Sona
ta No. 6 Kharkiv for
guitar solo was composed
in 2021, in the end of
the COVID-19 lockdown. At
that time my family and I
were staying in our home
city of Kharkiv (also
known as Kharkov),
Ukraine for almost two
years. We considered that
pandemic period as a
disaster, but later have
realized that it actually
was a rather happy time,
because a war came to our
homeland just a few
months later. Since 2022
a considerable fraction
of the 1.5 millions of
Kharkiv citizens have
left their homes, those
who stayed have been
living under ceaseless
missile attacks, and many
have been killed. I would
like to dedicate this
Sonata to the frontier
city of Kharkiv and, most
of all, to its citizens
suffering from the
war. Yet, the music of
the Sonata does not have
any specific program.
Here I will give a brief
overview of its main
composition elements to
facilitate future
interpretations. The
first and fourth
movements of this Sonata
are based on the
interplay between the
twelve-tone principle and
the G-major tonal center,
natural for the guitar.
Namely, the first
movement is based on the
interaction of the
G-major triad Gâ??Bâ??D
of the open guitar
strings 2â??3â??4,
ascending motif 1
involving the notes
Eâ??F#â??Aâ??C#
(originally on the first
string), and descending
motif 2 using the notes
E-â??Câ??Bbâ??A-
(originally, on the bass
string 6). These elements
supplement each other to
almost make up twelve
tones (apart from the
missing F), and the
motifs alternate with
ostinato fragments where
each note in the G major
triad is step-by-step
moved by a semitone up or
down. The second
movement is a Scherzo
involving numerous
semitones in accented
chords and fast passages,
as well as chromatic
melodic motion in the
bass voice. It is almost
atonal in some fragments,
but has an overall tonal
center of A-minor. The
third movement is a
meditative Adagio based
on a theme composed
within hexatonic scale
Dâ??Eâ??Fâ??G#â??Aâ?
?B and ostinato chords
involving open bass
strings Eâ??Aâ??D and
semitone
Bâ??C. Finally, the
fourth movement is based
on the complete
twelve-tone theme
consisting of two phrases
including motifs 1 and 2
from the first movement:
Gâ??Fâ??Bbâ??Abâ??Câ
??Ebâ??D and
Eâ??Bâ??C#â??Aâ??F#.
This theme is presented
in its prime and
retrograde forms. There
are dialogues between the
first string, basses and
open middle strings,
similar to the first
movement. In the
culmination, the
twelve-tone theme is
performed using the
parallel motion of the
standard guitar G-major
chord with open middle
strings across twelve
positions. The Sonata
was premiered and
recorded (CD Naxos No.
8.574630) by the
prominent Ukrainian
guitarist Marko Topchii
who has also lived and
studied in Kharkiv. I am
extremely grateful to him
for the brilliant
performance of this
piece. I am greatly
indebted to Productions
dâ??Oz for keeping my
original notations in
places where these do not
conform to the
publisherâ??s style.
Choral SATB Choir and Piano SKU: PR.312418770 No. 1 from Second April<...(+)
Choral SATB Choir and
Piano
SKU:
PR.312418770
No. 1
from Second April.
Composed by Eric Ewazen.
Octavo. Performance
Score. Theodore Presser
Company #312-41877.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.312418770).
ISBN
9781491138120. UPC:
680160640195. Second
April, by Edna St.
Vincent
Millay.
Second
April for S.A.T.B. Chorus
and Piano is a
four-movement set, based
on the poetry of Edna St.
Vincent Millay. Ewazen
has long been enamored
with her poetry's
wonderfully vivid and
descriptive imagery of
nature and emotions, and
its powerful and profound
meaning. The first
movement, SONG OF A
SECOND APRIL is dramatic,
detailing a time of
personal strife and
tragedy, perhaps the end
of a relationship or even
the end of a life. The
music is intense, fast,
in a minor key, creating
a feeling of powerful,
relentless emotions.
Little by little, the
music almost dies away,
getting quieter and
quieter, creating a
feeling of resignation,
but with a surprise
Picardy Third in the
final chord –
suggesting a bit of
hope!. SECOND APRIL
for S.A.T.B. Chorus and
Piano is a four-movement
set, based on the poetry
of Edna St. Vincent
Millay. I have long been
enamored with the poetry
of Millay for its
wonderfully vivid and
descriptive imagery, and
its often powerful and
profound meaning.
Millay’s descriptions
of nature, and of
feelings and emotions,
have always spoken to me.
SECOND APRIL consists of
four of her poems, each
with a distinctive mood,
message, and emotional
feel. They are vivid,
powerful, and beautiful,
inspiring me to capture
these descriptions of the
various scenes she
portrays. Song of a
Second April uses music
to underlie strong
feelings, passions, and
the tragedies of life.
The poem itself is
dramatic, detailing a
time of personal strife
and tragedy, perhaps the
end of a relationship or
even the end of a life.
