| The Best Fake Book Ever - C Edition - 3rd Edition
Fake Book [Fake Book] Hal Leonard
(C Edition) For voice and C instrument. Format: fakebook. With vocal melody, lyr...(+)
(C Edition) For voice and
C instrument. Format:
fakebook. With vocal
melody, lyrics and chord
names. Series: Hal
Leonard Fake Books. 856
pages. 9x12 inches.
Published by Hal Leonard.
(14)$59.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Rise Up Singing
Paroles et Accords [Partition] Hal Leonard
The Group Singing Songbook. By Various. Vocal. Size 9.5x12 inches. 281 pages. Pu...(+)
The Group Singing
Songbook. By Various.
Vocal. Size 9.5x12
inches. 281 pages.
Published by Hal Leonard.
(1)$39.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Rise Up Singing Paroles et Accords [Partition] Hal Leonard
Arranged by Peter Blood, Annie Patterson. Vocal. Size 7.5x10.5 inches. 283 pages...(+)
Arranged by Peter Blood,
Annie Patterson. Vocal.
Size 7.5x10.5 inches. 283
pages. Published by Hal
Leonard.
(1)$34.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| The Ultimate Pop/Rock Fake Book - In C
Instruments en Do [Fake Book] Hal Leonard
(4th Edition ) For voice and C instrument. Format: fakebook. With vocal melody, ...(+)
(4th Edition ) For voice
and C instrument. Format:
fakebook. With vocal
melody, lyrics and chord
names. Pop rock, rock and
pop. Series: Hal Leonard
Fake Books. 584 pages.
9x12 inches. Published by
Hal Leonard.
(26)$49.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| The Best Rock Pop Fake Book Instruments en Do [Fake Book] Hal Leonard
(For C Instruments). By Various. For C Instruments. Fake Book. Softcover. 576 pa...(+)
(For C Instruments). By
Various. For C
Instruments. Fake Book.
Softcover. 576 pages.
Published by Hal Leonard
$39.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Classical Fake Book - 2nd Edition
Fake Book [Fake Book] - Facile Hal Leonard
(Over 850 Classical Themes and Melodies in the Original Keys) For C instrument. ...(+)
(Over 850 Classical
Themes and Melodies in
the Original Keys) For C
instrument. Format:
fakebook (spiral bound).
With vocal melody
(excerpts) and chord
names. Lassical. Series:
Hal Leonard Fake Books.
646 pages. 9x12 inches.
Published by Hal Leonard.
(8)$49.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| The Ultimate Rock Pop Fake Book Instruments en Do [Fake Book] Hal Leonard
By Various. For C Instruments. Fake Book. Softcover. 560 pages. Published by Hal...(+)
By Various. For C
Instruments. Fake Book.
Softcover. 560 pages.
Published by Hal Leonard
$49.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Das Ukulele-Ding 2 Vol. 2 Ukulele Edition Dux Verlag
Lyrics and chords (ukulele) SKU: M7.DUX-342 200 Lieder and Songs. ...(+)
Lyrics and chords
(ukulele) SKU:
M7.DUX-342 200
Lieder and Songs.
Composed by Andreas Lutz
and Bernhard Bitzel. This
edition: Ring/Spiral
binding. Sheet music.
Songbook. Edition Dux
Verlag #DUX 342.
Published by Edition Dux
Verlag (M7.DUX-342).
ISBN
9783868494006. The
Ukulele-Ding 2 contains
200 songs from Pop and
Rock for campfires,
outings and parties. In
order to be able to sing
the songs optimally and
accompany them with the
ukulele, suitable keys
and chords have been
chosen. The chords are
given directly above the
lyrics, so you can sing
and play directly from
the sheet. A fingering
chart for all ukuleles in
the tuning g - c - e - a
is included. A must for
every campfire ukulele
player and all those who
want to become one. Bound
as a practical spiral
book - like every edition
from the cult songbook
series Das Ding. With
songs from ABBA - AC/DC -
Aerosmith - BAP - Billy
Joel - Bob Dylan - Bob
Marley - Boney M. - Bruce
Springsteen - Cat Stevens
- Coldplay - Die Toten
Hosen - Dire Straits -
Elvis Presley - George
Ezra - Howard Carpendale
- John Denver - Kansas -
Lady Gaga - Max Giesinger
- Nirvana - Peter Maffay
- Phil Collins - Pink
Floyd - Queen - Reinhard
Mey - Robbie Williams -
Rod Stewart - Simon and
Garfunkel - Supertramp -
The Beach Boys - The
Beatles - U2 und vielen
weiteren. $34.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 4 to 6 weeks | | |
| Die Donau Orchestre Barenreiter
Orchestra SKU: BA.BA06861 Sinfonie (1923-1928). Composed by Leos J...(+)
Orchestra SKU:
BA.BA06861
Sinfonie
(1923-1928). Composed
by Leos Janacek. Arranged
by Leoš Faltus and
Miloš Štedron. This
edition: complete
edition, urtext edition.
Linen. Complete Critical
Edition of the Works of
Leos Janacek H/3.
Complete edition, Score,
Set of parts. Duration 40
minutes. Baerenreiter
Verlag #BA06861_00.
Published by Baerenreiter
Verlag (BA.BA06861).
