| Buskers Fake Book All Time Hit Piano seul Music Sales
| | |
| Granger's Fiddle Tunes for Guitarß Guitare notes et tablatures [Partition + Accès audio] - Débutant Mel Bay
Guitar - Beginning SKU: MB.31103M Third Edition. Bluegrass, Wire b...(+)
Guitar - Beginning
SKU: MB.31103M
Third Edition.
Bluegrass, Wire bound.
World. Book and online
audio. 236 pages. Mel Bay
Publications, Inc
#31103M. Published by Mel
Bay Publications, Inc
(MB.31103M). ISBN
9781513468792. 8.75x11.75
inches. Adam Granger
self-published the first
edition of
Grangerâ??s Fiddle
Tunes for Guitar in
1979. A second edition
was published in 1994.
Now Mel Bay Publications
presents the third
edition of the
book. This 236-page book
is the most extensive and
best-documented
collection of fiddle
tunes for the flatpicking
guitar player in
existence, and includes
reels, hoedowns,
hornpipes, rags,
breakdowns, jigs and
slip-jigs, presented in
Southern, Northern,
Irish, Canadian, Texas
and Old-time
styles. There are 508
fiddle tunes referenced
under 2500 titles and
alternate titles. The
titles are fully indexed,
making the book doubly
valuable as a reference
book and a source
book. In this new
edition, all tunes are
typeset, instead of being
handwritten as they were
in the previous editions,
making the tabs easier to
read. The tunes in
Grangerâ??s Fiddle
Tunes for Guitar are
presented in Easytab, a
streamlined tablature
notation system designed
by Adam specifically for
fiddle
tunes. The book comes
with a link which gives
access to mp3 recordings
by Adam of all 508 tunes,
each played once at a
moderate tempo, with
rhythm on one channel and
lead on the
other. Also included in
Grangerâ??s Fiddle
Tunes for Guitar are
instructions for reading
Easytab, descriptions of
tune types presented in
the book, and primers on
traditional flatpicking
and rhythm guitar.
Additionally, there are
sections on timing,
ornamentation, technique,
and fingering, as well as
information on tune
sources and a history of
the
collection.
Mel Bay also
offers The Granger
Collection, by Bill
Nicholson, the same 508
tunes in standard music
notation.
<
div> $45.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Spring in Dresden [Conducteur] Theodore Presser Co.
Orchestra Bass Drum, Bassoon 1, Bassoon 2, Clarinet 1, Clarinet 2, Contrabass, F...(+)
Orchestra Bass Drum,
Bassoon 1, Bassoon 2,
Clarinet 1, Clarinet 2,
Contrabass, Flute 1,
Flute 2, Harp, Horn 1,
Horn 2, Horn 3, Horn 4,
Marimba, Oboe 1, Oboe 2,
Percussion 1, Percussion
2, Percussion 3, Snare
Drum, Suspended Cymbal,
Tam-tam, Trombone 1 and
more. SKU:
PR.11641963S Composed
by Chen Yi. Full score.
58 pages. Duration 20
minutes. Theodore Presser
Company #116-41963S.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.11641963S). UPC:
680160684472. The
violin concerto is
commissioned by Friends
of Dresden Music
Foundation for American
soloist Mira Wang and the
New York Philharmonic and
Staatskapelle Dresden as
an American commemoration
of the reconstruction of
the Dresden Frauenkirche,
60 years after its
destruction in World War
II by American and
British Forces. The world
premiere is given at the
Semperoper in Dresden,
Germany, on October 9, 10
& 11, 2005, conducted
by Ivan Fischer. Full of
excitement and inner
power, the musical image
is vivid, energetic,
sometimes lyrical and
sometimes dramatic. The
major angular thematic
material (a three note
motive) consists of big
leaps in interval (a
perfect fourth downward
and then a minor seventh
upward, first introduced
by the violin solo in
measures 27-29). Except
for the cadenzas which
stand at the middle
(Rehearsal E, measure
127) and the two ends of
the piece as a frame, the
virtuosic violin solo
line is always
accompanied by the ever
moving and growing
textures in the
background. The rests
between long and short
phrases symbolize the
space in Chinese
paintings. The Beijing
Opera reciting tune, and
the fingerings to produce
sliding tones in the
performance of the
Chinese fiddle erhu are
also borrowed in the
writing and the
performing of the western
instruments. The musical
imagination of the violin
concerto came from an
ancient Chinese poem with
the same title, written
by Du Fu (712-770) in
Tang Dynasty. Happy Rain
on a Spring Night by Du
Fu (712-770 in Tang
Dynasty) Happy rain comes
in time, When spring is
in its prime. With night
breeze it will fall, And
quietly moisten all.
Clouds darken wild roads,
Light brightens a little
boat. Saturated at dawn,
With flowers blooming the
town. (English
translation by Chen Yi
from the original poem in
Chinese) The following is
the poem in its original
Chinese form, and the
detailed introduction on
the structural plan of
the violin concerto
Spring in Dresden. It's
like the welcome rain on
a quiet spring night that
nurtures the budding
seeds, our new society is
pushing us forward to the
new future. The music
reflects the scenes and
the expression according
to the meaning of the
poem when it's being
unfolded line by line.
Although the tempo is set
63 quarter notes per
minute throughout (played
vividly, never slow
down), the tension is
being built up from the
quiet background in the
beginning, to the
sustained climax towards
the end. The musical
image in Rehearsal A and
B (measures 39-80)
represents the first four
lines of the poem. The
wind instruments response
to the rustling of fast
moving notes on muted
string triplets,
decorated by occasional
strokes produced by
metallic string sound and
high woodwind gestures.
The music in Rehearsal C
and D (measures 81-126)
represents the next two
lines of the poem. It's
so dark, a little light
in the boat is shimmering
on the lake... The
breathy sound and key
slaps on the flutes
create a mysterious
atmosphere, in a dialogue
with other instruments.
The cello glissandi
recite the poem in the
tone of Mandarin, echoed
by the string harmonics.
The music in Rehearsal F,
G and H (m 129-202) is a
toccata, starting in the
orchestra (led by the
marimba), which builds up
a big shape, to reach the
climax in m. 157
(Rehearsal G, the
location of the Golden
Section, according to the
length of the music
without cadenzas), and
keeps the vivid scene
towards the coda (from
Rehearsal I, m. 203),
which stands on the
energetic peak until the
clear cutoff on measure
239, followed by the
short, yet powerful solo
conclusion with the
lingering echo produced
by the high string
harmonics. On the top,
there is a recall of the
three note motive in the
sound of wonderland,
touched by the motor-on
vibraphone meaningfully.
The music is written for
2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2
clarinets (in Bb), 2
bassoons, 4 French horns
(in F), 2 trumpets (in
Bb), 3 trombones, tuba,
harp, 3 percussion
players (Perc. 1:
xylophone; Perc. 2:
suspended cymbal,
Japanese high woodblock,
snare drum, bass drum and
vibraphone; Perc. 3:
marimba and tam-tam),
solo violin, and strings.
Duration is about 20
minutes. The violin
concerto is commissioned
by Friends of Dresden
Music Foundation for
American soloist Mira
Wang and the New York
Philharmonic and
Staatskapelle Dresden as
an American commemoration
of the reconstruction of
the Dresden Frauenkirche,
60 years after its
destruction in World War
II by American and
British Forces. The world
premiere is given at the
Semperoper in Dresden,
Germany, on October 9, 10
& 11, 2005, conducted by
Ivan Fischer.Full of
excitement and inner
power, the musical image
is vivid, energetic,
sometimeslyrical and
sometimes dramatic. The
major angular thematic
material (a three
notemotive) consists of
big leaps in interval (a
perfect fourth downward
and then a minorseventh
upward, first introduced
by the violin solo in
measures 27-29). Except
for thecadenzas which
stand at the middle
(Rehearsal E, measure
127) and the two ends of
the piece as a frame, the
virtuosic violin solo
line is always
accompanied by the ever
moving and growing
textures in the
background. The rests
between long and short
phrases symbolize the
space in Chinese
paintings. The Beijing
Opera reciting tune, and
the fingerings to produce
sliding tones in the
performance of the
Chinese fiddle erhu are
also borrowed in the
writing and the
performing of the western
instruments.The musical
imagination of the violin
concerto came from an
ancient Chinese poem with
the same title, written
by Du Fu (712-770) in
Tang Dynasty.Happy Rain
on a Spring Nightby Du Fu
(712-770 in Tang
Dynasty)Happy rain comes
in time,When spring is in
its prime.With night
breeze it will fall,And
quietly moisten
all.Clouds darken wild
roads,Light brightens a
little boat.Saturated at
dawn,With flowers
blooming the
town.(English translation
by Chen Yi from the
original poem in
Chinese)The following is
the poem in its original
Chinese form, and the
detailed introduction
onthe structural plan of
the violin concerto
Spring in
Dresden.It’s like
the welcome rain on a
quiet spring night that
nurtures the budding
seeds, our newsociety is
pushing us forward to the
new future. The music
reflects the scenes and
theexpression according
to the meaning of the
poem when it’s
being unfolded line by
line.Although the tempo
is set 63 quarter notes
per minute throughout
(played vividly,
neverslow down), the
tension is being built up
from the quiet background
in the beginning, tothe
sustained climax towards
the end. The musical
image in Rehearsal A and
B (measures39-80)
represents the first four
lines of the poem. The
wind instruments response
to therustling of fast
moving notes on muted
string triplets,
decorated by occasional
strokesproduced by
metallic string sound and
high woodwind gestures.
