By John Philip Sousa. Arranged by David Lovrien/James Gann. For concert band. So...(+)
By John Philip Sousa.
Arranged by David
Lovrien/James Gann. For
concert band. Sousa's
long-lost march,
available at last. March.
Full score and set of
parts. Duration 2:30.
Published by Lovebird
Music. (105)
Level: Grade 4
(Intermediate).
Iron Mountain Orchestre d'harmonie [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Débutant Hal Leonard
Score and Parts Concert Band (Score & Parts) - Grade 1 SKU: HL.4008937 (+)
Score and Parts Concert
Band (Score & Parts) -
Grade 1
SKU:
HL.4008937
Concert
Band, Grade 1 4:30 Score
and Parts. Composed
by Gerald Oswald.
Symphonic Dimensions.
Concert, Concert Band.
Softcover. Duration 270
seconds. Hal Leonard
#SDP222-24-02. Published
by Hal Leonard
(HL.4008937).
UPC:
196288281641.
“Ir
on Mountain” portrays
the legend of the Erzberg
in Austria in an
impressive musical
manner. At the beginning,
the atmosphere of the
cave where the Waterman
resides comes to life
through simulated water
droplets. The Waterman is
pursued and captured by
humans. In his
desperation, he pleads
for freedom and presents
an offer to the people:
gold mines for a year,
silver mines for ten
years, oriron mines
forever. The clear
response from the people
is iron forever. The
composition's finale
emphasizes this choice
with impactful anvil
strikes, and the Erzberg
rises triumphantly to the
forefront of the
narrative.
Concert
Band, Grade 1 4:30
Score. Composed by
Gerald Oswald. Symphonic
Dimensions. Concert,
Concert Band. Softcover.
Duration 270 seconds. Hal
Leonard #SDP222-24-01.
Published by Hal Leonard
(HL.4008938).
UPC:
196288281658.
“Ir
on Mountain” portrays
the legend of the Erzberg
in Austria in an
impressive musical
manner. At the beginning,
the atmosphere of the
cave where the Waterman
resides comes to life
through simulated water
droplets. The Waterman is
pursued and captured by
humans. In his
desperation, he pleads
for freedom and presents
an offer to the people:
gold mines for a year,
silver mines for ten
years, oriron mines
forever. The clear
response from the people
is iron forever. The
composition's finale
emphasizes this choice
with impactful anvil
strikes, and the Erzberg
rises triumphantly to the
forefront of the
narrative.
Recorder and Piano - Advanced SKU: FP.FDD02 Composed by David Dubery. She...(+)
Recorder and Piano -
Advanced
SKU:
FP.FDD02
Composed by
David Dubery. Sheet Music
and Books. An evocative
piece for treble recorder
or oboe and piano
inspired by two historic
Stockport landmarks.
Classical. Collection.
Forsyths Publications
#FDD02. Published by
Forsyths Publications
(FP.FDD02).
ISBN
9790570503834.
Vern
on Park,
Stockport’s oldest
park, was created on land
donated by Lord Vernon
(George John Warren). It
was built by poor mill
workers who called it
pinch-belly park and
opened on 20th September
1858. Comprising
twenty-one acres, it
houses a museum, a
bandstand, ornamental
fountains, a fernery,
rockery, borders and
sunken rose garden as
well terraced walkways
that overlook the river
and weir. The piece
depicts a solitary walker
engrossed in his own
thoughts on a
winter’s day, the
landscape, and the
park’s Victorian
past.
At the very
end of the piece a
reminder of the
park’s Victorian
origins can be detected
in a quote from
Elgar’s Salut
d’amour of 1899,
which may well have been
played by a band in the
bandstand. Stockport
market celebrated its
750th anniversary in
2010. It dated back to
September 1260 when a
Royal Charter allowed
Robert de Stokeport, the
Mayor, to hold a weekly
market within the
defensive walls of the
Norman Castle on the
present site of Castle
Yard.
The Glass
Umbrella was a popular
name given to the 1861
covered market built of
timber, glass and iron -
nine bays with open sides
and a glass canopy. In
1912, one bay was removed
to enable electric trams
and trolley buses to turn
a sharp
corner.
