Traditional, Wire bound,
Celtic. Folk. Book and
online audio. 216 pages.
Mel Bay Publications, Inc
#WBM58M. Published by Mel
Bay Publications, Inc
(MB.WBM58M).
ISBN
9781736363058. 8.75x11.75
inches.
A
comprehensive collection
of 172 guitar solos for
the flatpick or plectrum
guitarist. All solos are
written in standard
notation with
accompanying online
recordings by the author.
The solos include
beautiful American,
British and Celtic airs
and ballads, Celtic dance
tunes, lute and early
music, popular classical
repertoire and
contemporary etudes.
Includes access to online
audio.
Odysseia Orchestre d'harmonie [Conducteur] - Intermédiaire De Haske Publications
Concert Band/Harmonie - Grade 5 SKU: BT.DHP-1084443-140 Based on Homer...(+)
Concert Band/Harmonie -
Grade 5
SKU:
BT.DHP-1084443-140
Based on Homer-s
Odyssey. Composed by
Maxime Aulio. Concert and
Contest Collection CBHA.
Concert Piece. Score
Only. Composed 2008. 52
pages. De Haske
Publications #DHP
1084443-140. Published by
De Haske Publications
(BT.DHP-1084443-140).
9x12 inches.
English-German-French-Dut
ch.
Washed up on
the Phaeacian shore after
a shipwreck, Odysseus is
introduced to King
Alcinous. As he sits in
the palace, he tells the
Phaeacians of his
wanderings since leaving
Troy. Odysseus and his
men fi rst landed on the
island of the Cicones
wherethey sacked the city
of Ismarus. From there,
great storms swept them
to the land of the
hospitable Lotus Eaters.
Then they sailed to the
land of the Cyclopes.
Odysseus and twelve of
his men entered the cave
of Polyphemus. After the
single-eyed giantmade
handfuls of his men into
meals, Odysseus fi nally
defeated him. He got him
drunk and once he had
fallen asleep, he and his
men stabbed a glowing
spike into the
Cyclop’s single
eye, completely blinding
him. They escaped by
clinging to the belliesof
some sheep. Once aboard,
Odysseus taunted the
Cyclop by revealing him
his true identity.
Enraged, Polyphemus
hurled rocks at the ship,
trying to sink it. After
leaving the
Cyclopes’ island,
they arrived at the home
of Aeolus, ruler of the
winds.Aeolus off ered
Odysseus a bag trapping
all the strong winds
within except one - the
one which would take him
straight back to Ithaca.
As the ship came within
sight of Ithaca, the
crewmen, curious about
the bag, decided to open
it. The winds escapedand
stirred up a storm.
Odysseus and his crew
came to the land of the
cannibalistic
Laestrygonians, who sank
all but one of the ships.
The survivors went next
to Aeaea, the island of
the witch-goddess Circe.
Odysseus sent out a
scouting party butCirce
turned them into pigs.
With the help of an
antidote the god Hermes
had given him, Odysseus
managed to overpower the
goddess and forced her to
change his men back to
human form. When it was
time for Odysseus to
leave, Circe told him to
sail tothe realm of the
dead to speak with the
spirit of the seer
Tiresias. One
day’s sailing took
them to the land of the
Cimmerians. There, he
performed sacrifi ces to
attract the souls of the
dead. Tiresias told him
what would happen to him
next. He thengot to talk
with his mother,
Anticleia, and met the
spirits of Agamemnon,
Achilles, Patroclus,
Antilochus, Ajax and
others. He then saw the
souls of the damned
Tityos, Tantalus, and
Sisyphus. Odysseus soon
found himself mobbed by
souls. He
becamefrightened, ran
back to his ship, and
sailed away. While back
at Aeaea, Circe told him
about the dangers he
would have to face on his
way back home. She
advised him to avoid
hearing the song of the
Sirens; but if he really
felt he had to hear,
thenhe should be tied to
the mast of the ship,
which he did. Odysseus
then successfully steered
his crew past Charybdis
(a violent whirlpool) and
Scylla (a multiple-headed
monster), but Scylla
managed to devour six of
his men. Finally,
Odysseus and hissurviving
crew approached the
island where the Sun god
kept sacred cattle.
Odysseus wanted to sail
past, but the crewmen
persuaded him to let them
rest there. Odysseus
passed Circe’s
counsel on to his men.
