| Tartan Tapestries Orchestre d'harmonie - Intermédiaire Carl Fischer
Band Bagpipes, Bass Clarinet, Bass Drum, Bassoon, Bells, Clarinet 1, Clarinet 2,...(+)
Band Bagpipes, Bass
Clarinet, Bass Drum,
Bassoon, Bells, Clarinet
1, Clarinet 2, Clarinet
3, Crash Cymbals, Double
Bass, Euphonium,
Euphonium T.C., Flute 1,
Flute 2, Horn 1, Horn 2,
Mallet Percussion, Mark
Tree, Oboe, Percussion 1,
Percussion 2 and more. -
Grade 3.5 SKU:
CF.CPS225 Composed by
Larry Clark. Concert Band
(CPS). Set of Score and
Parts. With Standard
notation.
12+12+6+12+24+24+6+4+6+6+
6+6+8+8+8+4+4+6+6+6+8+2+1
+6+2+4+10+32+4 pages.
Duration 6 minutes, 9
seconds. Carl Fischer
Music #CPS225. Published
by Carl Fischer Music
(CF.CPS225). ISBN
9781491152515. UPC:
680160910014. Tarta
n Tapestries is an
original piece that sets
out to emulate Scottish
folk music. Composer
Larry Clark has created a
concert overture in
triple meter to capture
the essence of music from
Scotland. After a lilting
first section, lush
and beautiful moments
weave a tapestry of
sounds with the lyrical,
middle section of the
piece. There is an
optional part for
bagpipes, and an optional
ending should you chose
to use this instrument as
part of the piece. Alert
your contest music
committee about this
strong new piece for
advancing
groups. Tartan
Tapestries was
commissioned by Friends
of the Arts for the Saint
Andrew's School Band in
Boca Raton,
Florida. The band
program at Saint
Andrew’s School is
under the direction of
Andrea Wolgin. The
premiere took place on
November 29, 2017.When I
was asked by their
conductor Ms. Wolgin to
write a piece for the
Saint Andrew’s
School, I asked her what
kind of involvement she
wanted the students to
have in the process. We
discussed several options
for having the students
involved in the process
of creating with the type
of piece they wanted.Â
We set up a
“Skypeâ€
meeting with members of
the band to discuss the
piece. During this
discussion, the consensus
of the students was that
they wanted a piece
depicting the Scottish
influence to the
school. They also
wanted a piece that would
challenge all sections of
the band and to include
bagpipes if possible. I
asked that the students
be involved in helping to
name the piece once it
was completed, for which
they agreed and were very
helpful. Armed with
this information, I set
out to compose a piece
for them, and Tartan
Tapestries is the
result.The piece begins
with a fanfare gesture
based upon rhythms and
harmonies that appear
throughout the piece. I
chose the lilting triple
feel to the piece, to
bring about the Scottish
flavor. I wanted the
fanfare to be bardic
sounding, to depict the
strength of the Scottish
people and for the piece
to have a dynamic
opening. The fanfare
contains material that
alludes to the main theme
and with a bit of
dissonance and tension
that is resolved in the
main body of the
piece.The main theme is a
lilting original melody,
but one that I hope with
have the essence of
Scottish folk songs. The
main idea is followed by
a more modal and dark
sounding secondary theme,
first stated in the
horns. This material
is later used in the
development section of
the piece. The main
theme returns several
times, with different and
varied orchestrations and
harmonic treatments. This
is followed by a short
transition leading to the
more lyrical and slower
second section of the
piece. A transparent
presentation of the
lyrical theme, which is
based on aspects of the
main theme, is presented
first by a solo flute.
This section is a nod to
famous composer Malcom
Arnold’s wonderful
works for orchestra in
its style and
orchestration. After a
transition or bridge
section with a solo
euphonium, the piece
builds to a dramatic
climax of the lyrical
theme by the full band.
This subsides to a return
of the solo flute to end
this second section of
the piece, followed by a
transition back the main
theme.The solo bagpipes
play a central role in
the return of the main
theme and take center
stage after being heard
in the distance earlier
in the work. The piece
brings back a shortened
version of the darker
secondary theme, followed
by a hint of the fanfare
material that builds to
one last statement of the
main theme by the full
band, before leading to a
dramatic coda to complete
the work.It has been my
pleasure to have been
given the opportunity to
compose this piece for
the Saint Andrew’s
School Band! I thank
Andrea Wolgin for making
it happen, and I hope
that you enjoy it as much
as I have enjoyed
bringing the piece to
life.–Larry
ClarkLakeland, Florida
2017. $95.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Tartan Tapestries Orchestre d'harmonie - Intermédiaire Carl Fischer
Band Bagpipes, Bass Clarinet, Bass Drum, Bassoon, Bells, Clarinet 1, Clarinet 2,...(+)
Band Bagpipes, Bass
Clarinet, Bass Drum,
Bassoon, Bells, Clarinet
1, Clarinet 2, Clarinet
3, Crash Cymbals, Double
Bass, Euphonium,
Euphonium T.C., Flute 1,
Flute 2, Horn 1, Horn 2,
Mallet Percussion, Mark
Tree, Oboe, Percussion 1,
Percussion 2 and more. -
Grade 3.5 SKU:
CF.CPS225F Composed
by Larry Clark. Concert
Band (CPS). Full score.