The music in RehearsalC
and D (measures 81-126)
represents the next two
lines of the poem. It's
so dark, a littlelight in
the boat is shimmering on
the lake... The breathy
sound and key slaps on
theflutes create a
mysterious atmosphere, in
a dialogue with other
instruments. The
celloglissandi recite the
poem in the tone of
Mandarin, echoed by the
string harmonics.
Themusic in Rehearsal F,
G and H (m 129-202) is a
toccata, starting in the
orchestra (led bythe
marimba), which builds up
a big shape, to reach the
climax in m. 157
(Rehearsal G,the location
of the Golden Section,
according to the length
of the music
withoutcadenzas), and
keeps the vivid scene
towards the coda (from
Rehearsal I, m. 203),
whichstands on the
energetic peak until the
clear cutoff on measure
239, followed by the
short,yet powerful solo
conclusion with the
lingering echo produced
by the high
stringharmonics. On the
top, there is a recall of
the three note motive in
the sound ofwonderland,
touched by the motor-on
vibraphone
meaningfully.The music is
written for 2 flutes, 2
oboes, 2 clarinets (in
Bb), 2 bassoons, 4 French
horns (in F), 2 trumpets
(in Bb), 3 trombones,
tuba, harp, 3 percussion
players (Perc.
1:xylophone; Perc. 2:
suspended cymbal,
Japanese high woodblock,
snare drum, bass drum and
vibraphone; Perc. 3:
marimba and tam-tam),
solo violin, and
strings.Duration is about
20 minutes. $35.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Spring in Dresden Theodore Presser Co.
Orchestra Bass Drum, Bassoon 1, Bassoon 2, Clarinet 1, Clarinet 2, Contrabass, F...(+)
Orchestra Bass Drum,
Bassoon 1, Bassoon 2,
Clarinet 1, Clarinet 2,
Contrabass, Flute 1,
Flute 2, Harp, Horn 1,
Horn 2, Horn 3, Horn 4,
Marimba, Oboe 1, Oboe 2,
Percussion 1, Percussion
2, Percussion 3, Snare
Drum, Suspended Cymbal,
Tam-tam, Trombone 1 and
more. SKU:
PR.11641963SP
Composed by Chen Yi.
Part. 11 pages. Duration
20 minutes. Theodore
Presser Company
#116-41963SP. Published
by Theodore Presser
Company (PR.11641963SP).
UPC:
680160684496. The
violin concerto is
commissioned by Friends
of Dresden Music
Foundation for American
soloist Mira Wang and the
New York Philharmonic and
Staatskapelle Dresden as
an American commemoration
of the reconstruction of
the Dresden Frauenkirche,
60 years after its
destruction in World War
II by American and
British Forces. The world
premiere is given at the
Semperoper in Dresden,
Germany, on October 9, 10
& 11, 2005, conducted
by Ivan Fischer. Full of
excitement and inner
power, the musical image
is vivid, energetic,
sometimes lyrical and
sometimes dramatic. The
major angular thematic
material (a three note
motive) consists of big
leaps in interval (a
perfect fourth downward
and then a minor seventh
upward, first introduced
by the violin solo in
measures 27-29). Except
for the cadenzas which
stand at the middle
(Rehearsal E, measure
127) and the two ends of
the piece as a frame, the
virtuosic violin solo
line is always
accompanied by the ever
moving and growing
textures in the
background. The rests
between long and short
phrases symbolize the
space in Chinese
paintings. The Beijing
Opera reciting tune, and
the fingerings to produce
sliding tones in the
performance of the
Chinese fiddle erhu are
also borrowed in the
writing and the
performing of the western
instruments. The musical
imagination of the violin
concerto came from an
ancient Chinese poem with
the same title, written
by Du Fu (712-770) in
Tang Dynasty. Happy Rain
on a Spring Night by Du
Fu (712-770 in Tang
Dynasty) Happy rain comes
in time, When spring is
in its prime. With night
breeze it will fall, And
quietly moisten all.
Clouds darken wild roads,
Light brightens a little
boat. Saturated at dawn,
With flowers blooming the
town. (English
translation by Chen Yi
from the original poem in
Chinese) The following is
the poem in its original
Chinese form, and the
detailed introduction on
the structural plan of
the violin concerto
Spring in Dresden. It's
like the welcome rain on
a quiet spring night that
nurtures the budding
seeds, our new society is
pushing us forward to the
new future. The music
reflects the scenes and
the expression according
to the meaning of the
poem when it's being
unfolded line by line.
Although the tempo is set
63 quarter notes per
minute throughout (played
vividly, never slow
down), the tension is
being built up from the
quiet background in the
beginning, to the
sustained climax towards
the end. The musical
image in Rehearsal A and
B (measures 39-80)
represents the first four
lines of the poem. The
wind instruments response
to the rustling of fast
moving notes on muted
string triplets,
decorated by occasional
strokes produced by
metallic string sound and
high woodwind gestures.
The music in Rehearsal C
and D (measures 81-126)
represents the next two
lines of the poem. It's
so dark, a little light
in the boat is shimmering
on the lake... The
breathy sound and key
slaps on the flutes
create a mysterious
atmosphere, in a dialogue
with other instruments.
The cello glissandi
recite the poem in the
tone of Mandarin, echoed
by the string harmonics.
The music in Rehearsal F,
G and H (m 129-202) is a
toccata, starting in the
orchestra (led by the
marimba), which builds up
a big shape, to reach the
climax in m. 157
(Rehearsal G, the
location of the Golden
Section, according to the
length of the music
without cadenzas), and
keeps the vivid scene
towards the coda (from
Rehearsal I, m. 203),
which stands on the
energetic peak until the
clear cutoff on measure
239, followed by the
short, yet powerful solo
conclusion with the
lingering echo produced
by the high string
harmonics. On the top,
there is a recall of the
three note motive in the
sound of wonderland,
touched by the motor-on
vibraphone meaningfully.
The music is written for
2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2
clarinets (in Bb), 2
bassoons, 4 French horns
(in F), 2 trumpets (in
Bb), 3 trombones, tuba,
harp, 3 percussion
players (Perc. 1:
xylophone; Perc. 2:
suspended cymbal,
Japanese high woodblock,
snare drum, bass drum and
vibraphone; Perc. 3:
marimba and tam-tam),
solo violin, and strings.
Duration is about 20
minutes. The violin
concerto is commissioned
by Friends of Dresden
Music Foundation for
American soloist Mira
Wang and the New York
Philharmonic and
Staatskapelle Dresden as
an American commemoration
of the reconstruction of
the Dresden Frauenkirche,
60 years after its
destruction in World War
II by American and
British Forces. The world
premiere is given at the
Semperoper in Dresden,
Germany, on October 9, 10
& 11, 2005, conducted by
Ivan Fischer.Full of
excitement and inner
power, the musical image
is vivid, energetic,
sometimeslyrical and
sometimes dramatic. The
major angular thematic
material (a three
notemotive) consists of
big leaps in interval (a
perfect fourth downward
and then a minorseventh
upward, first introduced
by the violin solo in
measures 27-29). Except
for thecadenzas which
stand at the middle
(Rehearsal E, measure
127) and the two ends of
the piece as a frame, the
virtuosic violin solo
line is always
accompanied by the ever
moving and growing
textures in the
background. The rests
between long and short
phrases symbolize the
space in Chinese
paintings. The Beijing
Opera reciting tune, and
the fingerings to produce
sliding tones in the
performance of the
Chinese fiddle erhu are
also borrowed in the
writing and the
performing of the western
instruments.The musical
imagination of the violin
concerto came from an
ancient Chinese poem with
the same title, written
by Du Fu (712-770) in
Tang Dynasty.Happy Rain
on a Spring Nightby Du Fu
(712-770 in Tang
Dynasty)Happy rain comes
in time,When spring is in
its prime.With night
breeze it will fall,And
quietly moisten
all.Clouds darken wild
roads,Light brightens a
little boat.Saturated at
dawn,With flowers
blooming the
town.(English translation
by Chen Yi from the
original poem in
Chinese)The following is
the poem in its original
Chinese form, and the
detailed introduction
onthe structural plan of
the violin concerto
Spring in
Dresden.It’s like
the welcome rain on a
quiet spring night that
nurtures the budding
seeds, our newsociety is
pushing us forward to the
new future. The music
reflects the scenes and
theexpression according
to the meaning of the
poem when it’s
being unfolded line by
line.Although the tempo
is set 63 quarter notes
per minute throughout
(played vividly,
neverslow down), the
tension is being built up
from the quiet background
in the beginning, tothe
sustained climax towards
the end. The musical
image in Rehearsal A and
B (measures39-80)
represents the first four
lines of the poem. The
wind instruments response
to therustling of fast
moving notes on muted
string triplets,
decorated by occasional
strokesproduced by
metallic string sound and
high woodwind gestures.
