TTBB Choir - Grade 3 SKU: HL.14018993 Composed by Bernhard Lewkovitch. Mu...(+)
TTBB Choir - Grade 3
SKU: HL.14018993
Composed by Bernhard
Lewkovitch. Music Sales
America. Motet. Octavo.
Composed 2002. 8 pages.
Edition Wilhelm Hansen
#WH27672. Published by
Edition Wilhelm Hansen
(HL.14018993).
ISBN
9788759850978.
7.25x10.25x0.061 inches.
Latin.
This set of
three motets for
unaccompanied male choir
sets the Latin words for
the De Profundis, Ave
Maria and Laudate and
manifests Lewkovitch's
fascination both with
chant and with
modality.Contemporary
Danish composer,
conductor and Organist
Bernhard Lewkovitch has
followed a rare path
among modern composers.
From 1947 he was Organist
at St Ansgars Kirches and
later remained connected
with the Catholic Church
by working as an
Organist. Clearly he is
inspired by the Catholic
liturgy and sees his
great output of
ecclesiastical music as a
vocation and a great
responsibility. For many
years his work by
inspired by Gregorian
chant and was composed in
church modes, then inthe
mid 1950's he began to
expand into modern
bitonality and
polytonality, culminating
in Il cantico delle
creature in 1962/3 in
which there was no
conventional notation and
no fixed pitch. After
that, Lewkovitch had
somewhat of a hiatus,
later returning again to
the inspirations of the
mid1950's.
TTBB Choir and Piano SKU: HL.14008014 Composed by Edgar M. Deale. Music S...(+)
TTBB Choir and Piano
SKU: HL.14008014
Composed by Edgar M.
Deale. Music Sales
America. Classical.
Choral Score. Music Sales
#NOV252168. Published by
Music Sales
(HL.14008014).
The
Lark In The Clear
Air is a
traditional Irish air.
Since the 1800s, it has
been associated with a
poem by the Irish writer
Sir Samuel
Ferguson
(1810-1886), one of the
founding fathers of the
Irish literary revival.
It has been arranged here
by Edgar M.
Deale for TBarB
Three-part Male Voice
Chorus, with Piano
accompaniment. It makes a
perfect recital item for
any Male Voice Choir.
Edgar M.
Deale (1902-1999)
was a twentieth century
Irish composer. A former
chorister at Christ
Church Cathedral, Dublin,
he was largely
self-taught as a
composer. His output was
limited to a few dozen
original works and
arrangements, but
hiscontribution to Irish
music is gradually
achieving the recognition
it deserves.