ISBN 9790260104211.
34.3 x 27 cm
inches. Leoš
Janácek’s
symphonic fragment Dunaj
(The Danube) dates from
the period of the
composition of
“Katya
Kabanovaâ€. The
composer was not
concerned with a
musical-picturesque
description of a river
landscape, but with the
mythical link between
women’s destinies
and
water.
“Pale
green waves of the
Danube! There are so many
of you, and one followed
by another. You remain
interlocked in a
continuous flow. You
surprise yourselves where
you ended up – on
the Czech shores! Look
back downstream and you
will have an impression
of what you have left
behind in your haste. It
pleases you here. Here I
will rest with my
symphony.†Thus
Leoš Janácek
described the idea behind
the composition project
which occupied him in
1923/24. However, after
further work, it remained
incomplete in 1926. His
“symphonyâ€
entitled Dunaj has
survived as a
continuously-notated,
four-movement bundle of
sketches in score form.
It is one of the works
which occupied him until
his death. The scholarly
reconstruction by the two
Brno composers Miloš
Štedron and Leoš
Faltus closely follows
the original
manuscript.
A
whole conglomeration of
motifs stands behind the
incomplete work. What at
first seems like a
counterpart to
Smetana’s Vltava,
in fact doesn’t
turn out to be a musical
depiction of the Danube.
On the contrary, the
fateful link between the
destiny of women, water
and death permeates the
range of motifs found in
the work. It seems to be
no coincidence that
Janácek, whilst
working on the opera
Katya Kabanova, in which
the Volga, as the river
bringing death plays an
almost mythical role,
planned a Danube
symphony, and that its
content was linked with
the destiny of women: in
the sketches, two poems
were found which may have
provided the stimulus for
several movements of the
symphony. He copied a
poem by Pavla
Kriciková into the
second movement, in which
a girl remarks that
whilst bathing in a pond,
she was observed by a
man. Filled with shame,
the young naked woman
jumps into the water and
drowns. The outer
movements likewise draw
on the poem
“Lola†by the
Czech writer Sonja
Špálová,
published under the
pseudonym Alexander
Insarov. This is about a
prostitute who asks for
her heart’s
desire: she is given a
palace, but then goes on
a long search for it and
is finally no longer
wanted by anyone. She
suffers, feels cold and
just wants a warm fire.
Janácek adds his
remark “she jumps
into the Danube†to
the inconclusive
ending.
To these
tangible literary models
is added Adolf
Veselý’s verbal
account which reports
that the composer wanted
to portray “in the
Danube, the female sex
with all its passions and
driving forcesâ€.
The third movement is
said to characterise the
city of Vienna in the
form of a
woman.
It is
evident that in his
composition, Janácek
was not striving for a
simple, natural lyricism.
The River Danube is
masculine in the Slavic
language –
“ten Dunajâ€
– and assumes an
almost mythical
significance in the
national character,
indeed often also a role
bringing death. The four
movements are motivically
conceived. Elements of
sound painting, small
wave-like figures in the
first movement, motoric,
driving movements in the
third are obvious
evocations of water. And
the content and the
literary level are easy
to discover. The
“tremolo of the
four timpaniâ€,
which was amongst
Janácek’s first
inspirations, appears in
the second movement. It
is not difficult to
retrace in it the fate of
the drowning bather. The
oboe enters lamentoso
towards the end of the
movement over timpani
playing tremolo, its
descending figure is
taken over by the flute,
then upper strings and
intensified considerably.
The motif of drowning
– Lola’s
despair – returns
again in the fourth
movement in the clarinet,
before the work ends
abruptly and
dramatically.
One
special effect is the use
of a soprano voice in the
motor-driven third
movement. The singer
vocalises mainly in
parallel with the solo
oboe, but also in
dialogue with other parts
such as the viola
d’amore, which
Janácek used in
several late works as a
sort of “voice of
loveâ€.
About
Barenreiter
Urtext
What can I
expect from a Barenreiter
Urtext
edition?<
/p> MUSICOLOGICA
LLY SOUND - A
reliable musical text
based on all available
sources - A
description of the
sources -
Information on the
genesis and history of
the work - Valuable
notes on performance
practice - Includes
an introduction with
critical commentary
explaining source
discrepancies and
editorial decisions
... AND
PRACTICAL -
Page-turns, fold-out
pages, and cues where you
need them - A
well-presented layout and
a user-friendly
format - Excellent
print quality -
Superior paper and
binding
$249.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| The Christmas Carols Book Guitare Guitare acoustique Hal Leonard
120 Songs for Easy Guitar. By Various. Easy Guitar (Simplified arrangements for ...(+)
120 Songs for Easy
Guitar. By Various. Easy
Guitar (Simplified
arrangements for guitar).
Size 9x12 inches. 111
pages. Published by Hal
Leonard.
(1)$15.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Christmas Carols Fake book [Fake Book] Hal Leonard
Fake book for voice and C instrument. With vocal melody, lyrics, chord names and...(+)
Fake book for voice and C
instrument. With vocal
melody, lyrics, chord
names and guitar chord
diagrams. Series: Hal
Leonard Paperback Songs.
255 pages. Published by
Hal Leonard.