Once he had fallen
asleep, his men
impiouslykilled and ate
some of the cattle. When
the Sun god found out, he
asked Zeus to punish
them. Shortly after they
set sail from the island,
Zeus destroyed the ship
and all the men died
except for Odysseus.
After ten days, Odysseus
was washed up on
theisland of the nymph
Calypso.
Nachdem
er an die Küste der
Phäaker gespült
wurde, wird Odysseus dem
König Akinoos
vorgestellt. In dessen
Palast erzählt er den
Phäakern von den
Fahrten nach seiner
Abreise aus Troja.
Odysseus und seine
Männer landen
zunächst auf
denKikonen, einer
Inselgruppe, wo sie die
Stadt Ismaros einnehmen.
Von dort aus treiben sie
mächtige Stürme
zum Land der
gastfreundlichen
Lotophagen
(Lotos-Essern). Dann
segeln sie zum Land der
Kyklopen (Zyklopen).
Odysseus und seine
zwölf Mannenbetreten
die Höhle von
Poloyphem, dem Sohn
Poseidons. Nachdem dieser
einige der Männer
verspeist hat,
überwaÃ…Nltigt
ihn Odysseus, indem er
ihn betrunken macht und
dann mit einem
glühenden Spieß
in dessen einziges Auge
sticht und ihn
somitblendet. Odysseus
und die übrigen
Männer fl iehen an den
Bäuchen von Schafen
hängend. Wieder an
Bord, provoziert Odysseus
den Zyklopen, indem er
ihm seine wahre
Identität verrät.
Wütend bewirft
Polyphem das Schiff mit
Steinen undversucht, es
zu versenken. Nachdem sie
die Insel der Kyklopen
verlassen haben, kommen
Odysseus und seine Mannen
ins Reich von Aiolos, dem
Herr der Winde. Aiolos
schenkt ihm einen Beutel,
in dem alle Winde
eingesperrt sind,
außer dem, der ihn
direktzurück nach
Ithaka treiben soll. Als
das Schiff in Sichtweite
von Ithaka ist, öff
nen die neugierigen
Seemänner den
Windsack. Die Winde entfl
iehen und erzeugen einen
Sturm. Odysseus und seine
Mannschaft verschlägt
es ins Land
derkannibalischen
Laistrygonen, die alle
ihre Schiff e, bis auf
eines, versenken. Die
Ãœberlebenden reisen
weiter nach Aiaia, der
Insel der Zauberin Kirke.
Odysseus sendet einen
Spähtrupp aus, der von
Kirke aber in Schweine
verwandelt wird. Mit
Hilfeeines Gegenmittels
vom Götterboten Hermes
kann Odysseus Kirke
überwaÃ…Nltigen
und er zwingt sie, seinen
Gefährten wieder ihre
menschliche Gestalt
zurückzugeben. Als
er wieder aufbrechen
will, rät Kirke ihm,
den Seher Teiresias in
derUnterwelt aufzusuchen
und zu befragen. Eine
Tagesreise führt
sie dann ins Land der
Kimmerer, nahe dem
Eingang des Hades. Dort
bringt Odysseus Opfer, um
die Seelen der Toten
anzurufen. Teireisas sagt
ihm sein Schicksal
voraus. Dann darf
Odysseusmit seiner Mutter
Antikleia und den Seelen
von Agamemnon, Achilles,
Patroklos, Antilochus,
Ajax und anderen Toten
sprechen. Dann sieht er
die Seelen der Verdammten
Tityos, Tantalos und
Sisyphos. Bald wird
Odysseus selbst von den
Seelen gequält,
kehrtvoll Angst zu seinem
Schiff zurück und
segelt davon. In Aiaia
hatte Kirke ihn vor den
drohenden Gefahren der
Heimreise gewarnt. Sie
riet ihm, den Gesang der
Sirenen zu vermeiden,
wenn er aber unbedingt
zuhören müsse,
solle er sich an denMast
seines Schiff es bindet
lassen, was er dann auch
tut. Dann führt
Odysseus seine Mannschaft
erfolgreich durch die
Meerenge zwischen Skylla
und Charybdis, wobei
Skylla jedoch sechs
seiner Männer
verschlingt.
Schließlich erreichen
Odysseusund die
überlebende
Besatzung die Insel, auf
der der Sonnengott Helios
heiliges Vieh hält.
