Orchestra - Grade 1.5 SKU: AP.48071S Featuring Themes from Take Me Out...(+)
Orchestra - Grade 1.5
SKU: AP.48071S
Featuring Themes from
Take Me Out to the Ball
Game and the Ninth
Symphonies of Franz
Shubert, AntonÃn
Dvorák, and Ludwig van
Beethoven. Composed
by Albert Von Tilzer,
Antonin Dvorak, Franz
Shubert, and Ludwig van
Beethoven. Arranged by
Bob Phillips. MakeMusic
Cloud; Performance Music
Ensemble; Single Titles;
Solo Small Ensembles;
String Orchestra. Sound
Innovations for String
Orchestra. Masterwork
Arrangement. Score. 8
pages. Duration 2:30.
Alfred Music #00-48071S.
Published by Alfred Music
(AP.48071S).
UPC:
038081557601.
English.
This title
features Alfred Music's
String Orchestra FLEX
options. That means that
every part in this set is
now transposed into every
other part, so you can
play this title with any
combination of like- or
mixed-string ensemble.
After purchasing this
set, decide what
additional parts you need
to meet the unique needs
of your ensemble, then
download and print them
for free at
alfred.com/supplemental--
-free of charge.
Tongue-in-cheek
and beautiful, Bottom of
the Ninths is the perfect
way to delve into these
masterworks with young
players in a fun context!
All sections remain in
1st position, in the key
of D major, with no high
3's or low 1's as the
melodies are passed
throughout the orchestra.
Easy to play and
showcasing the beauty of
these great composers,
this piece, arranged by
Bob Phillips, would shine
at a festival or contest.
The medley features Take
Me Out to the Ball Game;
the opening theme from
Schubert's Symphony No. 9
which is, of course, at
the beginning of that
work; the famous Going
Home theme from the
middle of Dvorák's
Symphony No. 9; and the
Ode to Joy theme from
Beethoven's Symphony No.
9, which is at the end,
or the bottom, of the
9th. Correlated to Sound
Innovations for String
Orchestra, Book 1, Level
5. (2:30) This title
available in MakeMusic
Cloud.
Orchestra - Grade 1.5 SKU: AP.48071 Featuring Themes from Take Me Out ...(+)
Orchestra - Grade 1.5
SKU: AP.48071
Featuring Themes from
Take Me Out to the Ball
Game and the Ninth
Symphonies of Franz
Shubert, AntonÃn
Dvorák, and Ludwig van
Beethoven. Composed
by Albert Von Tilzer,
Antonin Dvorak, Franz
Shubert, and Ludwig van
Beethoven. Arranged by
Bob Phillips. MakeMusic
Cloud; Performance Music
Ensemble; Single Titles;
Solo Small Ensembles;
String Orchestra. Sound
Innovations for String
Orchestra. Masterwork
Arrangement. Score and
Part(s). 76 pages.
Duration 2:30. Alfred
Music #00-48071.
Published by Alfred Music
(AP.48071).
UPC:
038081557595.
English.
This title
features Alfred Music's
String Orchestra FLEX
options. That means that
every part in this set is
now transposed into every
other part, so you can
play this title with any
combination of like- or
mixed-string ensemble.
After purchasing this
set, decide what
additional parts you need
to meet the unique needs
of your ensemble, then
download and print them
for free at
alfred.com/supplemental--
-free of charge.
Tongue-in-cheek
and beautiful, Bottom of
the Ninths is the perfect
way to delve into these
masterworks with young
players in a fun context!
All sections remain in
1st position, in the key
of D major, with no high
3's or low 1's as the
melodies are passed
throughout the orchestra.
Easy to play and
showcasing the beauty of
these great composers,
this piece, arranged by
Bob Phillips, would shine
at a festival or contest.
The medley features Take
Me Out to the Ball Game;
the opening theme from
Schubert's Symphony No. 9
which is, of course, at
the beginning of that
work; the famous Going
Home theme from the
middle of Dvorák's
Symphony No. 9; and the
Ode to Joy theme from
Beethoven's Symphony No.
9, which is at the end,
or the bottom, of the
9th. Correlated to Sound
Innovations for String
Orchestra, Book 1, Level
5. (2:30) This title is
available in MakeMusic
Cloud.
New music
(post-2000). Full score.
Composed 2016/17/20. 48
pages. Duration 8'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #PB
5432. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.PB-5432).