(1)$7.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Compatible String Ensembles: Christmas Trios (Violin) Violon Carl Fischer
Chamber Music Violin SKU: CF.BF142 22 Holiday Arrangements for Any Com...(+)
Chamber Music Violin
SKU: CF.BF142
22 Holiday
Arrangements for Any
Combination of String
Instruments. Composed
by Basque Carol, Bernard
de la Monnoye, Catalonian
Carol, English Carol,
Felix Bartholdy
Mendelssohn, Franz Xaver
Gruber, French carol,
James Pierpont, John
Henry Hopkins, John Wade,
Lewis Redner, Mykola
Leontovich, Richard
Storrs Willis, and Welsh
Carol. Arranged by Todd
Parrish. Collection -
Score. 48 pages. Carl
Fischer Music #BF142.
Published by Carl Fischer
Music (CF.BF142). ISBN
9781491160145. UPC:
680160918744. The
22 holiday classics
contained in this
collection have been
carefully arranged for
any combination of string
trio. The melodies,
both sacred and secular,
cover many centuries and
originate in Western
Europe and the United
States. Each work was
selected for its quality,
musical interest, and
appropriateness in a
chamber setting. All
pieces in this collection
have stood the test of
time and are worthy of
both study and
performance. Arranged
specifically for a
chamber setting, the
trios may be performed in
a variety of venues from
church services to
holiday gatherings. This
Compatible String
Ensembles collection of
Christmas Trios will set
the mood in any
environment.This Series
is Available for:Violin
BF142Viola BF143Cello
BF144Bass BF145. The
22 Christmas tunes
contained in this
collection have been
carefully arranged for
any combination of string
trio. The most standard
instrumentation for
voicing is violin, viola,
and cello. However, three
of the same instruments
work well as do other
groupings, given that the
higher-pitched instrument
plays the higher part.
This three-part format
follows a standard order:
part 1 is melody, part 2
is harmony, and part 3 is
a traditional bass line.
Optional 8va markings are
sometimes given to help
the voicings sound
better.The selections
have been arranged in
alphabetic order. The
melodies, both sacred and
secular, cover many
centuries and originate
in Western Europe and the
United States. Each work
is in the public domain
and was selected for both
its quality and musical
interest.Arranged
specifically for a
chamber setting, the
trios may be performed in
a variety of venues from
church services to
holiday gatherings. Some
repeats are marked in the
music, but any selection
may be repeated for the
appropriate amount of
music needed. Bowings
have been added as
suggestions, and some
fingerings have been
added to show the
direction of shifts
beyond first
position.—Todd
ParrishOrchestra Editor,
Carl Fischer MusicJune
2021. $12.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| The Easy Christmas Carols Fake Book Instruments en Do [Fake Book] - Facile Hal Leonard
Melody, Lyrics and Simplified Chords in the Key of C. Composed by Various. Eas...(+)
Melody, Lyrics and
Simplified
Chords in the Key of C.
Composed by Various. Easy
Fake Book. Softcover. 112
pages. Published by Hal
Leonard
$22.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Violin - Concerto Orchestre, Violon SATB, Orchestre Editorial de Musica Boileau
Violin and orchestra SKU: BO.B.3340 Composed by Jordi Cervello. Instrumen...(+)
Violin and orchestra
SKU: BO.B.3340
Composed by Jordi
Cervello. Instrumental
Sets. Duration 29:00.
Published by Editorial de
Musica Boileau
(BO.B.3340). ISBN
9788480207591. Engl
ish comments: My
dedication to the string
instruments has been a
constant throughout my
compositional career and
I knew that sooner or
later the time would come
to compose a concerto for
violin and orchestra.
That moment came in the
autumn of 2002 and after
ten months of
uninterrupted work I
finished it in August of
2003. It is a work
structured similarly to
the traditional
concertos. An important
impetus for the
elaboration of my
concerto was due to the
ill-fated violinist
Ginette Neveu. Her
version of Sibelius'
Concerto has always
stayed with me. For this
reason the first
movement,
Moderato-Allegro, begins
with a contemplative
atmosphere similar to
that of Sibelius'
Concerto in which the
principal thematic ideas
appear tentatively. These
ideas, two rhythmic and
two melodic, are
reaffirmed through a
broad development that
culminates in an
orchestral fullness. A
calm, mysterious passage
recalls the introduction
and after becoming
blurred, three bars burst
in leading to the rapid
section of the movement.
Soloist and orchestra
engage in a dialectic
struggle of a dramatic
nature. The agitation
subsides leaving only a
tranquil and suggestive
clarinet phrase. This
will be taken up by the
soloist who leads up to
the movement's most
dramatic moment playing
an accelerating triplet
figure supported by an
orchestral pedal in
crescendo. From here the
soloist's cadenza emerges
beginning with soft
double notes. It finishes
with an ascending
progression and the
soloist settles into the
high register to elicit
the orchestra's
intervention in a soft
and transfigured
atmosphere. Once
internalised the second
movement, Adagio poco
sostenuto e leggero
begins. It has a solemn
character and opens with
two trumpet calls
answered by the
violoncellos and the
contrabasses. The violin
soloist introduces and
plays two nostalgic
themes, the first in the
low register and the
second, more extensive,
in the middle register.