With Standard notation.
32 pages. Carl Fischer
Music #CPS225F. Published
by Carl Fischer Music
(CF.CPS225F). ISBN
9781491153192. UPC:
680160910694. Tarta
n Tapestries is an
original piece that sets
out to emulate Scottish
folk music. Composer
Larry Clark has created a
concert overture in
triple meter to capture
the essence of music from
Scotland. After a lilting
first section, lush
and beautiful moments
weave a tapestry of
sounds with the lyrical,
middle section of the
piece. There is an
optional part for
bagpipes, and an optional
ending should you chose
to use this instrument as
part of the piece. Alert
your contest music
committee about this
strong new piece for
advancing
groups. Tartan
Tapestries was
commissioned by Friends
of the Arts for the Saint
Andrew's School Band in
Boca Raton,
Florida. The band
program at Saint
Andrew’s School is
under the direction of
Andrea Wolgin. The
premiere took place on
November 29, 2017.When I
was asked by their
conductor Ms. Wolgin to
write a piece for the
Saint Andrew’s
School, I asked her what
kind of involvement she
wanted the students to
have in the process. We
discussed several options
for having the students
involved in the process
of creating with the type
of piece they wanted.Â
We set up a
“Skypeâ€
meeting with members of
the band to discuss the
piece. During this
discussion, the consensus
of the students was that
they wanted a piece
depicting the Scottish
influence to the
school. They also
wanted a piece that would
challenge all sections of
the band and to include
bagpipes if possible. I
asked that the students
be involved in helping to
name the piece once it
was completed, for which
they agreed and were very
helpful. Armed with
this information, I set
out to compose a piece
for them, and Tartan
Tapestries is the
result.The piece begins
with a fanfare gesture
based upon rhythms and
harmonies that appear
throughout the piece. I
chose the lilting triple
feel to the piece, to
bring about the Scottish
flavor. I wanted the
fanfare to be bardic
sounding, to depict the
strength of the Scottish
people and for the piece
to have a dynamic
opening. The fanfare
contains material that
alludes to the main theme
and with a bit of
dissonance and tension
that is resolved in the
main body of the
piece.The main theme is a
lilting original melody,
but one that I hope with
have the essence of
Scottish folk songs. The
main idea is followed by
a more modal and dark
sounding secondary theme,
first stated in the
horns. This material
is later used in the
development section of
the piece. The main
theme returns several
times, with different and
varied orchestrations and
harmonic treatments. This
is followed by a short
transition leading to the
more lyrical and slower
second section of the
piece. A transparent
presentation of the
lyrical theme, which is
based on aspects of the
main theme, is presented
first by a solo flute.
This section is a nod to
famous composer Malcom
Arnold’s wonderful
works for orchestra in
its style and
orchestration. After a
transition or bridge
section with a solo
euphonium, the piece
builds to a dramatic
climax of the lyrical
theme by the full band.
This subsides to a return
of the solo flute to end
this second section of
the piece, followed by a
transition back the main
theme.The solo bagpipes
play a central role in
the return of the main
theme and take center
stage after being heard
in the distance earlier
in the work. The piece
brings back a shortened
version of the darker
secondary theme, followed
by a hint of the fanfare
material that builds to
one last statement of the
main theme by the full
band, before leading to a
dramatic coda to complete
the work.It has been my
pleasure to have been
given the opportunity to
compose this piece for
the Saint Andrew’s
School Band! I thank
Andrea Wolgin for making
it happen, and I hope
that you enjoy it as much
as I have enjoyed
bringing the piece to
life.–Larry
ClarkLakeland, Florida
2017. $14.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Arab Dance Big band [Conducteur et Parties séparées] Jazz Lines Publications
By Claude Thornhill. Edited by Jeffrey Sultanof. Arranged by Gil Evans. For Big ...(+)
By Claude Thornhill.
Edited by Jeffrey
Sultanof. Arranged by Gil
Evans. For Big Band.
Swing. Advanced. Full
score and set of parts.