The music in RehearsalC
and D (measures 81-126)
represents the next two
lines of the poem. It's
so dark, a littlelight in
the boat is shimmering on
the lake... The breathy
sound and key slaps on
theflutes create a
mysterious atmosphere, in
a dialogue with other
instruments. The
celloglissandi recite the
poem in the tone of
Mandarin, echoed by the
string harmonics.
Themusic in Rehearsal F,
G and H (m 129-202) is a
toccata, starting in the
orchestra (led bythe
marimba), which builds up
a big shape, to reach the
climax in m. 157
(Rehearsal G,the location
of the Golden Section,
according to the length
of the music
withoutcadenzas), and
keeps the vivid scene
towards the coda (from
Rehearsal I, m. 203),
whichstands on the
energetic peak until the
clear cutoff on measure
239, followed by the
short,yet powerful solo
conclusion with the
lingering echo produced
by the high
stringharmonics. On the
top, there is a recall of
the three note motive in
the sound ofwonderland,
touched by the motor-on
vibraphone
meaningfully.The music is
written for 2 flutes, 2
oboes, 2 clarinets (in
Bb), 2 bassoons, 4 French
horns (in F), 2 trumpets
(in Bb), 3 trombones,
tuba, harp, 3 percussion
players (Perc.
1:xylophone; Perc. 2:
suspended cymbal,
Japanese high woodblock,
snare drum, bass drum and
vibraphone; Perc. 3:
marimba and tam-tam),
solo violin, and
strings.Duration is about
20 minutes. $25.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Spring in Dresden Theodore Presser Co.
Orchestra Bass Drum, Bassoon 1, Bassoon 2, Clarinet 1, Clarinet 2, Contrabass, F...(+)
Orchestra Bass Drum,
Bassoon 1, Bassoon 2,
Clarinet 1, Clarinet 2,
Contrabass, Flute 1,
Flute 2, Harp, Horn 1,
Horn 2, Horn 3, Horn 4,
Marimba, Oboe 1, Oboe 2,
Percussion 1, Percussion
2, Percussion 3, Snare
Drum, Suspended Cymbal,
Tam-tam, Trombone 1 and
more. SKU:
PR.11641963L Composed
by Chen Yi. Large Score.
58 pages. Duration 20
minutes. Theodore Presser
Company #116-41963L.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.11641963L). UPC:
680160684489. The
violin concerto is
commissioned by Friends
of Dresden Music
Foundation for American
soloist Mira Wang and the
New York Philharmonic and
Staatskapelle Dresden as
an American commemoration
of the reconstruction of
the Dresden Frauenkirche,
60 years after its
destruction in World War
II by American and
British Forces. The world
premiere is given at the
Semperoper in Dresden,
Germany, on October 9, 10
& 11, 2005, conducted
by Ivan Fischer. Full of
excitement and inner
power, the musical image
is vivid, energetic,
sometimes lyrical and
sometimes dramatic. The
major angular thematic
material (a three note
motive) consists of big
leaps in interval (a
perfect fourth downward
and then a minor seventh
upward, first introduced
by the violin solo in
measures 27-29). Except
for the cadenzas which
stand at the middle
(Rehearsal E, measure
127) and the two ends of
the piece as a frame, the
virtuosic violin solo
line is always
accompanied by the ever
moving and growing
textures in the
background. The rests
between long and short
phrases symbolize the
space in Chinese
paintings. The Beijing
Opera reciting tune, and
the fingerings to produce
sliding tones in the
performance of the
Chinese fiddle erhu are
also borrowed in the
writing and the
performing of the western
instruments. The musical
imagination of the violin
concerto came from an
ancient Chinese poem with
the same title, written
by Du Fu (712-770) in
Tang Dynasty. Happy Rain
on a Spring Night by Du
Fu (712-770 in Tang
Dynasty) Happy rain comes
in time, When spring is
in its prime. With night
breeze it will fall, And
quietly moisten all.
Clouds darken wild roads,
Light brightens a little
boat. Saturated at dawn,
With flowers blooming the
town. (English
translation by Chen Yi
from the original poem in
Chinese) The following is
the poem in its original
Chinese form, and the
detailed introduction on
the structural plan of
the violin concerto
Spring in Dresden. It's
like the welcome rain on
a quiet spring night that
nurtures the budding
seeds, our new society is
pushing us forward to the
new future. The music
reflects the scenes and
the expression according
to the meaning of the
poem when it's being
unfolded line by line.
Although the tempo is set
63 quarter notes per
minute throughout (played
vividly, never slow
down), the tension is
being built up from the
quiet background in the
beginning, to the
sustained climax towards
the end. The musical
image in Rehearsal A and
B (measures 39-80)
represents the first four
lines of the poem. The
wind instruments response
to the rustling of fast
moving notes on muted
string triplets,
decorated by occasional
strokes produced by
metallic string sound and
high woodwind gestures.
The music in Rehearsal C
and D (measures 81-126)
represents the next two
lines of the poem. It's
so dark, a little light
in the boat is shimmering
on the lake... The
breathy sound and key
slaps on the flutes
create a mysterious
atmosphere, in a dialogue
with other instruments.
The cello glissandi
recite the poem in the
tone of Mandarin, echoed
by the string harmonics.
The music in Rehearsal F,
G and H (m 129-202) is a
toccata, starting in the
orchestra (led by the
marimba), which builds up
a big shape, to reach the
climax in m. 157
(Rehearsal G, the
location of the Golden
Section, according to the
length of the music
without cadenzas), and
keeps the vivid scene
towards the coda (from
Rehearsal I, m. 203),
which stands on the
energetic peak until the
clear cutoff on measure
239, followed by the
short, yet powerful solo
conclusion with the
lingering echo produced
by the high string
harmonics. On the top,
there is a recall of the
three note motive in the
sound of wonderland,
touched by the motor-on
vibraphone meaningfully.
The music is written for
2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2
clarinets (in Bb), 2
bassoons, 4 French horns
(in F), 2 trumpets (in
Bb), 3 trombones, tuba,
harp, 3 percussion
players (Perc. 1:
xylophone; Perc. 2:
suspended cymbal,
Japanese high woodblock,
snare drum, bass drum and
vibraphone; Perc. 3:
marimba and tam-tam),
solo violin, and strings.
Duration is about 20
minutes. The violin
concerto is commissioned
by Friends of Dresden
Music Foundation for
American soloist Mira
Wang and the New York
Philharmonic and
Staatskapelle Dresden as
an American commemoration
of the reconstruction of
the Dresden Frauenkirche,
60 years after its
destruction in World War
II by American and
British Forces. The world
premiere is given at the
Semperoper in Dresden,
Germany, on October 9, 10
& 11, 2005, conducted by
Ivan Fischer.Full of
excitement and inner
power, the musical image
is vivid, energetic,
sometimeslyrical and
sometimes dramatic. The
major angular thematic
material (a three
notemotive) consists of
big leaps in interval (a
perfect fourth downward
and then a minorseventh
upward, first introduced
by the violin solo in
measures 27-29). Except
for thecadenzas which
stand at the middle
(Rehearsal E, measure
127) and the two ends of
the piece as a frame, the
virtuosic violin solo
line is always
accompanied by the ever
moving and growing
textures in the
background. The rests
between long and short
phrases symbolize the
space in Chinese
paintings. The Beijing
Opera reciting tune, and
the fingerings to produce
sliding tones in the
performance of the
Chinese fiddle erhu are
also borrowed in the
writing and the
performing of the western
instruments.The musical
imagination of the violin
concerto came from an
ancient Chinese poem with
the same title, written
by Du Fu (712-770) in
Tang Dynasty.Happy Rain
on a Spring Nightby Du Fu
(712-770 in Tang
Dynasty)Happy rain comes
in time,When spring is in
its prime.With night
breeze it will fall,And
quietly moisten
all.Clouds darken wild
roads,Light brightens a
little boat.Saturated at
dawn,With flowers
blooming the
town.(English translation
by Chen Yi from the
original poem in
Chinese)The following is
the poem in its original
Chinese form, and the
detailed introduction
onthe structural plan of
the violin concerto
Spring in
Dresden.It’s like
the welcome rain on a
quiet spring night that
nurtures the budding
seeds, our newsociety is
pushing us forward to the
new future. The music
reflects the scenes and
theexpression according
to the meaning of the
poem when it’s
being unfolded line by
line.Although the tempo
is set 63 quarter notes
per minute throughout
(played vividly,
neverslow down), the
tension is being built up
from the quiet background
in the beginning, tothe
sustained climax towards
the end. The musical
image in Rehearsal A and
B (measures39-80)
represents the first four
lines of the poem. The
wind instruments response
to therustling of fast
moving notes on muted
string triplets,
decorated by occasional
strokesproduced by
metallic string sound and
high woodwind gestures.