The soft and delicate
Misterioso e leggero
begins with the violin
singing on high. The
rhythm of the constant
quaver figures gradually
accelerates until the
soloist provokes a
dramatic full orchestra
as in a cadenza. Once
again, the Calmo, in
which the soloist with
less and less orchestral
attire serenely bids
farewell. A rising series
of double stops by the
soloist serves to
initiate the
Finale-Scherzo. In 6/8
rhythm and with the
character of a rondo it
carries us along in a
carefree, virtuosic
ambiance. The principal
motives, brief and
concise, emerge from the
happy, playful theme
presented by the soloist.
With an intricate
progression of rapid
sixths in double stops it
reaches a tense and
somewhat combative
moment. However this
resolves itself in a
diminuendo that the
soloist peacefully takes
up with the notes re-la
to commence the cadenza.
This culminates in a
series of tied notes to
reintroduce the principal
theme. A moment of
melodic suspension serves
as a farewell before the
brief and jovial final
coda. --The
author
Comentari
os del Espanol: A lo
largo de mi carrera
compositiva mi dedicacion
a los instrumentos de
cuerda ha sido constante
y sabia que, tarde o
temprano, llegaria el
momento de componer un
concierto para violin y
orquesta. Este llego en
otono de 2002 y, tras
diez meses de trabajo
ininterrumpido, lo
termine en agosto de
2003. Se trata de una
obra estructurada de
manera similar a los
conciertos tradicionales.
Un importante impulso a
la elaboracion de mi
concierto lo debo al
recuerdo de la malograda
violinista Ginette Neveu.
Su version del concierto
de Sibelius ha
permanecido siempre
dentro de mi. Por ese
motivo, el primer
movimiento
Moderato-Allegro se
inicia con una atmosfera
contemplativa cercana a
la del mencionado
Concierto, en la que
aparecen cautamente las
principales ideas
tematicas. Con un amplio
desarrollo se llega a un
lleno orquestal en el que
estas ideas -dos ritmicas
y dos melodicas- quedan
reafirmadas. Un pasaje
calmo y misterioso
rememora la introduccion.
Tras desdibujarse,
irrumpen tres compases
que nos llevan a la parte
rapida del movimiento.
Solista y orquesta
establecen un combate
dialectico de caracter
dramatico. La inquietud
desaparece hasta una
tranquila e insinuante
frase del clarinete. Esta
sera recogida por el
solista, quien, a base de
una figuracion de
tresillos cada vez mas
rapidos apoyada por un
pedal de la orquesta in
crescendo, conduce hacia
el momento mas dramatico
del movimiento. De aqui
nace la cadenza del
solista, que se incia con
suaves notas dobles.
Finaliza con una
progresion ascendente y
el solista se coloca en
el registro agudo para
llamar la intervencion de
la orquesta dentro de una
atmosfera suave y
transfigurada.
Interiorizado es el
segundo movimiento Adagio
poco sostenuto e leggero.
Con dos llamadas de las
trompas respondidas por
los violonchelos y
contrabajos inicia el
Adagio de caracter grave.
El violin solista
introduce y canta dos
temas nostalgicos. El
primero en el registro
grave y el segundo, mas
amplio, en el medio.
Inicia el Misterioso e
leggero, de caracter
suave y delicado. Con el
violin cantando en agudo.
La constante figuracion
de corcheas acelerara
poco a poco el ritmo
hasta que el solista a
modo de cadenza provocara
un dramatico lleno
orquestal. De nuevo el
Calmo, donde el solista,
cada vez con menos ropaje
orquestal, se despide
serenamente. Una subida
de dobles cuerdas a cargo
del solista sirve para
iniciar el
Finale-Scherzo. Este, en
ritmo de 6/8 y con
caracter de rondo, nos
transporta en un clima
virtuosistico y
despreocupado. Del tema
alegre y jugueton
presentado por el solista
nacen los principales
motivos, breves y
concisos. Con una
intrincada sucesion de
rapidas sextas en doble
cuerda se llega a un
momento crispado y algo
combativo que, sin
embargo, se resolvera en
un diminuendo que el
solista recoge
apaciblemente con las
notas re-la para inciar
la cadenza. Esta culmina
con un suave rosario de
notas en ligado para
introducir de nuevo el
tema principal. Un
momento de suspension
melodica sirve como
despido antes de la breve
y jovial coda final. La
obra fue estrenada el 23
de septiembre de 2005 en
el Teatre Monumental de
Madrid por la Orquesta
Sinfonica de RTVE con
Markus Placci de solista
y Uwe Mund de director.
Gravacion: RNE y Canal
Clasico de TVE. --El
Autor. $42.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 4 to 6 weeks | | |
| Concerto Piano seul Theodore Presser Co.
Orchestra Piano SKU: PR.11641861SP Composed by William Kraft. Part. 35 pa...(+)
Orchestra Piano SKU:
PR.11641861SP
Composed by William
Kraft. Part. 35 pages.
Duration 21 minutes.
Theodore Presser Company
#116-41861SP. Published
by Theodore Presser
Company (PR.11641861SP).
UPC:
680160685202. What?
! - my composer
colleagues said - A
concerto for the piano?