Published by Jazz Lines
Publications
$85.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Festival March Orchestre d'harmonie - Avancé Carl Fischer
Band Bass Clarinet, Bass Drum, Bassoon, Clarinet 1, Clarinet 2, Clarinet 3, Cymb...(+)
Band Bass Clarinet, Bass
Drum, Bassoon, Clarinet
1, Clarinet 2, Clarinet
3, Cymbals, Euphonium,
Euphonium T.C., Flute 1,
Flute 2, Horn 1, Horn 2,
Horn 3, Horn 4, Oboe,
Percussion 1, Percussion
2, Piccolo, Snare Drum,
Timpani, Triangle,
Trombone 1 and more. -
Grade 5 SKU:
CF.SPS78F Composed by
Victor Herbert. Symphonic
Band (SPS). Full score.
With Standard notation.
40 pages. Carl Fischer
Music #SPS78F. Published
by Carl Fischer Music
(CF.SPS78F). ISBN
9781491153239. UPC:
680160910731. Festi
val March is presented in
a new edition arranged by
Richard Summers. It is a
tour de force composition
for advanced bands and
hearkens back to a bygone
era during the golden age
of the band movement.
Directors and students
will hear operatic music
from composer Victor
Herbert who is best known
for his Christmas
classic, Toyland. This
is a richly scored
masterpiece that deserves
to return to standard
status in concert band
repertoire. We are proud
to bring you this new
setting of this cherished
classic. About the
CompositionFestival March
by Victor Herbert was
written for the
Pittsburgh Symphony and
first performed under
Herbert’s
direction in Chicago on
Dec. 9, 1901 celebrating
the 12th anniversary
of Chicago’s
Auditorium Theatre. Also
known as the Auditorium
Festival March, he
included it many times
for programs of a
festival nature. The main
theme Auld Lang Syne, a
famous Scottish folk
song, is incorporated
many times along with
brass fanfares,
interludes and march
melodies. This band
arrangement is very
similar to the original
orchestral composition.
The missing string parts,
the addition of the
saxophone section and
other band instruments,
editing of the
superimposed triplets
against
sixteenth notes, to
one or the other, and
articulations suitable
for the band, were major
challenges. The style of
early twentieth-century
American music is
captured here. This
arrangement will give
band musicians access to
a fine piece of music
that could only be
appreciated by orchestra
musicians up to now.
Although suitable for
many occasions, this
piece is a great way to
begin or end a December
holiday concert.
 Notes to the
ConductorVictor
Herbert’s music
can be interpreted in a
romantic style, which is
the conductor’s
responsibility to read in
nuance and musicality.
The beginning and other
triple-tonguing sections
of this piece have a
March of the Toys quality
to it. Â The interludes
and Auld Lang Syne
sections are legato and
musical. The March
sections can also be
shaped musically.About
the ComposerVictor
Herbert was born in
Ireland in 1861 and
raised in Germany. When
he moved to America in
1886, he joined the
Metropolitan Opera as
principal cellist and
eventually composed many
works including
forty-three operettas
on Broadway from the
1890s to World War I,
including Naughty
Marietta and Babes in
Toyland. Victor Herbert
conducted the Pittsburgh
Symphony from 1898 to
1904 and then was the
conductor of his own
Victor Herbert Orchestra.
He formed ASCAP with a
group of composers in
1914 and was the director
until his death in 1924.
Among his thirty-one
compositions for
orchestra, Festival March
was a favorite of his and
was eventually published
by Carl Fischer Music.
 . $15.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Golden Winds Sc/pts Full Score Orchestre d'harmonie - Intermédiaire Anglo Music
Concert Band/Harmonie (Score) - Grade 3 SKU: HL.44012269 Composed by Phil...(+)
Concert Band/Harmonie
(Score) - Grade 3 SKU:
HL.44012269 Composed
by Philip Sparke. Anglo
Music Concert Band. Score
Only. Composed 2014.
Anglo Music Press
#AMP372-140. Published by
Anglo Music Press
(HL.44012269). UPC:
888680057640.
9.0x12.0x0.118 inches.
English-German-French-Dut
ch. Golden
Winds was
commissioned by
Jugendblasorchester
Schramberg, Germany, to
celebrate their 50th
anniversary in 2012. They
gave the premiere,
conducted by Andreas
Hirt, at their Christmas
concert that year.The
work opens with a
nervously energetic theme
in the lower woodwinds,
which is developed in
canon and builds to
climax for the whole
band. The mood subsides
to introduce a meditative
section featuring first
the clarinets and then a
rich, chorale-like theme
which grows into a
passionate tutti. This
then leads to the main
body of the piece, a
rhythmic vivo, which
introduces its main theme
quietly before it is
taken up by the full
band. A brief bridge
passage thenintroduces a
muscular second subject
which develops until the
bridge passage reappears
to lead to a repeat of
the main theme. This is
transformed to herald a
return of the opening
bars of the piece, which
now bring the work to a
celebratory close.