The piece
depicts a lively market
day, the multiculturalism
of the present day and
the old cries of pick and
pay without delay. The
bells of St Mary’s
Church are depicted by a
cascading peel tuned to
the ten bells of the
church tower, and a
fleeting reference to
John Wainwright’s
famous Christmas hymn
Christians Awake, and the
Westminster chimes
striking the hour from St
Mary’s, bring to
piece to a conclusion.
Separate parts are
provided for recorder and
oboe.
Chamber Music String Quartet SKU: PR.114410380 Composed by Lowell Lieberm...(+)
Chamber Music String
Quartet
SKU:
PR.114410380
Composed
by Lowell Liebermann.
Saddle, Tape Junction.
Set of Score and Parts.
With Standard notation.
Composed 1998. Opus 60.
48 + 92 pages. Duration
30 minutes. Theodore
Presser Company
#114-41038. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.114410380).
UPC:
680160015160. 9.5 x 13
inches.
My second
String Quartet was
written twenty years
after the first, Opus 4
from 1978. The First
Quartet is an obsessively
contrapuntal work in one
movement, which was no
doubt influenced by my
studies with David
Diamond. I had always
intended to return to the
medium once I left the
astringency of my earlier
style, but it was only
when the National
Federation of Music Clubs
commissioned a major
chamber work, with
unspecified
instrumentation, to
celebrate their 100th
Anniversary that I was
enabled to do so. The
Second Quartet is in four
movements: Moderato,
Allegro isterico, an
Andante theme with 11
variations, and the
closing Allegro, which
then returns to the tempo
of the first movement. An
audience member at the
premiere told me that she
heard echoes of recent
tragic events such as the
Oklahoma bombing in this
work. While I had no such
programmatic intent while
writing the quartet, it
was not an entirely
incorrect assessment of
the work's intended
emotional impact. The
quartet is pervaded by a
sense of seriousness,
even mournfulness. The
second movement's scherzo
is an aggressively
animated piece of musical
machinery. The third
movement's Variations
unfold into a greater
variety of moods than the
others - but the moments
of lyricism are countered
by aggressive or ironic
outbursts. The final
movement's attempt at
triumph quickly subsides
into a return of the
first movement, before
being transformed onto a
sense of resignation and
acceptance as the
chromaticism of the
opening theme is
transformed into a pure
and diatonic C-Major. The
work received its world
premiere by the Shanghai
Quartet at the 100th
Anniversary Congress of
the National Federation
of Music Clubs at the
Congress Hotel in Chicago
on August 19th
1998. My second String
Quartet was written
twenty years after the
first, Opus 4 from
1978. The First
Quartet is an obsessively
contrapuntal work in one
movement, which was no
doubt influenced by my
studies with David
Diamond. I had always
intended to return to the
medium once I left the
astringency of my earlier
style, but it was only
when the National
Federation of Music Clubs
commissioned a major
chamber work, with
unspecified
instrumentation, to
celebrate their 100th
Anniversary that I was
enabled to do so.The
Second Quartet is in four
movements:Â Moderato,
Allegro isterico, an
Andante theme with 11
variations, and the
closing Allegro, which
then returns to the tempo
of the first movement.An
audience member at the
premiere told me that she
heard echoes of recent
tragic events such as the
Oklahoma bombing in this
work. While I had no
such programmatic intent
while writing the
quartet, it was not an
entirely incorrect
assessment of the
work’s intended
emotional impact. The
quartet is pervaded by a
sense of seriousness,
even mournfulness.Â
The second
movement’s scherzo
is an aggressively
animated piece of musical
machinery. The third
movement’s
Variations unfold into a
greater variety of moods
than the others –
but the moments of
lyricism are countered by
aggressive or ironic
outbursts. The final
movement’s attempt
at triumph quickly
subsides into a return of
the first movement,
before being transformed
onto a sense of
resignation and
acceptance as the
chromaticism of the
opening theme is
transformed into a pure
and diatonic C-Major.The
work received its world
premiere by the Shanghai
Quartet at the 100th
Anniversary Congress of
the National Federation
of Music Clubs at the
Congress Hotel in Chicago
on August 19th 1998.