is now known and
loved as The Swan of
Tuonela. Lemminkainen
became popular from the
beginning and has
attained a fixed position
in the concert
repertoire.