The music in RehearsalC
and D (measures 81-126)
represents the next two
lines of the poem. It's
so dark, a littlelight in
the boat is shimmering on
the lake... The breathy
sound and key slaps on
theflutes create a
mysterious atmosphere, in
a dialogue with other
instruments. The
celloglissandi recite the
poem in the tone of
Mandarin, echoed by the
string harmonics.
Themusic in Rehearsal F,
G and H (m 129-202) is a
toccata, starting in the
orchestra (led bythe
marimba), which builds up
a big shape, to reach the
climax in m. 157
(Rehearsal G,the location
of the Golden Section,
according to the length
of the music
withoutcadenzas), and
keeps the vivid scene
towards the coda (from
Rehearsal I, m. 203),
whichstands on the
energetic peak until the
clear cutoff on measure
239, followed by the
short,yet powerful solo
conclusion with the
lingering echo produced
by the high
stringharmonics. On the
top, there is a recall of
the three note motive in
the sound ofwonderland,
touched by the motor-on
vibraphone
meaningfully.The music is
written for 2 flutes, 2
oboes, 2 clarinets (in
Bb), 2 bassoons, 4 French
horns (in F), 2 trumpets
(in Bb), 3 trombones,
tuba, harp, 3 percussion
players (Perc.
1:xylophone; Perc. 2:
suspended cymbal,
Japanese high woodblock,
snare drum, bass drum and
vibraphone; Perc. 3:
marimba and tam-tam),
solo violin, and
strings.Duration is about
20 minutes. $55.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Suite No. 1 Guitare Guitare classique [Conducteur] - Avancé Productions OZ
Guitar solo - Advanced SKU: DZ.DZ-4308 Composed by Giorgio Mirto. Score. ...(+)
Guitar solo - Advanced
SKU: DZ.DZ-4308
Composed by Giorgio
Mirto. Score. Les
Productions d'OZ #DZ
4308. Published by Les
Productions d'OZ
(DZ.DZ-4308). ISBN
9782898522253. Foll
owing a recent experience
on the jury of a guitar
competition, I noted with
great pleasure that
Giorgio Mirto, with whom
I had shared the role of
juror, wanted to
celebrate the experience
of the competition -
during from which we
discovered that we had
had a great affinity of
thought - with something
which could endure over
time and not evaporate as
often happens in short
and occasional meetings
between musicians. He did
it as a true composer,
which he is, and
dedicated to me a very
beautifully crafted Suite
to which I allowed myself
to collaborate at least
formally, by suggesting
titles for the four
movements. This is how
Suite n.1 was born, a
piece that does not
strictly respect the
formal rules of the
Baroque era, but
reinterprets and reuses
them in a new key. The
work's obvious late
Baroque inspiration led
me to find titles that
invited the performer to
delve deeper into the
work's aesthetic
inspiration. So I
suggested to Giorgio that
he title the four
movements with something
that linked their content
to four greats of the
18th century. German
masters. The prelude has
thus become from Eisenach
because of its sometimes
improvised Bach-like
atmosphere, the second
movement, vaguely
toccata, speaks an organ
language in the manner of
Buxtehude (who lived in
Lübeck), the slow
movement has a Handelian
quality - and Handel was
born in Halle - and the
last movement, far from
being a true Chaconne,
undoubtedly has the
latter's taste for
variation and ostinato,
typical traits of
Telemann who lived in
Magdeburg. The cities
that appear in the titles
are therefore indelible
to the authors cited.
Furthermore, one should
not think that the style
of the work is in any way
German, given that
Giorgio Mirto expresses
himself in a very joyful
language that synthesizes
modality with minimalism,
all seasoned with a a nod
to Pink's progressive
rock Floyd. or a Mike
Oldfield... The result of
this mixture of ideas,
inspirations and styles
is a work that personally
I never tire of reading
and rereading, for the
freshness that emanates
from it and for the
climate expressive which
rises, nourishing itself
with full efficiency. We
ultimately cannot ignore
that the note B, the one
which marks in a minor
way some of the most
expressive works of the
guitar repertoire, from
the study of Sor which
made generations of
students fall in love
with the guitar, until to
that of Frank Martin's
Four Pieces via La
Catedral di Barrios, is
the modal fulcrum of the
entire Suite: it is true
that the Prelude begins
with a clear chord in E
minor and lingers on an
open ending in A minor ,
but it almost seems that
the initial E serves as a
launching pad for a
continuation of the work
in which the dominant,
that is to say the B, is
the true musical North,
the pole star which
guides us in the other
three movements until the
end of the Chaconne de
Magdebourg. I wish
Giorgio and our Suite
great longevity and a
favorable destiny in the
complex and complex world
of contemporary guitar
composition. And I thank
him again, flattered by
his very kind
dedication.
FRANCE
SCO BIRAGHI
Au
lendemain d'une
récente
expérience au sein
du jury d'un concours de
guitare, j'ai
constaté avec
grand plaisir que Giorgio
Mirto, avec qui j'avais
partagé le
rôle de
juré, souhaitait
célébrer
l'expérience du
concours - au cours de
laquelle nous avons
découvert que nous
avions eu un grand
affinité de
pensée - avec
quelque chose qui
pourrait perdurer dans le
temps et ne pas
s'évaporer comme
cela arrive souvent lors
de rencontres courtes et
occasionnelles entre
musiciens. Il l'a fait en
véritable
compositeur, ce qu'il
est, et m'a
dédié une
Suite d'une très
belle facture ÃÂ
laquelle je me suis
permis de collaborer au
moins formellement, en
suggérant des
titres pour les quatre
mouvements. C'est ainsi
qu'est née la
Suite n.1, une
pièce qui ne
respecte pas strictement
les règles
formelles de
l'époque baroque,
mais les
réinterprèt
e et les réutilise
dans une nouvelle
tonalité.
L'inspiration
évidente du
baroque tardif de
l'Ã
Âuvre m'a
amené ÃÂ
trouver des titres qui
invitaient
l'interprète
ÃÂ approfondir
l'inspiration
esthétique de
l'Ã
Âuvre. J'ai donc
suggéré
ÃÂ Giorgio de
titrer les quatre
mouvements avec quelque
chose qui reliait leur
contenu ÃÂ quatre
grands du XVIIIe
siècle.
Maîtres allemands.
Le prélude est
ainsi devenu d'Eisenach
en raison de son
atmosphère parfois
improvisée
ÃÂ la Bach, le
deuxième
mouvement, vaguement
toccata, parle un langage
d'orgue ÃÂ la
manière de
Buxtehude (qui vivait
àLübeck),
le mouvement lent a un
Qualité
haendélienne - et
Haendel est né
ÃÂ Halle - et le
dernier mouvement, loin
d'être une
véritable
Chaconne, a sans doute le
goût de cette
dernière pour la
variation et l'ostinato,
traits typiques de
Telemann qui vivait
ÃÂ Magdebourg. Les
villes qui apparaissent
dans les titres sont donc
indélébiles
aux auteurs cités.
De plus, il ne faut pas
penser que le style de
l'Ã
Âuvre soit en
aucune façon
allemand, étant
donné que Giorgio
Mirto s'exprime dans un
langage très
joyeux qui
synthétise la
modalité avec le
minimalisme, le tout
assaisonné d'un
clin d'Ã
Âil au rock
progressif Floyd de Pink.
ou un Mike Oldfield... Le
résultat de ce
mélange
d'idées,
d'inspirations et de
styles est un ouvrage que
personnellement je ne me
lasse pas de lire et de
relire, pour la
fraîcheur qui s'en
dégage et pour le
climat expressif qui
monte, se nourrissant de
plein efficacité.
On ne peut finalement pas
ignorer que la note B,
celle qui marque de
manière mineure
certaines des
Ã
Âuvres les plus
expressives du
répertoire de
guitare, depuis
l'étude de Sor qui
a fait tomber amoureux de
la guitare des
générations
d'étudiants,
jusqu'ÃÂ celle de
Frank Martin Quatre
Pièces via La
Catedral di Barrios, est
le point d'appui modal de
toute la Suite : il est
vrai que le
Prélude commence
par un accord clair en mi
mineur et s'attarde sur
une fin ouverte en la
mineur, mais il semble
presque que le mi initial
sert de une rampe de
lancement pour une suite
de l'Ã
Âuvre dans
laquelle la dominante,
c'est-ÃÂ -dire le B,
est le véritable
Nord musical,
l'étoile polaire
qui nous guide dans les
trois autres mouvements
jusqu'ÃÂ la fin de
la Chaconne de
Magdebourg. Je souhaite
ÃÂ Giorgio et
àë notre
û Suite une grande
longévité
et un destin favorable
dans le monde complexe et
complexe de la
composition contemporaine
pour guitare. Et je le
remercie encore,
flatté de son
très aimable
dévouement.