The music is intense,
fast, in a minor key, and
with rapid, spinning
notes creating a feeling
of powerful, relentless
emotions. Melodies,
motives, and gestures are
tossed between the
voices, increasing the
feelings of intensity and
even desperation. Little
by little, the music
almost dies away, getting
quieter and quieter,
creating a feeling of
resignation, but with a
Picardy Third in the
final chord – maybe a
bit of hope! Mariposa
is a celebration of
nature, wandering through
a field with white and
blue butterflies
appearing almost
wondrously. But there’s
also a profound feeling
of poignancy, noting that
as one relishes such a
beautiful, magical sight,
they should embrace the
experience – the
fleeting, transient
nature of such a perfect
vision and of life
itself. The music
portrays the flying of
the butterflies: gentle,
beautiful, with rich
chords and arpeggios, but
stepping back, as the
fleeting nature of life
is the reality, with
gentle, but sombre chords
interspersed with the
magical flight of the
Mariposa.Alms is a fast
rondo, intense, bold, and
always dance-like. It is
about both tragedy and
resilience. This music is
also in minor, yet with
moments of playfulness,
as a recollection of
happy times or moments
takes over. This seesaw
between emotions is heard
throughout the movement,
as the music continues to
“dance.” And with
Millay’s summing up of
“reality being what it
is,” the piece ends
with strength, boldness,
and finality. Into the
Golden Vessel of Great
Song is an appassionato
call to overcome! The
poem exhorts us to
“sing out” with hope,
determination, and
strength. The music is
full of bright and
lilting energy; but as
the turmoil and times of
strife people can
sometimes feel or
experience, the music
becomes intense,
dramatic, in a minor key,
and with changing
rhythms. BUT, there is a
return to championing the
idea of simply
overcoming, going forward
with hope and
determination, and the
music is in major,
resonant and strong.
.
Cantata
for the 1st Sunday in
Advent. Composed by
Johann Sebastian Bach.
Edited by Reinhold Kubik.
Arranged by Paul Horn.
Coppenrath series, Hymns
by Martin Luther: Nun
komm, der Heiden Heiland.
German title: Nun Komm
Der Heiden Heiland Ii.
Sacred vocal music,
Cantatas, Advent,
Christmas. Single Part,
Violin 2. Composed 1724.
BWV 62. 12 pages.
Duration 23 minutes.
Carus Verlag #CV
31.062/12. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3106212).
ISBN
9790007043629. Key: B
minor. Language:
German/English. Text:
Luther, Martin. Text:
Martin
Luther.
Bach's
second cantata starting
with the text Come now,
God's chosen saviour (II)
BWV 62 was first
performed in 1724 on the
1st Advent Sunday (which,
at that time, was the
only Advent Sunday with
church music in Leipzig)
and belongs to the annual
cycle of chorale
cantatas. As was usual
for chorale cantatas, the
unknown librettist used
the first and last verses
of Martin Luther's hymn
verbatim for the opening
chorus and the concluding
chorale but adapted the
texts of the inner
verses. After two
contrasting arias - the
one dance-like, the
second almost heroic - an
almost enraptured
accompagnato (Wir ehren
diese Herrlichtkeit, und
nahen nun zu deiner
Krippen), in which the
soprano and contralto
mostly sing in parallel
thirds and sixths, leads
to a simple concluding
chorale. Score and part
available separately -
see item CA.3106200.
Quintet (2vl,2va,vc) SKU: BR.PB-5655-07 Urtext based on the Leipzig Me...(+)
Quintet (2vl,2va,vc)
SKU: BR.PB-5655-07
Urtext based on the
Leipzig Mendelssohn
Complete Edition.
Composed by Felix
Bartholdy Mendelssohn.
Edited by Clemens
Harasim. Chamber music;
Softbound.
Partitur-Bibliothek
(Score Library).
Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy
devoted to the
string-quintet genre only
two works sharing quite a
few formal and musical
similarities, though they
were composed almost two
decades apart.
Romantic period. Study
Score. 192 pages.
Breitkopf and Haertel #PB
5655-07. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.PB-5655-07).
ISBN
9790004215524. 6.5 x 9
inches.
In view of
Mendelssohn's strong
revising obsession, the
quintets pose some
challenges to the editor:
in the A-major quintet,
after he replaced an
inner movement and
switched the order of the
movements from the early
version, a somewhat
recognizable final
version was published in
1833; the B flat-major
quintet underwent several
further rounds of
revision after its
provisional conclusion in
1845, presumably
extending into the year
of the composer's death
(1847). The set of parts
includes beside the
second string quintet in
B flat major both the
complete early version as
well as the complete
published version of the
first quintet in A major,
so that both versions can
be played as independent
works. Appearing
alongside the parts
edition to facilitate
further engagement with
the music text is also a
study score.
Felix
Mendelssohn Bartholdy
devoted to the
string-quintet genre only
two works sharing quite a
few formal and musical
similarities, though they
were composed almost two
decades apart.