Odysseus will
weitersegeln, aber seine
Mannschaft
überredet ihn zu
einer Rast. Odysseus
erzählt ihnen von
Kirkes Warnung, aber
kaum, dass
ereingeschlafen ist,
töten die Männer in
gotteslästerlicher
Weise einige Rinder und
verspeisen sie. Als
Helios dies entdeckt,
bittet er Zeus, sie zu
bestrafen. Kurz nachdem
sie die Segel für
die Abreise von der Insel
gesetzt haben,
zerstört Zeusdas
Schiff und alle außer
Odysseus sterben. Nach
zehn Tagen wird Odysseus
an den Strand der Insel
der Nymphe Kalypso
angespült.
Odysseia Orchestre d'harmonie [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Intermédiaire De Haske Publications
Concert Band/Harmonie - Grade 5 SKU: BT.DHP-1084443-010 Based on Homer...(+)
Concert Band/Harmonie -
Grade 5
SKU:
BT.DHP-1084443-010
Based on Homer-s
Odyssey. Composed by
Maxime Aulio. Concert and
Contest Collection CBHA.
Concert Piece. Set (Score
& Parts). Composed 2008.
De Haske Publications
#DHP 1084443-010.
Published by De Haske
Publications
(BT.DHP-1084443-010).
9x12 inches.
English-German-French-Dut
ch.
Washed up on
the Phaeacian shore after
a shipwreck, Odysseus is
introduced to King
Alcinous. As he sits in
the palace, he tells the
Phaeacians of his
wanderings since leaving
Troy. Odysseus and his
men fi rst landed on the
island of the Cicones
wherethey sacked the city
of Ismarus. From there,
great storms swept them
to the land of the
hospitable Lotus Eaters.
Then they sailed to the
land of the Cyclopes.
Odysseus and twelve of
his men entered the cave
of Polyphemus. After the
single-eyed giantmade
handfuls of his men into
meals, Odysseus fi nally
defeated him. He got him
drunk and once he had
fallen asleep, he and his
men stabbed a glowing
spike into the
Cyclop’s single
eye, completely blinding
him. They escaped by
clinging to the belliesof
some sheep. Once aboard,
Odysseus taunted the
Cyclop by revealing him
his true identity.
Enraged, Polyphemus
hurled rocks at the ship,
trying to sink it. After
leaving the
Cyclopes’ island,
they arrived at the home
of Aeolus, ruler of the
winds.Aeolus off ered
Odysseus a bag trapping
all the strong winds
within except one - the
one which would take him
straight back to Ithaca.
As the ship came within
sight of Ithaca, the
crewmen, curious about
the bag, decided to open
it. The winds escapedand
stirred up a storm.
Odysseus and his crew
came to the land of the
cannibalistic
Laestrygonians, who sank
all but one of the ships.
The survivors went next
to Aeaea, the island of
the witch-goddess Circe.
Odysseus sent out a
scouting party butCirce
turned them into pigs.
With the help of an
antidote the god Hermes
had given him, Odysseus
managed to overpower the
goddess and forced her to
change his men back to
human form. When it was
time for Odysseus to
leave, Circe told him to
sail tothe realm of the
dead to speak with the
spirit of the seer
Tiresias. One
day’s sailing took
them to the land of the
Cimmerians. There, he
performed sacrifi ces to
attract the souls of the
dead. Tiresias told him
what would happen to him
next. He thengot to talk
with his mother,
Anticleia, and met the
spirits of Agamemnon,
Achilles, Patroclus,
Antilochus, Ajax and
others. He then saw the
souls of the damned
Tityos, Tantalus, and
Sisyphus. Odysseus soon
found himself mobbed by
souls. He
becamefrightened, ran
back to his ship, and
sailed away. While back
at Aeaea, Circe told him
about the dangers he
would have to face on his
way back home. She
advised him to avoid
hearing the song of the
Sirens; but if he really
felt he had to hear,
thenhe should be tied to
the mast of the ship,
which he did. Odysseus
then successfully steered
his crew past Charybdis
(a violent whirlpool) and
Scylla (a multiple-headed
monster), but Scylla
managed to devour six of
his men. Finally,
Odysseus and hissurviving
crew approached the
island where the Sun god
kept sacred cattle.
Odysseus wanted to sail
past, but the crewmen
persuaded him to let them
rest there. Odysseus
passed Circe’s
counsel on to his men.
Once he had fallen
asleep, his men
impiouslykilled and ate
some of the cattle. When
the Sun god found out, he
asked Zeus to punish
them. Shortly after they
set sail from the island,
Zeus destroyed the ship
and all the men died
except for Odysseus.