FRANCESCO BIRAGHI. $12.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Chilly Gonzales: NoteBook Solo Piano III Piano seul EBR Editions Bourges
Composed by Chilly Gonzales. Book Only. Composed 2018. Editions Bourges #EBR53...(+)
Composed by Chilly
Gonzales.
Book Only. Composed 2018.
Editions Bourges #EBR532.
Published by Editions
Bourges
$25.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Sonata No. 6 "Kharkiv", Op. 48 Guitare Guitare classique [Conducteur] - Avancé Productions OZ
Guitar solo - Advanced SKU: DZ.DZ-4244 Composed by Konstantin Bliokh. Sco...(+)
Guitar solo - Advanced
SKU: DZ.DZ-4244
Composed by Konstantin
Bliokh. Score. Les
Productions d'OZ #DZ
4244. Published by Les
Productions d'OZ
(DZ.DZ-4244). ISBN
9782898521614. La
Sonate n° 6 Kharkiv
pour guitare solo a
été composée en
2021, Ã la fin du
confinement lié au
COVID-19. Ã? ce
moment-là , ma famille
et moi étions
restés dans notre
ville natale de Kharkiv
(également connue sous
le nom de Kharkov), en
Ukraine, pendant près
de deux ans. Nous
considérions cette
période de pandémie
comme un désastre,
mais nous avons
réalisé plus tard
que c'était en fait un
moment plutôt heureux,
car la guerre est
arrivée dans notre
pays quelques mois plus
tard. Depuis 2022, une
fraction considérable
des 1,5 million de
citoyens de Kharkiv ont
quitté leur foyer,
ceux qui sont restés
vivent sous des attaques
incessantes de missiles,
et beaucoup ont été
tués. Je voudrais
dédier cette Sonate
à la ville
frontalière de Kharkiv
et, surtout, Ã ses
citoyens souffrant de la
guerre.
Pourtant,
la musique de la Sonate
n'a aucun programme
spécifique. Ici, je
donnerai un bref
aperçu de ses
principaux éléments
de composition pour
faciliter les
interprétations
futures.
Les
premier et quatrième
mouvements de cette
Sonate sont basés sur
l'interaction entre le
principe
dodécaphonique et le
centre tonal de sol
majeur, naturel pour la
guitare. En particulier,
le premier mouvement est
basé sur l'interaction
de la triade de sol
majeur Solâ??Siâ??Ré
des cordes de guitare
à vide 2â??3â??4, le
motif ascendant 1
impliquant les notes
Miâ??Fa#â??Laâ??Do#
(Ã l'origine sur la
première corde), et le
motif descendant 2
utilisant les notes
Miâ??Doâ??Sibâ??La
(Ã l'origine sur la
corde de basse 6). Ces
éléments se
complètent presque
pour former douze tons
(Ã l'exception du Fa
manquant), et les motifs
alternent avec des
fragments ostinato où
chaque note de la triade
de sol majeur est
déplacée pas Ã
pas d'un demi-ton vers le
haut ou vers le
bas.
Le
deuxième mouvement est
un Scherzo impliquant de
nombreux demi-tons dans
des accords accentués
et des passages rapides,
ainsi qu'un mouvement
mélodique chromatique
dans la voix de basse. Il
est presque atonal dans
certains fragments, mais
a un centre tonal global
de la mineur.
Le
troisième mouvement
est un Adagio
méditatif basé sur
un thème composé
dans l'échelle
hexatonique
Réâ??Miâ??Faâ??Sol#
â??Laâ??Si et des
accords ostinato
impliquant les cordes de
basse à vide
Miâ??Laâ??Ré et le
demi-ton
Siâ??Do.
Enfin,
le quatrième mouvement
est basé sur le
thème
dodécaphonique complet
composé de deux
phrases comprenant les
motifs 1 et 2 du premier
mouvement :
Solâ??Faâ??Sibâ??Labâ
??Doâ??Mibâ??Ré et
Miâ??Siâ??Do#â??Laâ??
Fa#. Ce thème est
présenté dans ses
formes prime et
rétrograde. Il y a des
dialogues entre la
première corde, les
basses et les cordes
médianes à vide,
similaires au premier
mouvement. Ã? son
apogée, le thème
dodécaphonique est
interprété en
utilisant le mouvement
parallèle de l'accord
de sol majeur standard de
la guitare avec les
cordes médianes Ã
vide sur douze
positions.
La
Sonate a été
créée en
première et
enregistrée (CD Naxos
No. 8.574630) par le
célèbre guitariste
ukrainien Marko Topchii,
qui a également
vécu et étudié
à Kharkiv. Je lui suis
extrêmement
reconnaissant pour
l'interprétation
brillante de cette
pièce.
Je suis
très redevable envers
Productions d'Oz d'avoir
conservé mes notations
originales là où
celles-ci ne
correspondent pas au
style de
l'éditeur.
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. $9.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Roger Nichols Recording Method Livre - Pas de partitions [Livre + DVD] - Intermédiaire Alfred Publishing
(A Primer for the 21st Century Audio Engineer). By Roger Nichols. Book; Books an...(+)
(A Primer for the 21st
Century Audio Engineer).
By Roger Nichols. Book;
Books and DVDs; DVD;
Method/Instruction; Pro
Audio; Pro Audio
Textbook; Reference
Textbooks. 180 pages.
Published by Alfred Music
Publishing
$29.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| The Baltic Way Ensemble de cuivres [Conducteur] - Intermédiaire De Haske Publications
Brass Band - Grade 4 SKU: BT.DHP-1206253-130 Composed by Jan de Haan. Con...(+)
Brass Band - Grade 4
SKU:
BT.DHP-1206253-130
Composed by Jan de Haan.
Concert and Contest
Collection Brass Band en
Fanfare. Concert Piece.
Score Only. Composed
2019. 48 pages. De Haske
Publications #DHP
1206253-130. Published by
De Haske Publications
(BT.DHP-1206253-130).
English-German-French-
Dutch. In 1989, the
demonstration named the
Baltic Way also
known as the Baltic
Chain— was held in
the Baltic states of
Estonia, Latvia and
Lithuania by its citizens
in a call for
independence from the
Soviet Union. On 23rd
August 1989, some two
million participants
formed a human chain,
hand-in-hand all the way
from the Estonian capital
of Tallinn its Latvian
counterpart, Riga,
through to the Lithuanian
capital of Vilnius - six
hundred kilometres long.
It became the longest
human chain ever created
and turned out to be the
final push needed for
much sought-after
independence. This
historic event became the
source of inspiration for
this composition. The
introduction of thefirst
movement, ‘Struggle
for Independence’,
is based on a nocturne
for piano by the renowned
Lithuanian composer and
painter Mikalojus
Konstantinas iurlionis
(1875-1911), thematic
material from which has
been incorporated
throughout the whole
composition. The
melancholic beginning is
followed by a powerful
theme which reflects the
resolve of the Baltic
people. The sudden
aggressive, dissonant
chords and a dominant
and—in rhythmic
terms—contrary
bass drum announce that
the resistance is not
going smoothly. Just for
a moment, we hear the
anthem of the Soviet
Union in the lower brass,
but this is relentlessly
pushed to the background
by the rest of the band
playing the Lithuanian
national anthem,
‘Tautiška giesm
’ (Lithuania, our
homeland). The second
movement, ‘Decades
of Suffering’,
echoes life under the
Soviet Union's thumb. In
the pursuit of
independence, a peaceful
protest is planned in
which a human chain is
formed across the Baltic
states of Estonia, Latvia
and Lithuania. This
‘Chain of
Freedom’ is
depicted in the final
movement of the work.
De Baltische Weg
(The Baltic Way)
was een demonstratie van
de bevolking van de
Baltische staten die in
1989 plaatsvond als een
roep om onafhankelijkheid
van de Sovjet-Unie. Deze
historische gebeurtenis
vormde de inspiratiebron
voor deze compositie. Van
Vilnius via Riga naar
Tallinn werd een
zeshonderd kilometer
lange keten van naar
schatting twee miljoen
mensen gevormd. Op 23
augustus 1989 gaven al
die mensen elkaar de hand
en werd De Baltische Weg
de langste menselijke
keten ooit. Het bleek de
uiteindelijke opmaat tot
de zo gewenste
onafhankelijkheid. De
inleiding van het eerste
deel, ‘Struggle for
Independence’, is
gebaseerd op een nocturne
voor piano van
devooraanstaande Litouwse
componist en
kunstschilder Mikalojus
Konstantinas iurlionis
(1875-1911). Het
thematische materiaal van
deze nocturne is door de
hele compositie heen
verwerkt. Na het
melancholische begin
volgt een krachtig thema,
waarmee de strijdbaarheid
van de Baltische
bevolking wordt
uitgebeeld. De
plotselinge agressieve
dissonante akkoorden en
een dominante en ritmisch
gezien tegendraadse grote
trom laten horen dat het
verzet niet eenvoudig
verloopt. Even klinkt het
begin van het volkslied
van de Sovjet-Unie in het
lage koper, maar dat
wordt door de rest van de
band onverbiddelijk naar
de achtergrond verwezen
door het Litouwse
nationale volkslied
‘Tautiška giesm
’ (Litouwen, ons
vaderland). In deel twee,
‘Decades of
Suffering’, wordt
het leven onder het juk
van de Sovjet-Unie
verklankt. In het streven
naar onafhankelijkheid
worden plannen gemaakt om
als vreedzaam protest
tegen de onderdrukking
een menselijke keten te
vormen over de wegen van
de Baltische staten
Litouwen, Letland en
Estland. Deze
‘Chain of
Freedom’ wordt in
het laatste deel van het
werk muzikaal
weergegeven.