The Groove Book Basse electrique [Partition + Accès audio] Mel Bay
A Study in Musical Styles for Bass. Composed by Marc Ensign. Saddle-stitched...(+)
A Study in Musical Styles
for
Bass. Composed by Marc
Ensign. Saddle-stitched.
Rock. Book and online
audio.
40 pages. Mel Bay
Publications, Inc
#96868M.
Published by Mel Bay
Publications, Inc
Rhenish Symphony - Urtext. Composed by Robert Schumann. Edited by Joachim...(+)
Rhenish Symphony -
Urtext. Composed by
Robert Schumann. Edited
by Joachim Draheim.
Symphony.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library). The
5 study scores of the
symphonies (incl. early
version of the 4th
symphony) in slipcase are
temporarily out of print.
The single editions are,
however, still available.
Romantic. Violoncello
part. Breitkopf and
Haertel #OB 5263-23.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.OB-5263-23).
0.48
Parts. Composed by
Poul Ruders. Music Sales
America. Classical.
Softcover. 34 pages.
Music Sales #KP00246.
Published by Music Sales
(HL.14028046).
ISBN
9788759859377.
9.5x14.25x0.12 inches.
International (more than
one
language).
Score
available: KP00247 Ruders
writes: Quartet No. 3
Motet was written in
1979, commissioned by the
Lerchenborg music-week of
1979 during which it was
first performed by
Quatuor Bernede. This
short one-movement
quartet is a kind of
modernization of the 14th
century French motets, a
cadeau to this weird and
fantastic music whose
abstract and almost
deprecatory, introvert
expression appears
unaccountably modern and
incredibly ancient at the
same time. Motet is a
sober, cool treatise on
rhythm and statics,
depicted in a Gothic,
crypt-like atmosphere.
The almost completely
non-vibrato movement is
suggestive of boys'
choir, monks'
processions, and the
piercing sound of musical
glasses. An ancient world
is reborn and becomes the
world of today.
Cantata
for the 1st Sunday in
Advent. Composed by
Johann Sebastian Bach.
Edited by Reinhold Kubik.
Arranged by Paul Horn.
This edition: Paperbound.
Coppenrath series, Hymns
by Martin Luther: Nun
komm, der Heiden Heiland.
German title: Nun Komm
Der Heiden Heiland Ii.
Sacred vocal music,
Cantatas, Advent,
Christmas. Study score.
Composed 1724. BWV 62. 56
pages. Duration 23
minutes. Carus Verlag #CV
31.062/07. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3106207).
ISBN
9790007043599. Key: B
minor. Language:
German/English. Text:
Luther, Martin. Text:
Martin
Luther.
Bach's
second cantata starting
with the text Come now,
God's chosen saviour (II)
BWV 62 was first
performed in 1724 on the
1st Advent Sunday (which,
at that time, was the
only Advent Sunday with
church music in Leipzig)
and belongs to the annual
cycle of chorale
cantatas. As was usual
for chorale cantatas, the
unknown librettist used
the first and last verses
of Martin Luther's hymn
verbatim for the opening
chorus and the concluding
chorale but adapted the
texts of the inner
verses. After two
contrasting arias - the
one dance-like, the
second almost heroic - an
almost enraptured
accompagnato (Wir ehren
diese Herrlichtkeit, und
nahen nun zu deiner
Krippen), in which the
soprano and contralto
mostly sing in parallel
thirds and sixths, leads
to a simple concluding
chorale. Score available
separately - see item
CA.3106200.
Clarinet and Piano. Composed by Philip Sparke (1951-). Arranged by Philip Sparke...(+)
Clarinet and Piano.
Composed by Philip Sparke
(1951-). Arranged by
Philip Sparke. Anglo
Instrumental series.
Educational Tool. Book
[Softcover]. Composed
2004. 40 pages. Anglo
Music Press #AMP 130-401.
Published by Anglo Music
Press
Composed
by Bose. This edition:
Saddle stitching. Sheet
music. Edition Schott.
Score and Parts. Composed
1989/1990. 164 pages.
Duration 28'. Schott
Music #AVV 153. Published
by Schott Music
(HL.49020925).
ISBN
9790200101270.
The
first movement is
characterized by the
interplay between a
delicate, almost fragile
theme and its extremely
harsh development. The
second is melodic and the
third tonally repetitive.
The finale almost seems
to seek the introductory
theme, but quickly
fades.
Composed by John Ireland.
Band Music. Score and
parts. Duration 10:30.
Published by G & M Brand
Music Publishers
(CN.R10004).
A
slow introduction gives
way to the chirpy theme
which is developed,
inverted, and accents
displaced across the bar
line to give a 3/2 feel
against the written
meter. Restlessness leads
to a tranquillo presented
by the flute and
clarinet, weaving a
flowing counterpoint
around the melody until
the original slow
introduction returns. A
triumphant recapitulation
of the main theme brings
this wonderful piece to
an end.