After ten days, Odysseus
was washed up on
theisland of the nymph
Calypso.
Nachdem
er an die Küste der
Phäaker gespült
wurde, wird Odysseus dem
König Akinoos
vorgestellt. In dessen
Palast erzählt er den
Phäakern von den
Fahrten nach seiner
Abreise aus Troja.
Odysseus und seine
Männer landen
zunächst auf
denKikonen, einer
Inselgruppe, wo sie die
Stadt Ismaros einnehmen.
Von dort aus treiben sie
mächtige Stürme
zum Land der
gastfreundlichen
Lotophagen
(Lotos-Essern). Dann
segeln sie zum Land der
Kyklopen (Zyklopen).
Odysseus und seine
zwölf Mannenbetreten
die Höhle von
Poloyphem, dem Sohn
Poseidons. Nachdem dieser
einige der Männer
verspeist hat,
überwaÃ…Nltigt
ihn Odysseus, indem er
ihn betrunken macht und
dann mit einem
glühenden Spieß
in dessen einziges Auge
sticht und ihn
somitblendet. Odysseus
und die übrigen
Männer fl iehen an den
Bäuchen von Schafen
hängend. Wieder an
Bord, provoziert Odysseus
den Zyklopen, indem er
ihm seine wahre
Identität verrät.
Wütend bewirft
Polyphem das Schiff mit
Steinen undversucht, es
zu versenken. Nachdem sie
die Insel der Kyklopen
verlassen haben, kommen
Odysseus und seine Mannen
ins Reich von Aiolos, dem
Herr der Winde. Aiolos
schenkt ihm einen Beutel,
in dem alle Winde
eingesperrt sind,
außer dem, der ihn
direktzurück nach
Ithaka treiben soll. Als
das Schiff in Sichtweite
von Ithaka ist, öff
nen die neugierigen
Seemänner den
Windsack. Die Winde entfl
iehen und erzeugen einen
Sturm. Odysseus und seine
Mannschaft verschlägt
es ins Land
derkannibalischen
Laistrygonen, die alle
ihre Schiff e, bis auf
eines, versenken. Die
Ãœberlebenden reisen
weiter nach Aiaia, der
Insel der Zauberin Kirke.
Odysseus sendet einen
Spähtrupp aus, der von
Kirke aber in Schweine
verwandelt wird. Mit
Hilfeeines Gegenmittels
vom Götterboten Hermes
kann Odysseus Kirke
überwaÃ…Nltigen
und er zwingt sie, seinen
Gefährten wieder ihre
menschliche Gestalt
zurückzugeben. Als
er wieder aufbrechen
will, rät Kirke ihm,
den Seher Teiresias in
derUnterwelt aufzusuchen
und zu befragen. Eine
Tagesreise führt
sie dann ins Land der
Kimmerer, nahe dem
Eingang des Hades. Dort
bringt Odysseus Opfer, um
die Seelen der Toten
anzurufen. Teireisas sagt
ihm sein Schicksal
voraus. Dann darf
Odysseusmit seiner Mutter
Antikleia und den Seelen
von Agamemnon, Achilles,
Patroklos, Antilochus,
Ajax und anderen Toten
sprechen. Dann sieht er
die Seelen der Verdammten
Tityos, Tantalos und
Sisyphos. Bald wird
Odysseus selbst von den
Seelen gequält,
kehrtvoll Angst zu seinem
Schiff zurück und
segelt davon. In Aiaia
hatte Kirke ihn vor den
drohenden Gefahren der
Heimreise gewarnt. Sie
riet ihm, den Gesang der
Sirenen zu vermeiden,
wenn er aber unbedingt
zuhören müsse,
solle er sich an denMast
seines Schiff es bindet
lassen, was er dann auch
tut. Dann führt
Odysseus seine Mannschaft
erfolgreich durch die
Meerenge zwischen Skylla
und Charybdis, wobei
Skylla jedoch sechs
seiner Männer
verschlingt.
Schließlich erreichen
Odysseusund die
überlebende
Besatzung die Insel, auf
der der Sonnengott Helios
heiliges Vieh hält.