Golden
Winds werd geschreven
in opdracht van het
Jugendblasorchester
Schramberg uit Duitsland,
dat in 2012 zijn
vijftigjarig bestaan
vierde. Het orkest bracht
het werk in premiere
tijdens het kerstconcert
van het jubileumjaar,
onder leiding van
dirigent Andreas Hirt.De
compositie begint met een
koortsachtig, energiek
thema in het lage hout.
Dit ontvouwt zich
vervolgens tot een canon,
die uitmondt in een door
het complete orkest
uitgevoerd hoogtepunt. De
muziek wordt rustiger van
sfeer en er ontwikkelt
zich een meditatieve
passage, aanvankelijk
gespeeld door de
klarinetten, waarna een
rijk, koraalachtig thema
uitgroeit tot een
gepassioneerd tutti. Het
centralegedeelte van het
werk, een ritmisch vivo,
introduceert het
hoofdthema, eerst
zachtjes en dan
weerklinkend in het hele
orkest. Een kort fragment
leidt een krachtig tweede
motief in, waarop wordt
voortgebouwd totdat de
bridgepassage opnieuw
opduikt en ons meevoert
naar een herhaling van
het hoofdthema. Dat
ondergaat een
transformatie en kondigt
dan de terugkeer van de
openingsmaten aan,
waarmee het werk op
feestelijke wijze wordt
afgesloten.
Golden
Winds wurde zum
50-jahrigen Jubilaum des
Jugendblasorchesters
Schramberg in Auftrag
gegeben. Die Premiere
fand beim
Weihnachtskonzert
selbigen Jahres unter der
Leitung von Andreas Hirt
statt.Das Werk setzt mit
einem Thema voll
gespannter Energie in den
tiefen Holzblasern ein,
das kanonisch
weiterentwickelt wird und
sich zu einem Hohepunkt
fur das gesamte Orchester
aufbaut. Diese Stimmung
klingt ab zugunsten eines
meditativen Abschnitts,
der zunachst die
Klarinetten in den
Vordergrund ruckt und
dann ein volltonendes,
choralartiges Thema, das
zu einem
leidenschaftlichen Tutti
anschwillt. Dieses fuhrt
zum Hauptteil des
Stuckes, einem
rhythmischen Vivo, das
seinHauptthema leise
vorstellt, bevor es vom
gesamten Orchester
aufgenommen wird. Eine
kurze Uberleitung
prasentiert ein
kraftvolles zweites
Thema, das
weiterentwickelt wird bis
die Uberleitung
zuruckkehrt und die
Wiederholung des
Hauptthemas bewirkt.
Dieses verwandelt sich in
eine Ankundigung der
Eroffnungstakte, die das
Werk nun zu einem
festlichen Schluss
fuhren.
Golden
Winds est une
commande de l'Harmonie
des Jeunes de Schramberg,
en Allemagne, pour
marquer son
cinquantenaire en 2012.
L'orchestre a cree cette
piece sous la direction
d'Andreas Hirt lors de
son concert de Noel la
meme annee.La piece
s'ouvre sur un theme
nerveux et energique joue
dans le registre grave
des bois qui se developpe
en canon et s'amplifie
pour arriver a un climax
avec l'orchestre entier.
L'ambiance s'apaise pour
introduire un passage
contemplatif qui met en
avant d'abord les
clarinettes, puis un
theme opulent en forme de
choral qui se transforme
en un tutti ardent.
Celui-ci mene au corps de
la piece, un vivo rythme
qui introduit doucement
son themeprincipal avant
une reprise par
l'orchestre entier. Un
court passage de
transition introduit
alors un second sujet
muscle qui se developpe
jusqu'a la reapparition
du passage de transition
pour mener a une reprise
du theme principal. Ce
theme se transforme pour
annoncer le retour des
premieres mesures de la
piece, qui menent a une
conclusion festive. $33.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| 371 4-part Chorales E Flat Part 3 Orchestre d'harmonie [Partie séparée] - Intermédiaire De Haske Publications
Part 3 Eb Alto Clarinet HOrn. By Hans Algra. By Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750...(+)
Part 3 Eb Alto Clarinet
HOrn. By Hans Algra. By
Johann Sebastian Bach
(1685-1750). Edited by
Hans Algra. De Haske
Ensemble. Classical.
Individual part. Composed
2000. 76 pages. De Haske
Publications
#1001947-711. Published
by De Haske Publications
$16.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
1 |