Originally
composed for Brass Band
in 1934 Comedy Overture
is, despite its name, a
serious piece of writing.
The term Overture does
not imply that there is
anything else to follow;
it is used in the 19th
century sense of Concert
Overture (like
Mendelssohn's Fingal's
Cave - in other words, a
miniature Tone Poem). The
1930's was a period of
Ireland's mature writing
- yielding the Piano
Concerto (1930), the
Legend for piano and
orchestra (1933), and the
choral work These Things
Shall Be (1936-1937). We
are fortunate therefore
to have both Comedy
Overture and A Downland
Suite (1932) written for
band medium at this time.
As with Maritime Overture
(written in 1944 for
military band) Ireland
approaches his material
symphonically. The
opening three notes state
immediately the two
seminal intervals of a
semitone and a third.
These are brooding and
dark in Bb minor. It is
these intervals which
make up much of the
thematic content of
Comedy, sometimes
appearing in inverted
form, and sometimes in
major forms as well. The
concept that some musical
intervals are consonant ,
some dissonant, and some
perfect is perhaps useful
in understanding the
nature of the tension and
resolution of this work.
The third is inherently
unstable, and by bar 4,
the interval is expanded
to a fourth - with an
ascending sem-quaver
triplet - and then
expanded to a fifth. The
instability of the third
pushes it towards a
perfect resolution in the
fourth or the fifth. The
slow introduction is
built entirely around
these intervals in Bb
minor and leads through
an oboe cadenza, to an
Allegro moderato
brillante in Bb major.
Once again, the semi-tone
(inverted) and a third
(major) comprise the
main, chirpy,
theme-inspired by a
London bus-conductor's
cry of Piccadilly. (Much
of the material in Comedy
was re-conceived by
Ireland for orchestra and
published two years later
under the title A London
Overture.) The expansion
of the interval of a
third through a fourth,
fifth, sixth, and seventh
now takes place quickly
before our very ears at
the outset of this
quicker section.
Immediately the theme is
developed, inverted, and
accents displaced across
the bar line to give a
3/2 feel against the
written meter. But this
restlessness leads to a
tranquillo built around
an arpeggio figure and
presented by flute and
clarinet. Ireland weaves
his flowing counterpoint
around this melody until
the original slow
introduction returns
leading to a stretto
effect as the rising bass
motifs become more
urgent, requesting a
resolution of the tension
of that original semitone
and minor third. Yet
resolution is withheld at
this point as the music
becomes almost becalmed
in a further, unrelated
tranquillo section marked
pianissimo. It is almost
as if another side of
Ireland's nature is
briefly allowed to shine
through the stern
counterpoint and
disciplined structure.
This leads to virtually a
full recapitulation of
the chirpy brilliante,
with small additional
touches of counterpoint,
followed by the first
tranquillo section-this
time in the tonic of Bb
major. But the
instability of the third
re-asserts itself, this
time demanding a
resolution. And a
triumphant resolution it
receives, for it finally
becomes fully fledged and
reiterates the octave in
a closing vivace. The
opening tension has at
last resolved itself into
the most perfect interval
of all.
Chorus (with soloists) and piano (solos: SAATBB - choir: SSAATB - 2rec.B-fl.2.0....(+)
Chorus (with soloists)
and piano (solos: SAATBB
- choir: SSAATB -
2rec.B-fl.2.0.0. -
0.2.0.0. - timp - str -
bc)
SKU:
BR.ED-10296
Hail!
Bright Cecilia.
Composed by Henry
Purcell. Edited by
Christopher Hogwood.
Choir; stapled.
Renaissance/early
Baroque; Baroque.
Piano/Vocal Score. 80
pages. Duration 60'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #ED
10296. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.ED-10296).
ISBN
9790220101977. 7.5 x 11
inches.
The Ode was
admirably set by Mr.
Henry Purcell, and
performed twice with
universal applause.
(The Gentlemen's
Journal, 1692)
The
popularity of Purcell's
setting is apparent from
the many sources that
survive and from the
printed extracts which
appeared almost
immediately after its
first performance. The
primary source for this
edition is the largely
autograph manuscript in
the Bodleian Library.
Rather to reduce the
orthography to a norm,
the capitalization of the
vocal text favours
Purcell's
preferences. (Christop
her Hogwood)
Vokalensemble Stuttgart
und den Kammerchor des
Kopernikus-Gymnasiums
Wasseralfingen. Fur diese
beiden ganz
unterschiedlichen
Chorformationen hat
Martin Smolka 2012 auch
gezielt seine Partitur
angelegt. Biografisch ist
das Agnus Dei eine Art
kleines Requiem fur
seinen kurz zuvor
verstorbenen Vater. Das
liturgische Agnus Dei
rahmt den deutschen Text
Eh das Madchen entschlief
... der bei Auffuhrungen
in anderen Landern durch
eine Ubersetzung ersetzt
werden soll.