Odysseus will
weitersegeln, aber seine
Mannschaft
überredet ihn zu
einer Rast. Odysseus
erzählt ihnen von
Kirkes Warnung, aber
kaum, dass
ereingeschlafen ist,
töten die Männer in
gotteslästerlicher
Weise einige Rinder und
verspeisen sie. Als
Helios dies entdeckt,
bittet er Zeus, sie zu
bestrafen. Kurz nachdem
sie die Segel für
die Abreise von der Insel
gesetzt haben,
zerstört Zeusdas
Schiff und alle außer
Odysseus sterben. Nach
zehn Tagen wird Odysseus
an den Strand der Insel
der Nymphe Kalypso
angespült.
Oboe SKU: BT.9781408105283 Composed by Helen McKean. Abracadabra. Method....(+)
Oboe
SKU:
BT.9781408105283
Composed by Helen McKean.
Abracadabra. Method. Book
with CD. Collins Music
Publishing
#9781408105283. Published
by Collins Music
Publishing
(BT.9781408105283).
String Quartet No.
3. Composed by
Shulamit Ran. Sws.
Contemporary. Full score.
With Standard notation.
Composed March 9 2013. 32
pages. Duration 23
minutes. Theodore Presser
Company #114-41690S.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.11441690S).
UPC:
680160626021. 9 x 12
inches.
Ran's third
string quartet was
written for the Pacifica
Quartet, who are
featuring it in numerous
performances from May
2014 through February
2016, across the country
and abroad. Their blog
page dedicated to the
work also features the
composer's notes, for
more indepth insight.
...impassioned solos
emerge from ominous
quiet, and high arpeggios
in the violins quiver
alongside the earthy
cello. Ms. Ran skillfully
deploys these extremes of
color, volume and pitch,
yet the overall somewhat
chilly impression is one
of poise. -- Zachary
Woolfe, The New York
Times. My third string
quartet was composed at
the invitation of the
Pacifica
Quartet, whose
music-making I have come
to know closely and
admire hugely as resident
artists at the University
of Chicago. Already
in our early
conversations Pacifica
proposed that this
quartet might, in some
manner, refer to the
visual arts as a point of
germination. Probing
further, I found out that
the quartet members had
special interest in art
created during the
earlier part of the 20th
century, perhaps between
the two world wars.Â
It was my good fortune to
have met, a short while
later, while in residence
at the American Academy
in Rome in the fall of
2011, art conservationist
Albert Albano who steered
me to the work of Felix
Nussbaum (1904-1944), a
German-Jewish painter
who, like so many others,
perished in the Holocaust
at a young age, and who
left some powerful,
deeply moving art that
spoke to the life that
was unraveling around
him. The title of my
string quartet takes its
inspiration from a major
exhibit devoted to art by
German artists of the
period of the Weimar
Republic (1919-1933)
titled “Glitter and
Doom: German Portraits
from the 1920sâ€,
first shown at New
York’s
Metropolitan Museum of
Art in 2006-07.Â
Nussbaum would have been
a bit too young to be
included in this
exhibit. His most
noteworthy art was
created in the last very
few years of his short
life. The
exhibit’s
evocative title, however,
suggested to me the idea
of “Glitter, Doom,
Shards, Memory†as
a way of framing a
possible musical
composition that would be
an homage to his life and
art, and to that of so
many others like him
during that era.
 Knowing that their
days were numbered, yet
intent on leaving a mark,
a legacy, a memory, their
art is triumph of the
human spirit over
annihilation. Parallel
to my wish to compose a
string quartet that,
typically for this genre,
would exist as
“pure musicâ€,
independent of a
narrative, was my desire
to effect an awareness in
my listener of matters
which are, to me, of
great human concern.
 To my mind there is
no contradiction between
the two goals. Â As in
several other works
composed since 1969, this
is my way of saying
‘do not
forget’, something
that, I believe, can be
done through music with
special power and
poignancy. Â Â The
individual titles of the
quartet’s four
movements give an
indication of some of the
emotional strands this
work explores. 1)
“That which
happened†(das was
geschah) – is how
the poet Paul Celan
referred to the Shoah
– the Holocaust.
 These simple words
served for me, in the
first movement, as a
metaphor for the way in
which an
“ordinaryâ€
life, with its daily flow
and its sense of sweet
normalcy, was shockingly,
inhumanely, inexplicably
shattered. 2)
“Menace†is a
shorter movement,
mimicking a Scherzo.