It's a 19th century
instrument! Admittedly we
are in an age when
originally created
timbres and/or
musico-technological
formulations are often
the modus operandi of a
piece. Actually, this
Concerto began about two
years ago when, during
one of my creative jogs,
the sound of the
uppermost register of the
piano mingled with wind
chimes penetrated my
inner ear. The challenge
and fascination of
exploring and developing
this idea into an
orchestral situation
determined that some day
soon I would be writing a
work for piano and
orchestra. So it was a
very happy coincidence
when Mona Golabek phoned
to tell me she would like
discuss the Ford
Foundation commission.
After covering areas of
aesthetics and
compositional styles, we
found that we had a good
working rapport, and she
asked if I would accept
the commission. The
answer was obvious. Then
began the intensive
thought process on the
stylistic essence and
organization of the work.
Along with this went a
renewed study of
idiomatic writing for the
piano, of the kind
Stravinsky undertook with
the violin when he began
his Violin Concerto. By a
stroke of great fortune,
the day in February 1972
that I received official
notice from the Ford
Foundation of the
commission, I also
received a letter from
the Guggenheim Foundation
informing me I had been
awarded my second
fellowship. With the good
graces of Zubin Mehta and
Ernest Fleischmann,
masters of my destiny as
a member of the Los
Angeles Philharmonic, I
was relieved of my
orchestral duties during
the Hollywood Bowl
season. Thus I was able
to go to Europe to work
and to view the latest
trends in music
concentrating in London
(the current musical
melting pot and showcase
par excellence), Oslo,
Norway, for the Festival
of Scandinavian Music
called Nordic Days, and
Warsaw, Poland, for its
prestigious Autumn
Festival. Over half the
Concerto was completed in
that summer and most of
the rest during the 72-73
season with the final
touches put on during a
month as Resident Scholar
at the Rockefeller
Foundation's Villa
Serbelloni in Bellagio,
Italy. So much for the
external and
environmental influences,
except perhaps to mention
the birds of Sussex in
the first movement, the
bells of Arhus (Denmark)
in the second movement
and the bells of Bellagio
at the end of the
Concerto. Primary in the
conception was the
personality of Miss
Golabek: she is a
wonderfully vital and
dynamic person and a real
virtuoso. Therefore, the
soloist in the Concerto
is truly the protagonist;
it is she (for once we
can do away with the
generic he) who unfolds
the character and intent
of the piece. The first
section is constructed in
the manner of a
recitative - completely
unmeasured - with letters
and numbers by which the
conductor signals the
orchestra for its
participation. This
allows the soloist the
freedom to interpret the
patterns and control the
flow and development of
the music. The Concerto
is actually in one
continuous movement but
with three large
divisions of sufficiently
contrasting character to
be called movements in
themselves. The first
'movement' is based on a
few timbral elements: 1)
a cluster of very low
pitches which at the
beginning are practically
inaudibly depressed, and
sustained silently by the
sostenuto pedal, which
causes sympathetic
vibrating pitches to ring
when strong notes are
struck; 2) a single
powerful note indicated
by a black note-head with
a line through it
indicating the strongest
possible sforzando; 3)
short figures of various
colors sometimes ominous,
sometimes as splashes of
light or as elements of
transition; 4) trills and
tremolos which are the
actual controlling
organic thread starting
as single axial tremolos
and gradually expanding
to trills of increasingly
larger and more powerful
scope. The 'movement'
begins in quiescent
repose but unceasingly
grows in energy and
tension as the stretching
of a string or rubber
band. When it can no
longer be restrained, it
bursts into the next
section. The second
'movement,' propelled by
the released tension, is
a brilliant virtuosic
display, which begins
with a long solo of wispy
percussion, later joined
in duet with the piano.
Not to be ignored, the
orchestra takes over
shooting the material
throughout all its
sections like a small
agile bird deftly
maneuvering through
nothing but air, while
the piano counterposes
moments of lyricism. The
orchestra reaches a
climax, thrusting us into
the third 'movement'
which begins with a
cadenza-like section for
the piano. This moves
gently into an expressive
section (expressive is
not a negative term to
me) in which duets are
formed with various
instruments. There are
fleeting glimpses of
remembrances past, as a
fragmented
recapitulation. One
glimpse is hazily
expressed by strings and
percussion in a moment of
simultaneous contrasting
levels of activity, a
technique of which I have
been fond and have
utilized in various
fixed-free relationships,
particularly in my
Percussion Concerto,
Contextures and Games:
Collage No. 1. The second
half of the third
'movement; is a large
coda - akin to those in
Beethoven - which brings
about another display of
virtuosity, this time
gutsy and driving,
raising the Concerto to a
final climax, the soloist
completing the fragmented
recapitulation concept as
well as the work with the
single-note sforzando and
low cluster from the very
opening of the first
movement. $47.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Peace on Earth Piano, Voix et Guitare [Partition] - Intermédiaire Hal Leonard
Piano/Vocal/Chords Songbook (Arrangements for piano and voice with guitar chords...(+)
Piano/Vocal/Chords
Songbook (Arrangements
for piano and voice with
guitar chords). Size 9x12
inches. 144 pages.
Published by Hal Leonard.