Der
SWR-Redakteur Hans-Peter
Jahn schreibt dazu im
Programmheft: Die fur
Smolka typischen
minimalistischen
Taktzellen schaffen eine
archaische Sinnlichkeit.
Eine einfache und
zugleich streng gebaute
Vokalmusik mit
Tiefenwirkung.
Nac
h der Urauffuhrung war
die Esslinger Zeitung
hellauf begeistert:
Smolka ist ein Meister
der Stimmbehandlung und
der chorischen
Klanggestaltung. Im
Zentrum des Stucks gerat
die Musik zum Stillstand:
im leisen gleichmassigen
Summen uber dem plotzlich
fortissimo ein
tschechisches Kinderlied
erklingt eines das der
Vater seinen Kindern
haufig vorgesungen hat.
Das alles war sehr
beruhrend. Und eigentlich
noch mehr als das. My
father PhDr. Jaroslav
Smolka (1933-2011) was a
leading Czech
musicologist author of
books Czech Cantata and
Oratorium Fuga in Czech
Music Smetana's Orchestra
Music Smetana's Vocal
Music monography of Jan
Dismas Zelenka and many
others. He was a
legendary teacher of
Music History at Prague
Music Academy critic
recording producer
composer; for almost 50
years he was an important
and highly respected
personality of Prague
musical life. My
father devoted a lot of
time and energy to
musical education and
activities of my sister
and me using often quite
original methods such as
teaching of intervals and
counterpoint through
Bartok's Microcosmos ear
training filling all
imaginable moments of
everyday life or lessons
of harmony analysis
starting with Overture to
Tristan and Musorgsky's
Catacombs. The Martinu
song Wondering Maiden was
his solo number in our
home vocal productions
which he used to sing
with amazing devotion
while his huge voice was
audible in several
neighboring
streets. My Agnus Dei
is closely bound to all
this history e.g. by
using canon and
preferring beauty of
dissonant seconds like
Bartok or quoting Martinu
and his refined
neoclassical harmony.
Father would be probably
a bit critical about the
minimalistic monotony of
the main body of the
piece. Nevertheless
firstly he would
improvise a short lecture
of history of Agnus Dei
in Requiem in Czech Music
naming by heart many
dates and all examples of
changes of order of the
traditional text by
composers. Examples would
be sung
probably. (Martin
Smolka).
Choral SATB Choir and Piano SKU: PR.312418800 No. 4 from Second April<...(+)
Choral SATB Choir and
Piano
SKU:
PR.312418800
No. 4
from Second April.
Composed by Eric Ewazen.
Octavo. Performance
Score. Theodore Presser
Company #312-41880.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.312418800).
ISBN
9781491138151. UPC:
680160640225. Second
April, by Edna St.
Vincent
Millay.
Second
April for S.A.T.B. Chorus
and Piano is a
four-movement set, based
on the poetry of Edna St.
Vincent Millay. Ewazen
has long been enamored
with her poetry's
wonderfully vivid and
descriptive imagery of
nature and emotions, and
its powerful and profound
meaning. The final
movement, INTO THE GOLDEN
VESSEL OF GREAT SONG is
an appassionato call to
overcome! The poem
exhorts us to “sing
out” with hope,
determination, and
strength. The music
contrasts turmoil and
times of strife with a
return to championing the
idea of simply
overcoming, going forward
with hope and
determination, with the
closing music in major,
resonant and strong.
. SECOND APRIL for
S.A.T.B. Chorus and Piano
is a four-movement set,
based on the poetry of
Edna St. Vincent Millay.
I have long been enamored
with the poetry of Millay
for its wonderfully vivid
and descriptive imagery,
and its often powerful
and profound meaning.
Millay’s descriptions
of nature, and of
feelings and emotions,
have always spoken to me.
SECOND APRIL consists of
four of her poems, each
with a distinctive mood,
message, and emotional
feel. They are vivid,
powerful, and beautiful,
inspiring me to capture
these descriptions of the
various scenes she
portrays. Song of a
Second April uses music
to underlie strong
feelings, passions, and
the tragedies of life.
The poem itself is
dramatic, detailing a
time of personal strife
and tragedy, perhaps the
end of a relationship or
even the end of a life.