Der
sogenannte Baltischer Weg
(The Baltic Way)
auch unter dem Namen
Baltische Kette bekannt
war 1989 eine
Demonstration von
Bürgern in den
baltischen Staaten
Estland, Lettland und
Litauen mit dem Aufruf
zur Unabhängigkeit von
der Sowjetunion. Am 23.
August 1989 bildeten rund
zwei Millionen Teilnehmer
eine sechshundert
Kilometer lange
Menschenkette, die von
der estnischen Hauptstadt
Tallinn über das
lettische Riga bis zur
litauischen Hauptstadt
Vilnius reichte. Die
längste Menschenkette,
die jemals geschaffen
wurde, erwies sich als
der letzte Schritt, der
zur lang ersehnten
Unabhängigkeit
führte. Dieses
historische Ereignis
diente der Komposition
alsInspirationsquelle.
Die Einleitung des ersten
Satzes, Struggle for
Independence“,
basiert auf einem
Nocturne für Klavier
des bekannten litauischen
Komponisten und Malers
Mikalojus Konstantinas
iurlionis (1875 1911),
dessen thematisches
Material in der gesamten
Komposition verwendet
wird. Dem melancholischen
Anfang folgt ein
mitreißendes Thema,
das die Entschlossenheit
der baltischen
Bevölkerung
widerspiegelt. Die
plötzlichen
aggressiven, dissonanten
Akkorde und eine
dominante und rhythmisch
gegenläufige Bewegung
in der Basstrommel
kündigen an, dass der
Widerstand nicht
reibungslos verläuft.
Für einen kurzen
Moment erklingt die Hymne
der Sowjetunion in den
tiefen Blechbläsern,
aber diese wird
unerbittlich vom
restlichen Orchester in
den Hintergrund
gedrängt, welches die
litauische Nationalhymne
Tautiška giesm “
(Litauen, unser
Heimatland“)
spielt. Der zweite Satz,
Decades of
Suffering“,
spiegelt das Leben unter
dem Joch der Sowjetunion
wider. Für das Streben
nach Unabhängigkeit
war ein friedlicher
Protest geplant, bei dem
eine Menschenkette durch
die baltischen Staaten
Estland, Lettland und
Litauen gebildet wurde.
Diese Chain of
Freedom“ wird im
letzten Satz des Werkes
beschrieben.
En
1989, la manifestation
nommée « La Voie
balte » (The Baltic
Way) s’est
tenue en Estonie, en
Lettonie et en Lituanie,
les pays baltes dont les
citoyens demandaient
être indépendants
de l’Union
soviétique. Le 23 ao t
1989, quelque deux
millions de personnes se
tenant par la main ont
formé une chaîne
humaine de 600 km de long
reliant les trois
capitales Tallinn
(Estonie), Riga
(Lettonie) et Vilnius
(Lituanie). Cette
chaîne humaine, la
plus longue ce jour,
donna une impulsion
décisive au
rétablissement
d’une
indépendance vivement
souhaitée. Cet
événement
historique est devenu
source
d’inspiration pour
cette composition.
L’introduction du
premier mouvement,«
Struggle for Independence
», est fondée sur
un nocturne pour piano du
célèbre compositeur
et peintre letton
Mikalojus Konstantinas
iurlionis (1875-1911). Du
matériel thématique
emprunté ce nocturne
est parsemé travers la
présente composition.
Un début
mélancolique est suivi
d’un thème
puissant qui reflète
la détermination des
peuples baltes. La
présence soudaine
d’accords
agressifs et dissonants,
associés une grosse
caisse dont le
décalage rythmique
domine, indiquent que la
résistance rencontre
des obstacles. Nous
entendons
momentanément
l’hymne
soviétique dans les
cuivres graves, mais cet
air est inexorablement
repoussé
l’arrière-plan
par le reste de
l’orchestre
interprétant
l’hymne national
de Lettonie, «
Tautiška giesm »
(Lettonie, notre patrie).
Le deuxième mouvement,
« Decades of Suffering
», dépeint la vie
sous le joug de
l’Union
soviétique. la
recherche de
l’indépendance,
une manifestation
pacifique est
organisée sous la
forme d’une
chaîne humaine
traversant les trois pays
baltes l ’Estonie,
la Lettonie et la
Lituanie. Le dernier
mouvement de la pièce,
« Chain of Freedom
», exprime cet appel
la liberté. $30.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| The Baltic Way Ensemble de cuivres [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Intermédiaire De Haske Publications
Brass Band - Grade 4 SKU: BT.DHP-1206253-030 Composed by Jan de Haan. Con...(+)
Brass Band - Grade 4
SKU:
BT.DHP-1206253-030
Composed by Jan de Haan.
Concert and Contest
Collection Brass Band en
Fanfare. Concert Piece.
Set (Score & Parts).
Composed 2019. De Haske
Publications #DHP
1206253-030. Published by
De Haske Publications
(BT.DHP-1206253-030).
English-German-French-
Dutch. In 1989, the
demonstration named the
Baltic Way also
known as the Baltic
Chain— was held in
the Baltic states of
Estonia, Latvia and
Lithuania by its citizens
in a call for
independence from the
Soviet Union. On 23rd
August 1989, some two
million participants
formed a human chain,
hand-in-hand all the way
from the Estonian capital
of Tallinn its Latvian
counterpart, Riga,
through to the Lithuanian
capital of Vilnius - six
hundred kilometres long.
It became the longest
human chain ever created
and turned out to be the
final push needed for
much sought-after
independence. This
historic event became the
source of inspiration for
this composition. The
introduction of thefirst
movement, ‘Struggle
for Independence’,
is based on a nocturne
for piano by the renowned
Lithuanian composer and
painter Mikalojus
Konstantinas iurlionis
(1875-1911), thematic
material from which has
been incorporated
throughout the whole
composition. The
melancholic beginning is
followed by a powerful
theme which reflects the
resolve of the Baltic
people. The sudden
aggressive, dissonant
chords and a dominant
and—in rhythmic
terms—contrary
bass drum announce that
the resistance is not
going smoothly. Just for
a moment, we hear the
anthem of the Soviet
Union in the lower brass,
but this is relentlessly
pushed to the background
by the rest of the band
playing the Lithuanian
national anthem,
‘Tautiška giesm
’ (Lithuania, our
homeland). The second
movement, ‘Decades
of Suffering’,
echoes life under the
Soviet Union's thumb. In
the pursuit of
independence, a peaceful
protest is planned in
which a human chain is
formed across the Baltic
states of Estonia, Latvia
and Lithuania. This
‘Chain of
Freedom’ is
depicted in the final
movement of the work.
De Baltische Weg
(The Baltic Way)
was een demonstratie van
de bevolking van de
Baltische staten die in
1989 plaatsvond als een
roep om onafhankelijkheid
van de Sovjet-Unie. Deze
historische gebeurtenis
vormde de inspiratiebron
voor deze compositie. Van
Vilnius via Riga naar
Tallinn werd een
zeshonderd kilometer
lange keten van naar
schatting twee miljoen
mensen gevormd. Op 23
augustus 1989 gaven al
die mensen elkaar de hand
en werd De Baltische Weg
de langste menselijke
keten ooit. Het bleek de
uiteindelijke opmaat tot
de zo gewenste
onafhankelijkheid. De
inleiding van het eerste
deel, ‘Struggle for
Independence’, is
gebaseerd op een nocturne
voor piano van
devooraanstaande Litouwse
componist en
kunstschilder Mikalojus
Konstantinas iurlionis
(1875-1911). Het
thematische materiaal van
deze nocturne is door de
hele compositie heen
verwerkt. Na het
melancholische begin
volgt een krachtig thema,
waarmee de strijdbaarheid
van de Baltische
bevolking wordt
uitgebeeld. De
plotselinge agressieve
dissonante akkoorden en
een dominante en ritmisch
gezien tegendraadse grote
trom laten horen dat het
verzet niet eenvoudig
verloopt. Even klinkt het
begin van het volkslied
van de Sovjet-Unie in het
lage koper, maar dat
wordt door de rest van de
band onverbiddelijk naar
de achtergrond verwezen
door het Litouwse
nationale volkslied
‘Tautiška giesm
’ (Litouwen, ons
vaderland). In deel twee,
‘Decades of
Suffering’, wordt
het leven onder het juk
van de Sovjet-Unie
verklankt. In het streven
naar onafhankelijkheid
worden plannen gemaakt om
als vreedzaam protest
tegen de onderdrukking
een menselijke keten te
vormen over de wegen van
de Baltische staten
Litouwen, Letland en
Estland. Deze
‘Chain of
Freedom’ wordt in
het laatste deel van het
werk muzikaal
weergegeven.