(1)$10.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| The Complete Guitar Player: Rock Songbook Guitare Amsco Wise Publications
Guitar SKU: BT.MUSAM1008040 By Toby Knowles. The Complete Guitar Player. ...(+)
Guitar SKU:
BT.MUSAM1008040 By
Toby Knowles. The
Complete Guitar Player.
Pop & Rock. Book Only.
Composed 2015. 160 pages.
Wise Publications
#MUSAM1008040. Published
by Wise Publications
(BT.MUSAM1008040).
ISBN 9781783058228.
English. The
Complete Guitar Player
Rock Songbook features a
massive collection of 50
hard-rocking hits from
the best of classic and
contemporary rock music
for Guitar. Each song
includes full lyrics and
Guitar chords as well as
strumming and picking
patterns, making this
songbook great for the
aspiring rock rhythm or
lead Guitarist. Each and
every tune included in
this Guitar songbook is a
true rock classic,
perfect for cranking the
amp up to 10, or should
that be 11?. Old
favourites like All Day
And All Of The Night by
The Kinks and Hey Joe by
Jimi Hendrix are matched
by modern classics such
as Radiohead's Creep
and Use Somebody
by Kings Of Leon.
The rock songbook
presents the best in
music to plug in and rock
out to. It's designed to
be accessible and
enjoyable, showcasing the
best songs by the best
rock bands and
songwriters like The
Clash, AC/DC, Eric
Clapton and David Bowie.
Past and present tunes
are included, ensuring
there's something for
everyone in this complete
rock songbook. Each song
has been carefully
arranged for Guitar and
Voice, including the
melody in standard
notation,lyrics and
Guitar chord shapes. Not
only this, but there are
also suggested strumming
and picking patterns to
help you dial up the
volume and nail the exact
sound of the song
straight away. This rock
Guitar songbook is ideal
for beginners and
intermediate Guitarists
looking to expand their
repertoire with powerful
songs new and old,
whereas absolute
beginners new to the
Guitar will find that the
four books of the famous
Complete Guitar Player
series by Russ Shipton
will help them out with
the basics. With
these 50 rock Guitar
songs, you'll be singing,
strumming your power
chords, and soloing your
way through the best rock
songs of the past
half-century in no time
at all. The Complete
Guitar Player Rock
Songbook would make a
sterling addition to any
guitarist's bookshelf,
and each of these superb
songs is guaranteed to
make everyone stop and
listen. $29.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| String Sextet [Conducteur] Theodore Presser Co.
Chamber Music Viola 1, Viola 2, Violin 1, Violin 2, Violoncello 1, Violoncello 2...(+)
Chamber Music Viola 1,
Viola 2, Violin 1, Violin
2, Violoncello 1,
Violoncello 2 SKU:
PR.11442131S Composed
by Peter Schickele. Full
score. Duration 26
minutes. Theodore Presser
Company #114-42131S.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.11442131S). UPC:
680160681006. A lot
of chamber music playing
went on in Fargo, North
Dakota during my teenage
years. The participants
included both high school
friend - my brother, who
plays viola, was an is an
inveterate chamber music
player - and members of
parents' generation. The
latter included not only
professional musicians
(the conductor of the
Fargo-Moorhead Community
Orchestra, who also
played cello and was my
first composition
teacher, his wife, who
was the orchestra's
concert mistress, and
others) but also people
from various other walks
of life. Although I don't
play a string instrument,
I was almost always in
attendance, with score in
hand. (One summer, all
the young cellists we
played with went to the
Interlochen Music Camp,
so I got to play the
cello parts on the
bassoon.) Mostly it was
string quartets that were
played, but one of the
larger pieces I remember
being done more than once
was the Brahms Sextet in
G Major, and I think that
the idea for utilizing
that combination had been
lurking in the back of my
mind since then. In the
middle 1980's, ideas for
a string sextet began
appearing in my
sketchbooks; one movement
(the fourth) was actually
completed in one of the
sketchbooks. But without
a deadline, it's hard for
me to finish a major
work, since there are
always other pieces (with
deadlines) waiting to be
completed. So when the
Composers Showcase at
Lincoln Center asked me
to put together a
retrospective of my work,
I knew I wanted to have a
premiere on the program,
and May 7, 1990 became
the deadline that I got
the piece done. The work
is in six movements, with
a symmetrical key
pattern; the movements
range from the very
dramatic to the very
easy-going. I had
contacted the Lark
Quartet, who had
commissioned my String
Quartet No.2, about
forming the core of the
sextet. Unfortunately,
one of the Larks had a
scheduling conflict, but
the other three rounded
up three more players,
and the six of them gave
the piece a rousing
performance, in spite of
the limited rehearsal
time. The players were
Eva Gruesser, Genovia
Cummins, Anna Kruger,
Mary Hamman, Astrid
Schween and Julia
Lichten. A lot of
chamber music playing
went on in Fargo, North
Dakota during my teenage
years. The participants
included both high school
friend – my
brother, who plays viola,
was an is an inveterate
chamber music player
– and members of
parents’
generation. The latter
included not only
professional musicians
(the conductor of the
Fargo-Moorhead Community
Orchestra, who also
played cello and was my
first composition
teacher, his wife, who
was the
orchestra’s
concert mistress, and
others) but also people
from various other walks
of life. Although I
don’t play a
string instrument, I was
almost always in
attendance, with score in
hand. (One summer, all
the young cellists we
played with went to the
Interlochen Music Camp,
so I got to play the
cello parts on the
bassoon.)Mostly it was
string quartets that were
played, but one of the
larger pieces I remember
being done more than once
was the Brahms Sextet in
G Major, and I think that
the idea for utilizing
that combination had been
lurking in the back of my
mind since then. In the
middle 1980’s,
ideas for a string sextet
began appearing in my
sketchbooks; one movement
(the fourth) was actually
completed in one of the
sketchbooks. But without
a deadline, it’s
hard for me to finish a
major work, since there
are always other pieces
(with deadlines) waiting
to be completed. So when
the Composers Showcase at
Lincoln Center asked me
to put together a
retrospective of my work,
I knew I wanted to have a
premiere on the program,
and May 7, 1990 became
the deadline that I got
the piece done.The work
is in six movements, with
a symmetrical key
pattern; the movements
range from the very
dramatic to the very
easy-going.I had
contacted the Lark
Quartet, who had
commissioned my String
Quartet No.2, about
forming the core of the
sextet. Unfortunately,
one of the Larks had a
scheduling conflict, but
the other three rounded
up three more players,
and the six of them gave
the piece a rousing
performance, in spite of
the limited rehearsal
time. The players were
Eva Gruesser, Genovia
Cummins, Anna Kruger,
Mary Hamman, Astrid
Schween and Julia
Lichten. $95.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| String Sextet Theodore Presser Co.