The music is intense,
fast, in a minor key, and
with rapid, spinning
notes creating a feeling
of powerful, relentless
emotions. Melodies,
motives, and gestures are
tossed between the
voices, increasing the
feelings of intensity and
even desperation. Little
by little, the music
almost dies away, getting
quieter and quieter,
creating a feeling of
resignation, but with a
Picardy Third in the
final chord – maybe a
bit of hope! Mariposa
is a celebration of
nature, wandering through
a field with white and
blue butterflies
appearing almost
wondrously. But there’s
also a profound feeling
of poignancy, noting that
as one relishes such a
beautiful, magical sight,
they should embrace the
experience – the
fleeting, transient
nature of such a perfect
vision and of life
itself. The music
portrays the flying of
the butterflies: gentle,
beautiful, with rich
chords and arpeggios, but
stepping back, as the
fleeting nature of life
is the reality, with
gentle, but sombre chords
interspersed with the
magical flight of the
Mariposa.Alms is a fast
rondo, intense, bold, and
always dance-like. It is
about both tragedy and
resilience. This music is
also in minor, yet with
moments of playfulness,
as a recollection of
happy times or moments
takes over. This seesaw
between emotions is heard
throughout the movement,
as the music continues to
“dance.” And with
Millay’s summing up of
“reality being what it
is,” the piece ends
with strength, boldness,
and finality. Into the
Golden Vessel of Great
Song is an appassionato
call to overcome! The
poem exhorts us to
“sing out” with hope,
determination, and
strength. The music is
full of bright and
lilting energy; but as
the turmoil and times of
strife people can
sometimes feel or
experience, the music
becomes intense,
dramatic, in a minor key,
and with changing
rhythms. BUT, there is a
return to championing the
idea of simply
overcoming, going forward
with hope and
determination, and the
music is in major,
resonant and strong.
.
Piano - late intermediate SKU: BT.EMBZ7783 Composed by Charles-Louis Hano...(+)
Piano - late intermediate
SKU: BT.EMBZ7783
Composed by Charles-Louis
Hanon. Studies &
Exercises. Book Only.
Composed 1977. 136 pages.
Editio Musica Budapest
#EMBZ7783. Published by
Editio Musica Budapest
(BT.EMBZ7783).
International.
'
'Learning the piano is so
widespread these days and
good pianists so numerous
that mediocrity on the
instrument can no longer
be accepted. In effect,
the piano must be studied
for eight or ten years
before performance of a
harder piece is
attempted. Few can spare
the years for this. It
takes one hour to play
the volume in full. Once
it has been mastered, it
is enough to set aside
for it a little time each
day and the difficulties
will disappear almost
like magic. Playing will
become as attractive,
accurate, fluent and
pearly as that of the
best performers.'' This
piano method by the
French music teacher
Charles-Louis Hanon
(1819-1900) appeared in
1874, with these
introductory
wordsaddressed to the
realm of pianists. Almost
a century and a half
later, it remains among
the most popular systems
of piano tuition all
around the world, and
Hanon's name has become
generic for systematic
instrumental methods,
even in types of popular
music. The Virtuoso
Pianist appears as a
publication in six
languages: English,
German, French, Italian,
Spanish and Hungarian.
The volume in a
new, decorative cover is
useful to every pianist.
Students with a years
study behind them will
succeed in mastering the
exercises. Advanced
pianists after working
through the exercises
will be able to tackle
even serious
technicaldifficulties. In
the volume different
forms of technical
difficulty are
encountered. The
exercises may be
performed on more than
one piano simultaneously,
so that students become
accustomed to ensemble
playing.
Das
Erlernen des
Klavierspiels ist
gegenwärtig so sehr
verbreitet, und es gibt
so viele gute Pianisten,
dass wir uns auf diesem
Instrument mit
Mittelmäßigkeit
nicht mehr zufriedengeben
können. Das führt
dazu, dass acht bis zehn
JahreKlavierunterricht
erforderlich sind, bevor
wir riskieren können,
ein schwieriges Stück
zu spielen. Es gibt
jedoch nur Wenige, die
dem Erlernen dieses
Instruments so viele
Jahre widmen! Man
benötigt etwa eine
Stunde, um diesen Band
voll und
ganzdurchzuspielen. Wenn
wir uns die Ãœbungen
bereits perfekt
angeeignet haben,
genügt es, sich
täglich nur kurze Zeit
mit ihm zu
beschäftigen, und
unsere Schwierigkeiten
werden wie von
Zauberhandverschwinden:
Unser Spiel wird so
schön, so akkurat,
soleicht und perlend wie
das der hervorragendsten
Künstler.
Danceries by Kenneth Hesketh. Concert Band. For Wind Band. Part(s); Score; Wind ...(+)
Danceries by Kenneth
Hesketh. Concert Band.
For Wind Band. Part(s);
Score; Wind Band. Faber
Edition: Faber Wind Band
Series. 20th Century;
Masterwork. Published by
Faber Music
Edited by Carol Cuellar. Piano/Vocal songbook (Piano/Vocal/Chords. Arrangements ...(+)
Edited by Carol Cuellar.
Piano/Vocal songbook
(Piano/Vocal/Chords.
Arrangements for piano
and voice with guitar
chords). 236 pages.
Published by Alfred
Publishing.
(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.
Cello solo SKU: BR.EB-9074 (Plainte sur la perte de la reflexion music...(+)
Cello solo
SKU:
BR.EB-9074
(Plainte sur la perte
de la reflexion
musicale). Composed
by Klaus Huber. Edited by
Michael Bach. Arranged by
Michael Bach. Solo
instruments; stapled.