 It is also
machine-like, incessant,
with an occasional,
recurring, waltz-like
little tune –
perhaps the chilling
grimace we recognize from
the executioner’s
guillotine mask. Â Like
the death machine it
alludes to, it gathers
momentum as it goes, and
is
unstoppable. 3) â
If I must perish - do
not let my paintings
dieâ€; these words
are by Felix Nussbaum
who, knowing what was
ahead, nonetheless
continued painting till
his death in Auschwitz in
1944. Â If the heart of
the first movement is the
shuddering interruption
of life as we know it,
the third movement tries
to capture something of
what I can only imagine
to be the conflicting
states of mind that would
have made it possible,
and essential, to
continue to live and
practice one’s art
– bearing witness
to the events.
 Creating must have
been, for Nussbaum and
for so many others, a way
of maintaining sanity,
both a struggle and a
catharsis – an act
of defiance and salvation
all at the same
time. 4)
“Shards,
Memory†is a direct
reference to my
quartet’s title.
 Only shards are left.
 And memory.  The
memory is of things large
and small, of unspeakable
tragedy, but also of the
song and the dance, the
smile, the hopes. All
things human. Â As we
remember, in the face of
death’s silence,
we restore dignity to
those who are
gone.—Shulamit
Ran .
Choral SATB choir, piano SKU: PR.362034230 A Prologue to THE CREATION ...(+)
Choral SATB choir, piano
SKU: PR.362034230
A Prologue to THE
CREATION by Franz Joseph
Haydn. Composed by
Dan Welcher. Sws.
Premiered at the
Northwest Hills United
Methodist Church, Austin,
TX. Choral. Performance
Score. With Standard
notation. Composed July 5
2014. 16 pages. Duration
5:15. Theodore Presser
Company #362-03423.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.362034230).
ISBN
9781598069556. UPC:
680160624225. Letter
inches.
English.
by Marcia Diehl. For soprano recorder. Celtic/Irish, Irish. Level: Beginning-Int...(+)
by Marcia Diehl. For
soprano recorder.
Celtic/Irish, Irish.
Level:
Beginning-Intermediate.
Book. Solos. Size
8.75x11.75. 32 pages.
Published by Mel Bay
Pub., Inc.
Edited by Jamey Aebersold. For any C, Eb, Bb, bass instrument or voice. Play-Alo...(+)
Edited by Jamey
Aebersold. For any C, Eb,
Bb, bass instrument or
voice. Play-Along series
with accompaniment CD.
Jazz Play-A-Long For All
Musicians. Book with CD.
Published by Jamey
Aebersold Jazz.
Piano/Keyboard SKU: HL.1438561 Composed by Various. Super Easy Songbook. ...(+)
Piano/Keyboard
SKU:
HL.1438561
Composed
by Various. Super Easy
Songbook. Classic Rock,
Pop, Standards.
Softcover. Published by
Hal Leonard (HL.1438561).
ISBN 9798350123715.
UPC:
196288204916.
The
'80s brought on an
electrifying surge of
musical innovation,
marked by the rise of
genres such as synth-pop,
hair metal, and the early
beginnings of hip-hop.
This dynamic period was
distinguished by the
revolutionary influence
of MTV, which changed the
way we consume music and
turned musicians in
visual legends. The
decade's spirited vibe
made a lasting impact on
the music scene, etching
its presence into the
cultural fabric forever.
Grab your hairspray and
teasing comb and jump
into this new Super Easy
songbook, featuring 46
simple arrangements of
the decade's best to
start playing your
favorite songs in no
time! Each song is
arranged with simple
right-hand melody, letter
names inside each note,
basic left-hand chord
diagrams, and no page
turns. Songs include:
Africa ⢠All Outof
Love ⢠Beat It
⢠Danger Zone â¢
Don't Dream It's Over
⢠Ebony and Ivory
⢠Everybody Wants to
Rule the World â¢
Flashdance... What a
Feeling ⢠Footloose
⢠Girls Just Want to
Have Fun ⢠Higher
Love ⢠Hurts so Good
⢠Into the Air
Tonight ⢠Jump
⢠Owner of a Lonely
Heart ⢠Running Up
That Hill ⢠Sweet
Dreams (Are Made of This)
⢠Total Eclipse of
the Heart ⢠You're
the Inspiration â¢
and more!
Piano; Voice (Voice and Piano) SKU: HL.49006662 A Selection of 51 Klav...(+)
Piano; Voice (Voice and
Piano)
SKU:
HL.49006662
A
Selection of 51
Klavierliedern of 4
centuries. Composed
by Various. Edited by
Kurt Suttner and
Margarete
Juergenson-Rupprecht.