Chamber Music Viola 1, Viola 2, Violin 1, Violin 2, Violoncello 1, Violoncello 2...(+)
Chamber Music Viola 1,
Viola 2, Violin 1, Violin
2, Violoncello 1,
Violoncello 2 SKU:
PR.114421310 Composed
by Peter Schickele. Set
of Score and Parts.
74+21+20+22+19+21+19
pages. Duration 26
minutes. Theodore Presser
Company #114-42131.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.114421310). UPC:
680160680993. A lot
of chamber music playing
went on in Fargo, North
Dakota during my teenage
years. The participants
included both high school
friend - my brother, who
plays viola, was an is an
inveterate chamber music
player - and members of
parents' generation. The
latter included not only
professional musicians
(the conductor of the
Fargo-Moorhead Community
Orchestra, who also
played cello and was my
first composition
teacher, his wife, who
was the orchestra's
concert mistress, and
others) but also people
from various other walks
of life. Although I don't
play a string instrument,
I was almost always in
attendance, with score in
hand. (One summer, all
the young cellists we
played with went to the
Interlochen Music Camp,
so I got to play the
cello parts on the
bassoon.) Mostly it was
string quartets that were
played, but one of the
larger pieces I remember
being done more than once
was the Brahms Sextet in
G Major, and I think that
the idea for utilizing
that combination had been
lurking in the back of my
mind since then. In the
middle 1980's, ideas for
a string sextet began
appearing in my
sketchbooks; one movement
(the fourth) was actually
completed in one of the
sketchbooks. But without
a deadline, it's hard for
me to finish a major
work, since there are
always other pieces (with
deadlines) waiting to be
completed. So when the
Composers Showcase at
Lincoln Center asked me
to put together a
retrospective of my work,
I knew I wanted to have a
premiere on the program,
and May 7, 1990 became
the deadline that I got
the piece done. The work
is in six movements, with
a symmetrical key
pattern; the movements
range from the very
dramatic to the very
easy-going. I had
contacted the Lark
Quartet, who had
commissioned my String
Quartet No.2, about
forming the core of the
sextet. Unfortunately,
one of the Larks had a
scheduling conflict, but
the other three rounded
up three more players,
and the six of them gave
the piece a rousing
performance, in spite of
the limited rehearsal
time. The players were
Eva Gruesser, Genovia
Cummins, Anna Kruger,
Mary Hamman, Astrid
Schween and Julia
Lichten. A lot of
chamber music playing
went on in Fargo, North
Dakota during my teenage
years. The participants
included both high school
friend – my
brother, who plays viola,
was an is an inveterate
chamber music player
– and members of
parents’
generation. The latter
included not only
professional musicians
(the conductor of the
Fargo-Moorhead Community
Orchestra, who also
played cello and was my
first composition
teacher, his wife, who
was the
orchestra’s
concert mistress, and
others) but also people
from various other walks
of life. Although I
don’t play a
string instrument, I was
almost always in
attendance, with score in
hand. (One summer, all
the young cellists we
played with went to the
Interlochen Music Camp,
so I got to play the
cello parts on the
bassoon.)Mostly it was
string quartets that were
played, but one of the
larger pieces I remember
being done more than once
was the Brahms Sextet in
G Major, and I think that
the idea for utilizing
that combination had been
lurking in the back of my
mind since then. In the
middle 1980’s,
ideas for a string sextet
began appearing in my
sketchbooks; one movement
(the fourth) was actually
completed in one of the
sketchbooks. But without
a deadline, it’s
hard for me to finish a
major work, since there
are always other pieces
(with deadlines) waiting
to be completed. So when
the Composers Showcase at
Lincoln Center asked me
to put together a
retrospective of my work,
I knew I wanted to have a
premiere on the program,
and May 7, 1990 became
the deadline that I got
the piece done.The work
is in six movements, with
a symmetrical key
pattern; the movements
range from the very
dramatic to the very
easy-going.I had
contacted the Lark
Quartet, who had
commissioned my String
Quartet No.2, about
forming the core of the
sextet. Unfortunately,
one of the Larks had a
scheduling conflict, but
the other three rounded
up three more players,
and the six of them gave
the piece a rousing
performance, in spite of
the limited rehearsal
time. The players were
Eva Gruesser, Genovia
Cummins, Anna Kruger,
Mary Hamman, Astrid
Schween and Julia
Lichten. $250.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Jesus, Oh, What a Wonderful Child Quintette de Cuivres: 2 trompettes, Cor, trombone, tuba Hope Publishing Company
Arranged by Lloyd Larson. For piano & brass quintet (optional sextet). C...(+)
Arranged by Lloyd Larson.