Edition Breitkopf. You
will need a copy of BG
1002 for each player to
perform the version for
variable instrumentation
(BG 1004). Music
post-1945; New music
(post-2000). Score.
Composed 1972. 12 pages.
Duration 20'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #EB 9074.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.EB-9074).
ISBN 9790004179499. 9
x 12 inches.
World
premieres:I version for
flute: Wiesbaden, 1972II
version for piano: Nyon,
1972III version for var.
insts.: Cologne, May 29,
1976VI version for
accordeon: Fribourg, June
25, 1987VIII version for
violoncello Tokyo:
October 14, 1989X version
for organ: Stuttgart,
March 28, 2018This work
(A Breath of the
Untimely) was first
written for solo Flute
and dedicated to Aurele
Nicolet. Its bears the
subtitle Lament on the
Loss of Musical Thought -
some Madrigals for Solo
Flute or Flute with any
other Instruments. This
serves as a playing
instruction but doubles
at the same time as an
outmoded programme: it
refers back to the
musical origin of the
opening lamenting motif,
a tradition which was
once of its time but is
not of our time - namely
the Lamento genre which
gave the title to the
Chaconne in Purcell's
opera Dido and Aeneas.
Almost simultaneously I
wrote a second version
for Piano (for Piano
one-and-a-half hands),
which already formulates
possible approaches for
the performer, in some
detail, to the indicated,
quasi-canonic version of
the piece in the
programme. The multiple
version Ein Hauch von
Unzeit III realizes a
concrete version of a
formal state which floats
between strict canon and
aleatoric principles:
each of the musicians who
are spread throughout the
hall introduces their own
idiomatic translation of
the flute part. And so
the music exists,
omnipresent, not only
spatially throughout the
hall, but also formally
in a sort of fluctuating
simultaneity. For that
reason, it was my express
wish to any potential
interpreter that they
should construct entirely
their own version of the
piece. A healthy number
of musicians have
responded to my
suggestion - versions of
the piece have now been
made for guitar
(Cornelius Schwehr,
Gunther Schneider),
accordion (Hugo Noth),
double bass (Fernando
Grillo), violin
(Hansheinz Schneeberger),
viola, violoncello, and
double bass (trio basso,
Koln), violoncello
(Michael Bach), trombone
(Andrew Digby) and,
created by myself, a sung
version for voice (to
words by Georg Wilhelm
Friedrich Hegel und Max
Bense), and for viola.The
most important
requirement for the whole
piece is absolute
stillness, which should
as far as possible
emanate from the
performer. The pauses are
occasionally in this
respect the most
important element. These
may, if one can find the
necessary stillness,
become very long.Ein
Hauch von Unzeit (A
Breath of the Untimely) -
time almost
dissolves!(Klaus Huber,
1989/2014 - translation:
David
Alberman)CD:Jean-Luc
Menet (Bass flute)CD
Traversieres
120.270Jean-Luc Menet
(fl)CD STR
37039Bibliography:Zimmerm
ann, Heidy:
Zeitgestaltung im
Kompositionsprozess bei
Klaus Huber - dargestellt
anhand von Skizzen, in:
Mnemosyne. Zeit und
Gedachtnis in der
europaischen Musik des
ausgehenden 20.
Jahrhunderts, hrsg. von
Dorothea Redepenning und
Joachim Steinheuer,
Saarbrucken: Pfau 2006,
S. 90-109
World
premiere: VIII version
for violoncello Tokyo:
October 14, 1989.
Chamber Music High voice, Piano SKU: PR.111402890 Composed by Ricky Ian G...(+)
Chamber Music High voice,
Piano
SKU:
PR.111402890
Composed
by Ricky Ian Gordon. Full
score. 44 pages. Duration
20 minutes. Theodore
Presser Company
#111-40289. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.111402890).
ISBN
9781491134672. UPC:
680160685264.
What
??s in a name? While the
title is French for
â??Eight Flower
Songs,â? the texts are
all in English. The
poemsâ?? flowers
metaphorically evoke
fragrance, love and loss,
life and death, rebirth
and regrowth. Perhaps the
texture and beauty of
Gordonâ??s music are
themselves French. The
20-minute song cycle
draws on poems from
Wordsworth to Dorothy
Parker, as well as from
contemporary poets
including the composer
himself. When So-Chung
Shinn came to me with the
idea of commissioning a
song cycle with her
spectacular husband Tony
Lee, she had in mind
something having to do
with flowers. Tony had
asked her what she wanted
for her birthday, and she
said she wanted to be
behind the creating of a
new work. Lucky me, I was
the recipient of the
commission. So-Chung sent
me a little description
of all the flowers she
loves, but I had to take
the idea and create a
narrative in my head.It
is always a matter of
pleasing the
commissioner, yet coming
up with something you can
get behind and hear music
for as well. I already
knew I wanted to use my
â??Tulipsâ? poem
which is really about the
arc of a relationship as
represented through the
life span of the Tulips,
and, in many ways,
disappointment; and
Dorothy Parkerâ??s
â??One Perfect
Rose,â? which is wry,
bitter, cynical, and
funny, in a way only
Dorothy Parker can so
pithily express.I thought
of Jane Kenyonâ??s
exquisite â??Peonies at
Dusk,â? because
knowing she died so young
(46) of leukemia, the
poem has such a
particular resonance,
almost humanizing the
Peonies, casting the moon
as a sentient being,
illustrating so
beautifully how connected
everything is, alive
here, and revolving
around these exquisite
blossoms. Then, I
remembered her husband
Donald Hallâ??s poem
â??Her Garden,â?