Der
sogenannte Baltischer Weg
(The Baltic Way)
auch unter dem Namen
Baltische Kette bekannt
war 1989 eine
Demonstration von
Bürgern in den
baltischen Staaten
Estland, Lettland und
Litauen mit dem Aufruf
zur Unabhängigkeit von
der Sowjetunion. Am 23.
August 1989 bildeten rund
zwei Millionen Teilnehmer
eine sechshundert
Kilometer lange
Menschenkette, die von
der estnischen Hauptstadt
Tallinn über das
lettische Riga bis zur
litauischen Hauptstadt
Vilnius reichte. Die
längste Menschenkette,
die jemals geschaffen
wurde, erwies sich als
der letzte Schritt, der
zur lang ersehnten
Unabhängigkeit
führte. Dieses
historische Ereignis
diente der Komposition
alsInspirationsquelle.
Die Einleitung des ersten
Satzes, Struggle for
Independence“,
basiert auf einem
Nocturne für Klavier
des bekannten litauischen
Komponisten und Malers
Mikalojus Konstantinas
iurlionis (1875 1911),
dessen thematisches
Material in der gesamten
Komposition verwendet
wird. Dem melancholischen
Anfang folgt ein
mitreißendes Thema,
das die Entschlossenheit
der baltischen
Bevölkerung
widerspiegelt. Die
plötzlichen
aggressiven, dissonanten
Akkorde und eine
dominante und rhythmisch
gegenläufige Bewegung
in der Basstrommel
kündigen an, dass der
Widerstand nicht
reibungslos verläuft.
Für einen kurzen
Moment erklingt die Hymne
der Sowjetunion in den
tiefen Blechbläsern,
aber diese wird
unerbittlich vom
restlichen Orchester in
den Hintergrund
gedrängt, welches die
litauische Nationalhymne
Tautiška giesm “
(Litauen, unser
Heimatland“)
spielt. Der zweite Satz,
Decades of
Suffering“,
spiegelt das Leben unter
dem Joch der Sowjetunion
wider. Für das Streben
nach Unabhängigkeit
war ein friedlicher
Protest geplant, bei dem
eine Menschenkette durch
die baltischen Staaten
Estland, Lettland und
Litauen gebildet wurde.
Diese Chain of
Freedom“ wird im
letzten Satz des Werkes
beschrieben.
En
1989, la manifestation
nommée « La Voie
balte » (The Baltic
Way) s’est
tenue en Estonie, en
Lettonie et en Lituanie,
les pays baltes dont les
citoyens demandaient
être indépendants
de l’Union
soviétique. Le 23 ao t
1989, quelque deux
millions de personnes se
tenant par la main ont
formé une chaîne
humaine de 600 km de long
reliant les trois
capitales Tallinn
(Estonie), Riga
(Lettonie) et Vilnius
(Lituanie). Cette
chaîne humaine, la
plus longue ce jour,
donna une impulsion
décisive au
rétablissement
d’une
indépendance vivement
souhaitée. Cet
événement
historique est devenu
source
d’inspiration pour
cette composition.
L’introduction du
premier mouvement,«
Struggle for Independence
», est fondée sur
un nocturne pour piano du
célèbre compositeur
et peintre letton
Mikalojus Konstantinas
iurlionis (1875-1911). Du
matériel thématique
emprunté ce nocturne
est parsemé travers la
présente composition.
Un début
mélancolique est suivi
d’un thème
puissant qui reflète
la détermination des
peuples baltes. La
présence soudaine
d’accords
agressifs et dissonants,
associés une grosse
caisse dont le
décalage rythmique
domine, indiquent que la
résistance rencontre
des obstacles. Nous
entendons
momentanément
l’hymne
soviétique dans les
cuivres graves, mais cet
air est inexorablement
repoussé
l’arrière-plan
par le reste de
l’orchestre
interprétant
l’hymne national
de Lettonie, «
Tautiška giesm »
(Lettonie, notre patrie).
Le deuxième mouvement,
« Decades of Suffering
», dépeint la vie
sous le joug de
l’Union
soviétique. la
recherche de
l’indépendance,
une manifestation
pacifique est
organisée sous la
forme d’une
chaîne humaine
traversant les trois pays
baltes l ’Estonie,
la Lettonie et la
Lituanie. Le dernier
mouvement de la pièce,
« Chain of Freedom
», exprime cet appel
la liberté. $137.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Saga of the Mississippi [Conducteur] Theodore Presser Co.
Orchestra 2 Bassoons, 2 Oboes, 3 Clarinets, 3 Flutes, 3 Trombones, 3 Trumpets, 4...(+)
Orchestra 2 Bassoons, 2
Oboes, 3 Clarinets, 3
Flutes, 3 Trombones, 3
Trumpets, 4 Horns, Bass
Drum, Contra-bassoon,
Cymbal, English Horn,
Percussion: Snare Drum,
Strings, Timpani, Tuba
SKU: PR.466411770
Composed by Harl
Mcdonald. This edition:
Study Score.
Contemporary. Full score.
With Standard notation.
84 pages. Duration 15
minutes. Theodore Presser
Company #466-41177.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.466411770). UPC:
680160640850. 9 x 12
inches. Mississippi
I. Father of Waters: born
of the Highlands and the
Lakes; the Glaciers, the
Mountains, and the
Prairies. The picture of
your birth is clounded in
the ice and mists of
ancient ages but your
spirit remains our life
stream. II. The Red Man
knew your bountiful gifts
and gave thanks to the
Great Spirit on your
banks. -- The Spanish and
French Fathers brought
the glory of Christianity
to America on
Mississippi. But all men,
white and dark; --
Indian, Spaniard, and
Negro; Bourbon and
Yankee, combined to make
Mississippi the heart of
America. Saga of the
Mississippi Harl McDonald
Born near Boulder,
Colorado, July 27, 1899
Now living in
Philadelphia The original
suggestion for a
symphonic work on the
subject of the
Mississippi came
indirectly from the late
Booth Tarkington who saw
in it color and movement
and atmosphere
translatable into the
terms of music. In the
course of time, by the
mysterious processes of
composers' chemistry, it
took shape as a tone-poem
of two sections, one
representing the rise of
the great stream from its
primeval geologic
sources, the other the
human history of the
river. Mr. McDonald
devised the following
verbal outline of the
general scheme of his
diptych: I. Father of
Waters: born of the
Highlands and the Lakes;
the Glaciers, the
Mountains, and the
Prairies. The picture of
your birth is clounded in
the ice and mists of
ancient ages but your
spirit remains our life
stream. II. The Red Man
knew your bountiful gifts
and gave thanks to the
Great Spirit on your
banks. -- The Spanish and
French Fathers brought
the glory of Christianity
to America on
Mississippi. But all men,
white and dark; --
Indian, Spaniard, and
Negro; Bourbon and
Yankee, combined to make
Mississippi the heart of
America. The first of the
two movements, beginning
molto andante, is vaguel
modal to hint at
antiquity. It is built
upon the conventional two
themes, with an episode,
poco piu mosso,
misterioso, for
prehistoric murk and
muck. There are various
changes of pace and mood.
The second, Allegro ma
vigorosamente, prefigures
an Indian ceremony. A
theme presented by flute,
clarinet and bassoon is a
Canadian Indian fishing
call collected by the
late J.B. Beck. A later
passage of
quasi-Gregorian chant
identifies the French and
Spanish priests who made
the great river their
highway. The fishing-call
is altered in rhythm and
harmony to represent
Negro field hands and
roustabous. A turbulent
close brings all these
elemts together in the
muddy swirling currents
of the Mississippi. The
work was begun in the
summer of 1945, and was
revised and completed in
the summer of 1947. Harl
McDonald, who is the
manager of The
Philadelphia Orchestra,
has concerned himself
with music as an art, as
a science and as a
business in course of his
career. He was born on a
cattle ranch in the
Rockies, but since his
was a musical family, his
up-bringing combined
piano lessons with ranch
life. Years of study and
professional experience
followed in Los Angeles
and in Germany. In 1927
he was appointed lecuter
in composition at the
University of
Pennsylvania and he has
since then made is home
in Philadelphia. In 1933
under a grant of the
Rockefeller FOundation he
collaborated with
physicists in research
dealing with the
measurement of
instrumental and vocal
tone, new scale divisions
and the resultant
harmonies. In that same
year he was named head of
the University's music
faculty and conductor of
its choral organizations.
In 1939, having been a
member of the Board of
Directors for five years,
he was appointed manager
of The Philadelphia
Orchestra. He continus to
write, but otherwise his
entire attention is now
devoted to managerial
duties. Chief items in
the catalogue of his
compositions are four
symphonies, three
orchestra suites, a
half-dozen tone-poems,
three concertos and
considerable quantity of
choral music. $58.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Dotonbori Dash Orchestre à Cordes [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Facile Carl Fischer
By Alan Lee Silva. For string orchestra. Carl Fischer Concert String Orchestra S...(+)
By Alan Lee Silva. For
string orchestra. Carl
Fischer Concert String
Orchestra Series. Grade 3
and up. Score and parts.