For
piano & brass quintet
(optional sextet).
Christmas,
Traditional/Spiritual.
Instrumental parts. 31
pages.
Published by Hope
Publishing
Company
$20.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 4 to 6 business days | | |
| Intimate Apparel Theodore Presser Co.
Opera Piano, solo Voices SKU: PR.411411630 Opera in Two Acts. Comp...(+)
Opera Piano, solo Voices
SKU: PR.411411630
Opera in Two Acts.
Composed by Ricky Ian
Gordon. Piano Reduction
Score. 438 pages.
Duration 2 minutes, 30
seconds. Theodore Presser
Company #411-41163.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.411411630). ISBN
9781491137635. UPC:
680160691081. English.
Intimate Apparel by Lynn
Nottage. Originally
an award-winning play,
Lynn Nottage’s INTIMATE
APPAREL was inspired by
her great-grandmother’s
life in New York in the
early 20th century. The
Pulitzer-laureate also
created the libretto for
Ricky Ian Gordon’s
grand-yet-intimate opera
whose complete
instrumentation is two
pianos. The story follows
the life of a young,
single seamstress who has
recently emigrated from
Barbados, the fascinating
cast of characters in her
life, and her
socially-unacceptable
feelings of affection for
a Jewish fabric salesman.
The premiere production
of this 2½-hour drama
was televised nationally
from Lincoln Center on
PBS’s “Great
Performances.”. Inti
mate Apparel began with
an old photograph that I
found haphazardly wedged
between the pages of a
Family Circle magazine. I
was helping my
grandmother, who’d
developed debilitating
senile dementia, move
from her longtime home in
Crown Heights, Brooklyn.
In the midst of a pile of
weathered magazines I
discovered a black and
white passport photograph
of my grandmother Waple
and her younger sister
Eurita sitting on their
mother’s lap. It was
the first time I’d ever
seen an image of my
great-grandmother Ethel,
a striking woman with
high West African
cheekbones and a gentle
intensity. She had been a
seamstress from Barbados,
who at the age of 18
arrived alone in New York
City at the dawn of the
Twentieth Century. The
image invited a thousand
questions, none that
could be answered by the
living, and it led me on
a journey to piece
together the history of
my great-grandmother
Ethel, a woman who was
basically a stranger to
me. The only clue that I
had about Ethel, was a
story that my grandmother
had once told me about
her mother corresponding
with a man laboring on
the Panama Canal, who
would eventually become
her husband. I was
fascinated by this story,
which served as the
inspiration for INTIMATE
APPAREL.As I began my
research for INTIMATE
APPAREL at the New York
Public Library, I
discovered that lives of
Black working women in
the early 1900s were
woefully absent from the
archive. So, I found
myself perusing help
wanted listings, boarding
house and clothing
advertisements, looking
for any sign of women
like my great-grandmother
on the printed page. As I
was doing so, I began to
find the characters that
would populate the world
of INTIMATE APPAREL;
Esther the lonely
seamstress, Mrs. Dickson
the proprietress of the
boardinghouse for Black
women, Mr. Marks the
Jewish fabric salesman on
the Lower Eastside, Mrs.
Van Buren the wealthy
white socialite on the
Upper Eastside, Mayme the
sex worker in the
tenderloin, and George
the laborer toiling on
the Panama Canal. As I
was conjuring the
characters, I realized
that I was interested in
the unexpected
intersections between
class, race, and gender
at the turn of the
Twentieth Century, and
what happens when people
across cultural and
economic divides are
thrust into spaces of
intimacy.INTIMATE APPAREL
began its life as a
popular play, but it was
the brilliant composer
Ricky Ian Gordon who
invited me to consider
adapting it into an
opera. He saw something
epic and expansive in the
life of Esther that he
felt demanded to be sung,
and with his loving
guidance I was able to
write my first libretto.
It took me several tries
to figure out how to
wrestle my play into a
form that was new to me.
As a playwright, I kept
wanting to maintain
absolute control of the
narrative. But, it was
Ricky’s words that
freed me creatively to
find my way into the
libretto. He said,
“You’re not trusting
my music as a narrative
tool; I can say “I love
you” without any words,
with just music. So,
allow me to be your
collaborator on the
storytelling.” And once
he said that, we found
INTIMATE APPAREL the
opera together. $110.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
Page suivante 1 31 61 ... 181 |