which he wrote after Jane
died, his grief
intermingled with his
inability to care for
what she had created, to
keep alive what so
represented her
aliveness, broken as he
was, and I felt I already
had a story.I found the
Wordsworth, because it
felt like pure joy to me,
but also, if each of the
songs has a color in my
head, â??The
Daffodilsâ? is pure
yellow and a good place
to start. My partner
Kevin and I live on a
lake, and every year, the
first Daffodils, the
shock of yellows, the
oranges, the blinding
whites, after the long
snowy winters, sing of
the newness that is about
to enfold us in its green
miraculousness.At first,
the cycle ended with the
Langston Hughes poem
â??Cycle,â? or
â??New Flowers,â?
because it was lovely,
and about rebirth, which
is obviously optimistic,
and apt, but then, my
friend Telmo Dos Santos,
a wonderful Canadian poet
whom I met at Banff, sent
me his poem â??Afterlife
With Lilacs,â? having
no idea what I was
working on. I felt I had
to add it because it is
so dazzling, and it
immediately felt like the
missing link. Finally,
there were unfortunately
rights issues, namely, we
could not, no how, get in
touch with the Langston
Hughes Estate, after so
many happy
collaborations.After
almost a yearâ??s
frustration, I wrote my
own text, â??Play,
Orpheus,â? which ended
up being fortuitous,
because the first time I
met So-Chung, she entered
the room and the most
exquisite scent of
Lillies of the Valley,
Muguet de Bois, filled
the room. I went right
over to her and rudely
put my nose to her neck,
for the intoxication of
the scent. So â??Play,
Orpheusâ? is for
So-Chung, to remind us of
the precious treasures of
this world flowers remind
us of. Everything and
everyone lives and dies,
lives and dies. Death and
resurrection.And of
course, this is music,
this is song, so the
inclusion of the God of
music, Orpheus, seems
apt. Huit Chansons de
Fleurs is really about
what flowers represent,
their radiance, their
flickering impermanence,
the way they are used to
celebrate, as well as to
mourn...... and of
course, their fragrance.
Their fragrance.Ricky Ian
GordonJuly 28, 2021.
Guitar SKU: HL.50600499 Daily technical training for maximum fluency, ...(+)
Guitar
SKU:
HL.50600499
Daily
technical training for
maximum fluency,
flexibility and
strength. Composed by
Fabian Payr. Guitar.
Classical, Educational.
Softcover. Composed 2015.
Ricordi #SY2918.
Published by Ricordi
(HL.50600499).
GTRSO
inches.
English.
Good
technique doesn't appear
overnight. Technical
exercises are necessary
but have a reputation for
being boring and
frustrating - perhaps
this is down to
perspective and attitude.
Fabian Payr has developed
an approach in Finger
Fitness totrain
dexterity--among other
things--in a way that is
anything but tedious. The
focus of this collection
of exercises are
efficiency, accuracy and
variety. With minimum
time devoted to practice,
a maximum benefit can be
achieved, and monotony
isavoided altogether
through the built-in
variations. Finger
Fitness is a
collection of short
exercises in almost every
area of guitar technique
from beginner to advanced
level. From the wealth of
material provided, the
guitarist can focus onhis
or her specific abilities
and targets by creating a
personalised practice
regime to be worked
through in the course of
a week. Finger
Fitness provides the
solution to enjoyable yet
target-oriented
practice.
Good
technique doesn’t
appear overnight.
Technical exercises are
necessary but have a
reputation for being
boring and frustrating -
perhaps this is down to
perspective and attitude.
Fabian Payr has developed
an approach in Finger
Fitness to train
dexterity—among
other things—in a
way that is anything but
tedious. The focus of
this collection of
exercises are efficiency,
accuracy and variety.
With minimum time devoted
to practice, a maximum
benefit can be achieved,
and monotony is avoided
altogether through the
built-in variations.
Finger Fitness is a
collection of short
exercises in almost every
area of guitar technique
from beginner to advanced
level. Fromthe wealth of
material provided, the
guitarist can focus on
his or her specific
abilities and targets by
creating a personalised
practice regime to be
worked through in the
course of a week. Finger
Fitness provides the
solution to enjoyable yet
target-oriented
practice.