Published by Carl Fischer
$60.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| 100 Etudes, Exercises and Simple Tonal Phrases Volume 1 Piano seul - Facile Schott
Piano - easy to intermediate SKU: HL.49045014 For Piano. Composed ...(+)
Piano - easy to
intermediate SKU:
HL.49045014 For
Piano. Composed by
Nicholas Lens. This
edition: Saddle
stitching. Sheet music.
Piano. Classical, Etude.
Softcover. 86 pages.
Duration 75'. Schott
Music #ED 22049.
Published by Schott Music
(HL.49045014). ISBN
9790001202114. 9.0x12.0
inches. The Belgian
composer Nicholas Lens
presents extremely varied
etudes, exercises and
simple phrases with
wonderfully telling
titles from poetry and
everyday world for
children and adults. For
the most part the studies
are tonal and simple and
have no constructed line.
They are not based on any
educational concept but
leave the musical
dramatization to the
pupils and teachers:
'Notes and rhythms are
just notes and rhythms,
they do not have that
many rules, they do not
have any pretension, they
are just tools for you to
use to express what you
want to share'. $64.00 - Voir plus => Acheter | | |
| Lux et Umbra Orchestre à Cordes Editorial de Musica Boileau
String orchestra SKU: BO.B.3292 Composed by Jordi Cervello. Instrumental ...(+)
String orchestra SKU:
BO.B.3292 Composed by
Jordi Cervello.
Instrumental Sets.
Duration 17:35. Published
by Editorial de Musica
Boileau (BO.B.3292).
English
comments: This is
the definitive version of
Biogenesis, a piece that
Cervello had written in
1976, together with his
friend Jorge Wagensberg,
and which was awarded the
First Prize at the
Spanish Ministry for
Education and Science's
Permanent Composition and
Musical Research
Competition. The new
version was made at
1984-85 Lux et umbra is
written for a string
group consisting of four
first and four second
violins, three violas,
three cellos and a double
bass. The conceptual
battle between darkness
and light is represented
by the instability
between the notes B and
C, and by the
compartmentation of the
group of fifteen strings
into divisi that provide
an independent
arrangement for each
instrument, thus
bestowing great substance
upon the texture of the
music. A cello cadence
emerges from a slow and
straightforward
beginning. A process of
contrasts then begins,
culminating in a molto
vivace passage of a
scherzando nature, which
alludes to the Baroque
concerti grossi. The
music once again plays
with chiaroscuro until
reaching its climax, from
which point the
conclusion slowly begins,
establishing itself in
the high register until
fading away. The work was
first performed at
Barcelona's Palau de la
Musica by the English
Chamber Orchestra,
directed by Enrique
Garcia Asensio, in 1987.
That same year, in the
newspaper El Pais, the
observations of the
composer and critic
Francesc Taverna-Bech
paid tribute to the
work's intelligence as
regards the use of and
search for instrumental
resources (in this case,
string instruments, about
which Cervello knows a
great deal), the skill
involved in endowing the
lyrical line with
tension, and a singular
touch that confers formal
essence upon the musical
discourse. In La
Vanguardia, Jordi Llovet
wrote that this is a work
in which, as is the case
with most of Cervello's
compositions, the
listener finds something
covertly religious, a
mysterious secret, a
transcendence linked to
the origins of
communication requiring
more than a single being,
which provides
excitement. In 1990, when
the Orquesta de Granada
(Orchestra of Granada)
performed the work at
Barcelona's Grec
festival, the critic
Cesar Calmell opined, in
the same newspaper, that
inch by inch, surely and
imperturbably, Cervello
built up a perfect world
that reflects the image
of the craftsman who, so
astonished at the
delights of his trade, is
unable to do anything but
turn the very backdrop of
tragedy into something
pleasant. Lux et umbra
was recorded by the
Orchestra Estatal of the
Hermitage, conducted by
Alexis Soriano (CD
SA01210 Fundacion Autor).
--Xavier Casanoves Danes
Music
critic
Comentari
os del Espanol: Se
trata de la version
definitiva de Biogenesis,
obra que habia escrito en
1976 en colaboracion con
su amigo Jorge Wagensberg
y que obtuvo el Primer
Premio, en el ano de su
creacion, en el Concurso
Permanente de Composicion
e Investigacion Musical
del Ministerio de
Educacion y Ciencia. La
nueva version fue
realizada en 1984-85. Lux
et umbra esta escrita
para un grupo de cuerda
integrado por cuatro
primeros violines, cuatro
segundos, tres violas,
tres violoncelos y un
contrabajo. El combate
filosofico entre la
oscuridad y la luz lo
lleva a cabo la
inestabilidad entre las
notas si y do y la
compartimentacion del
grupo de quince cuerdas
en unos divisi que llegan
a una escritura
independiente para cada
instrumento, otorgando
una gran importancia a la
textura sonora. De un
principio lento y
descarnado emerge una
cadencia del violonchelo.
A continuacion da
comienzo un proceso de
contrastes que culmina en
un pasaje molto vivace de
caracter scherzando que
alude a los concerti
grossi del barroco. La
musica juega de nuevo con
el claroscuro hasta
llegar a la cumbre sonora
iniciando el final
lentamente que se instala
en el registro agudo
hasta desvanecerse. La
estreno en el Palau de la
Musica de Barcelona la
English Chamber Orchestra
en el ano 1987 bajo la
direccion de Enrique
Garcia Asensio. Ese mismo
ano, en el periodico El
Pais, el compositor y
critico Francesc
Taverna-Bech reconocia en
sus comentarios la
inteligencia en el uso y
la busqueda de los
recursos instrumentales
-en este caso la cuerda,
de la que Cervello es
profundo conocedor-, la
destreza para revestir de
tension la linea lirica y
un tacto particular para
conferir entidad formal
al discurso sonoro. Jordi
Llovet, en La Vanguardia,
escribia que en esta
obra, se encuentra, como
en la mayor parte de la
produccion de Cervello,
algo secretamente
religioso, un arcano
misterioso, una
trascendencia vinculada a
los origenes de la
comunicacion
impracticable con el ser
unico que resulta
apasionante. En el ano
1990, cuando la Orquesta
de Granada la toco en el
Grec de Barcelona, era el
critico Cesar Calmell
quien, en el mismo
periodico consideraba que
Cervello construyo palmo
a palmo, segura e
imperturbablemente, un
mundo perfecto que
refleja la imagen del
artesano que, de tan
admirado con las delicias
de su oficio, no puede
hacer otra cosa que
convertir en agradable el
fondo mismo de la
tragedia. Lux et umbra
esta grabada por la
Orquesta Estatal del
Hermitage, dirigida por
Alexis Soriano (CD
SA01210 Fundacion Autor).
--Xavier Casanoves Danes
Critico musical. $38.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 4 to 6 weeks | | |
| Queen [Partition] Backbeat Books
(The Complete Illustrated Lyrics). Book. Softcover. 390 pages. Published by Back...(+)
(The Complete Illustrated
Lyrics). Book. Softcover.
390 pages. Published by
Backbeat Books
$55.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Let's Play Jazz and More * Primer with CD Piano seul [Partition + CD] - Débutant Santorella Publications
Let's Play Jazz and More * Primer composed by Jay Latulippe and Sonny Doss. For ...(+)
Let's Play Jazz and More
* Primer composed by Jay
Latulippe and Sonny Doss.
For easy piano. This
edition: Paperback.
Instructional. Jazz
Method. Book and CD. Text
Language: English. 48
pages. Published by
Santorella Publications
$14.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Mythos Orchestre à Cordes [Conducteur et Parties séparées] Carl Fischer
By Sean O'Loughlin. For string orchestra. Carl Fischer Primer String Orchestra S...(+)
By Sean O'Loughlin. For
string orchestra. Carl
Fischer Primer String
Orchestra Series. Grade
0.5. Score and parts.
Published by Carl Fischer
$48.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Adult Piano Adventures All-in-One Lesson Book 1 CD
Piano seul - Débutant Faber Music Limited
By Nancy Faber and Randall Faber. For Piano. Faber Piano Adventures®. Method. P...(+)
By Nancy Faber and
Randall Faber. For Piano.
Faber Piano Adventures®.
Method. Primer - Level
2B. CD only. Faber Music
#CD1025. Published by
Faber Music
(1)$12.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 5 business days | | |
| Rhythmizing the Bow Violon [DVD] Huiksi Music Company
The world's first rhythmic primer for violinists, violists, and cellists!. By Ju...(+)
The world's first
rhythmic primer for
violinists, violists, and
cellists!. By Julie Lyonn
Lieberman. DVD. DVD .
Size 5.25x7.5 inches.
Published by Huiksi Music
Company.
$29.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
Page suivante 1 31 61 ... 421 |