Arranged by Kurt Suttner,
Margarete Jü, and
rgenson-Rupprecht. This
edition: Paperback/Soft
Cover. Sheet music.
Edition Schott. Inspired
by the idea of presenting
singable songs for young
singers. Out of
consideration for less
trained singers, the
songs were transposed in
such a way that the
selection corresponds to
a volume for low voice.
Classical, Collection.
136 pages. Schott Music
#ED 6792. Published by
Schott Music
(HL.49006662).
ISBN
9790001072069. UPC:
841886030725.
7.75x11.0x0.377 inches.
German.
Klage eines
verliebten Schafers
(Albert) * Ergotzlichkeit
zur rechten Zeit
(Krieger) * Die
vergessene Phillis
(Telemann) * Von
Erschaffung Adam und Eva
(Rathgeber) * Von
allerhand Nasen * Ich
kehre wiederum (anon) *
Der lieben Sonne Licht
und Pracht (Bach) * Die
Sommernacht (Gluck) *
Rhapsodie (Reichardt) *
Um Mitternacht (Zelter) *
Der Musensohn (Zelter) *
Gegenliebe (Haydn) * Das
Veilchen (Mozart) * An
Chloe (Mozart) * Ich
liebe dich (Beethoven) *
Aus Goethe's Faust
(Beethoven) * Heinrich
der Vogler (Loewe) *
Heidenroslein (Schubert)
* An eine Quelle
(Schubert) * Der Wanderer
an den Mond (Schubert) *
Der Musensohn (Schubert)
* An Silvia (Schubert) *
Das Waldschloss
(Mendelssohn) * Aus den
ostlichen Rosen
(Schumann) * Erstes Grun
(Schumann) *
Fruhlingsfahrt (Schumann)
* Ein Jungling liebt ein
Madchen (Schumann) * Wenn
ich ein Voglein war *
Dein blaues Auge (Brahms)
* Salamander * Klange
(Brahms) * Traume
(Wagner) * Die Konige
(Cornelius) * Das
verlassene Magdlein
(Wolff) * Auf ein altes
Bild (Wolff) * Der
Musikant * Waldeinsamkeit
(Reger) * Morgen
(Strauss) * Untreu und
Trost (Pfitzner) * Hans
und Grethe (Mahler) *
Lied der Zigeunerin
(Tchaikovsky) * Die
Gefangene (Dvorak) * Im
Kahne (Grieg) * Span auf
den Wellen (Sibelius) *
Apres un Reve (Faure) *
Le Faune (Debussy) *
Gott, ach Gott im Himmel
(Bartok) * Ganse, Schwane
fliegen aus (Stravinsky)
* Wiegenlied
(Shostakovich) * Von der
Freundlichkeit der Welt
(Eisler) * Geh unter,
schone Sonne
(Fortner).
(Piano/Vocal/Guitar). For Guitar; Keyboard; Piano; Voice. This edition: Piano/Vo...(+)
(Piano/Vocal/Guitar). For
Guitar; Keyboard; Piano;
Voice. This edition:
Piano/Vocal/Guitar. Book;
P/V/C Mixed Folio;
Piano/Vocal/Chords. Hit
the Keys!. Jazz. 256
pages. Published by
Alfred Music Publishing
Santorella Publications' proudly boasts our connection to some of the best studi...(+)
Santorella Publications'
proudly boasts our
connection to some of the
best studio players in
the Los Angeles studio
circuit. Each one of
these great musicians,
when they are not in a
session or performing on
a new movie soundtrack,
is giving lessons to horn
players of all ages.
Santorella Publications
is setting a new trend in
the industry by making it
possible for you to study
with these talented
professionals in a
virtual world with Learn
From A Pro. Nick Lane
will walk you through all
23 lessons as if you're
sitting in a studio by
his side. If you went to
Los Angeles and took 23
lessons, it would cost
over $1,000.00. Now you
can Learn "Trombone" From
A Pro for only $12.95 and
in the privacy of your
own home. Whether you are
an early beginner or an
adult, here is your
chance to fulfill that
dream. Do something for
yourself and learn to
play today with
Santorella's Learn From A
Pro series. About your
private instructor, Nick
Lane Nick Lane has been
active in the Los Angeles
music scene for over
twenty five years. He
joined Maynard Ferguson's
Band after graduating
from Bostones Berklee
College of Music and
remained on the road for
three years before moving
to Los Angeles. He
continued touring while
based in L. A. with Rod
Stewart, The Who and Tom
Petty and The Heart
Breakers. Nick Lane
continues to perform with
Etta James, Chicago,
Shakira, Alejandro Sans
and has even performed
with Jennifer Lopez. Nick
has also been featured in
a special PBS broadcast
about "the blues" with
T-Bone Burnett. Nick
remains active in the
commercial recording
fields for movies,
television, commercials
and has recorded with
such Pop artists as; Macy
Gray, Tim Mc Graw, Baby
Face, Destiny's Child,
The Offspring, The
Wallflowers, Fast Ball,
Green Day, No Doubt,
Natalie Merchant,
Everclear, Barbara
Streisand and Joe Cocker.