ISBN
9790004212790. 10 x 12.5
inches.
Marche
fatale is an incautiously
daring escapade that may
annoy the fans of my
compositions more than my
earlier works, many of
which have prevailed only
after scandals at their
world premieres. My
Marche fatale has,
though, little
stylistically to do with
my previous compositional
path; it presents itself
without restraint, if not
as a regression, then
still as a recourse to
those empty phrases to
which modern civilization
still clings in its daily
utility music, whereas
music in the 20th and
21st centuries has long
since advanced to new,
unfamiliar soundscapes
and expressive
possibilities. The key
term is banality. As
creators we despise it,
we try to avoid it -
though we are not safe
from the cheap banal even
within new aesthetic
achievements.Many
composers have
incidentally accepted the
banal. Mozart wrote Ein
musikalischer Spass [A
Musical Jape], a
deliberately amateurishly
miscarried sextet.
Beethoven's Bagatellen
op. 119 were rejected by
the publisher on the
grounds that few will
believe that this minor
work is by the famous
Beethoven. Mauricio Kagel
wrote, tongue in cheek,
so to speak, Marsche, um
den Sieg zu verfehlen
[Marches for being
Unvictorious], Ligeti
wrote Hungarian Rock; in
his Circus Polka
Stravinsky quoted and
distorted the famous, all
too popular Schubert
military march, composed
at the time for piano
duet. I myself do not
know, though, whether I
ought to rank my Marche
fatale alongside these
examples: I accept the
humor in daily life, the
more so as this daily
life for some of us is
not otherwise to be
borne. In music, I
mistrust it, considering
myself all the closer to
the profounder idea of
cheerfulness having
little to do with humor.
However: Isn't a march
with its compelling claim
to a collectively martial
or festive mood absurd, a
priori? Is it even music
at all? Can one march and
at the same time listen?
Eventually, I resolved to
take the absurd seriously
- perhaps bitterly
seriously - as a
debunking emblem of our
civilization that is
standing on the brink.
The way - seemingly
unstoppable - into the
black hole of all
debilitating demons: that
can become serene. My old
request of myself and my
music-creating
surroundings is to write
a non-music, whence the
familiar concept of music
is repeatedly re-defined
anew and differently, so
that derailed here -
perhaps? - in a
treacherous way, the
concert hall becomes the
place of mind-opening
adventures instead of a
refuge in illusory
security. How could that
happen? The rest is -
thinking.(Helmut
Lachenmann, 2017)CD
(Version for
Piano):Nicolas Hodges CD
Wergo WER 7393 2
Bibliography:Ich bin
nicht ,,pietistisch
verformt. Ein Gesprach
[von Jan Brachmann] mit
dem Komponisten Helmut
Lachenmann, in: FAZ vom
7. Juni 2018, p.
15.
World premiere
of the piano version:
Mito/Japan, June 17,
2017, World premiere of
the orchestral version:
Stuttgart, January 1,
2018, World premiere of
the ensemble version:
Frankfurt, December 9,
2020.
Orchestra - Grade 1.5 SKU: AP.40459S Composed by Andrew H. Dabczynski. Pe...(+)
Orchestra - Grade 1.5
SKU: AP.40459S
Composed by Andrew H.
Dabczynski. Performance
Music Ensemble; Single
Titles; String Orchestra.
Highland/Etling String
Explorer. Christmas;
Novelty; Secular; Winter.
Score. 12 pages.
Highland/Etling
#00-40459S. Published by
Highland/Etling
(AP.40459S).
UPC:
038081454191.
English.
What
happens when we mix
Santa, tradition, and
old-time fiddling? Of
course, we get Fiddler on
the Housetop! In this
tongue-in-cheek and
thoroughly playable
arrangement, young string
players will play like
eastern European
fiddlers, then spin into
an upbeat and driving
American fiddle version
of the holiday standard.
Whether a member of the
orchestra or the
audience, here's a
humorous, toe-tapping
arrangement of Up on the
Housetop like you've
never heard it
before!
Orchestra Study Score. Composed by Franz Joseph Haydn (1732-1809). Edited by ...(+)
Orchestra Study Score.
Composed by Franz Joseph
Haydn (1732-1809). Edited
by
Andreas Friesenhagen.
Henle
Study Scores. Classical.
Softcover. 52 pages. G.
Henle #HN9056. Published
by
G. Henle