Nick has recorded with
such Jazz artists as;
Rick Braun, Jeff Golub,
David Benoit, Dave Koz,
Kombo, Greg Karukus and
Warren Hill. Nick's
popular "lounge jazz" CD
performed with baritone
saxophonist Greg Smith
and an organ trio is
recorded on the Oakland
Stroke Label.
Book/Online Audio Female Voice; Piano Accompaniment; Vocal SKU: HL.299347 ...(+)
Book/Online Audio Female
Voice; Piano
Accompaniment; Vocal
SKU: HL.299347
12 Songs from Teen
Musical Theatre
Roles. Composed by
Various. Vocal
Collection. Broadway,
Musicals, Teens.
Softcover Audio Online.
88 pages. Published by
Hal Leonard (HL.299347).
ISBN 9781540060228.
UPC: 888680956158.
9.0x12.0x0.222
inches.
12 songs
from teen musical theatre
roles from shows that
opened in 2010-2019
complete with access to
professionally-recorded
piano accompaniments!
Contents: Alyssa Greene
from The Prom * Home from
Beetlejuice * Home from
Wonderland * I Love Play
Rehearsal from Be More
Chill * In My Dreams from
Anastasia * Journey to
the Past from Anastasia *
Just Breathe from The
Prom * One Perfect Moment
from Bring It On: The
Musical * Sal Tlay Ka
Siti from The Book of
Mormon * Stupid With Love
from Mean Girls * What's
Wrong With Me? from Mean
Girls * World Burn from
Mean Girls. Audio is
accessed online using the
unique code inside the
book and can be streamed
or downloaded. The audio
files include PLAYBACK ,
a multi-functional audio
player that allows you to
slow down audio without
changing pitch, set loop
points, change keys, and
pan left or right.
By Bob Dylan. By Bob Dylan. Arranged by Don Giller and Ed Lozano. Music Sales Am...(+)
By Bob Dylan. By Bob
Dylan. Arranged by Don
Giller and Ed Lozano.
Music Sales America.
Folk, Pop, Rock.
Softcover. Composed 2016.
788 pages. Music Sales
#AM978923. Published by
Music Sale
12-String Guitar SKU: HL.287559 By Various. Guitar Collection. Pop, Stand...(+)
12-String Guitar
SKU:
HL.287559
By Various.
Guitar Collection. Pop,
Standards. Softcover.
With guitar tablature.
120 pages. Published by
Hal Leonard (HL.287559).
ISBN 9781540043313.
UPC: 888680904715.
9.0x12.0x0.299
inches.
This
one-of-a-kind collection
presents accessible,
must-know songs from the
Beatles and Bob Dylan to
Dave Matthews Band and
Tom Petty for those who
have been learning
12-string guitar and are
eager to put their new
skills to work. You'll
find a combination of
tab, chords and lyrics
for 50 great songs,
including: California
Dreamin' • Carry On
• Closer to the
Heart • Do You
Believe in Magic •
Free Fallin' • Give
a Little Bit • A
Hard Day's Night •
Hotel California •
Leaving on a Jet Plane
• Life by the Drop
• Like the Way I Do
• Melissa •
Mr. Tambourine Man
• More Than a
Feeling • The One I
Love • Over the
Hills and Far Away
• Solsbury Hill
• Space Oddity
• Still the Same
• Turn! Turn! Turn!
(To Everything There Is a
Season) • The
Waiting • Wish You
Were Here • You
Wear It Well • and
more!
About First
50
You've
been taking lessons,
you've got a few chords
under your belt, and
you're ready to buy a
songbook. Now what? Hal
Leonard has the answers
in its First 50 series.
The First 50 series
steers new players in the
right direction. These
books contain easy to
intermediate arrangements
for must-know songs. Each
arrangement is simple and
streamlined, yet still
captures the essence of
the tune.