Viva La Musica! Chorale SATB SATB divisi, A Cappella Boosey and Hawkes
(CME Conductor's Choice). By David L. Brunner. For Choral (SATB DV A Cappella). ...(+)
(CME Conductor's Choice).
By David L. Brunner. For
Choral (SATB DV A
Cappella). Conductor's
Choice. 8 pages. Boosey
and Hawkes #M051481378.
Published by Boosey and
Hawkes
Composed by William Averitt. Christmas, Sacred, 21st Century. Duration 3 minut...(+)
Composed by William
Averitt.
Christmas, Sacred, 21st
Century. Duration 3
minutes,
50 seconds. Galaxy Music
Corporation #1.3482.
Published by Galaxy Music
Corporation
Singt im Chor Chorale SATB [Vocal Score] Barenreiter
30 leichte Satze fur drei- bis funfstimmigen Chor. Edited by Ulrich Zimmer. For ...(+)
30 leichte Satze fur
drei- bis funfstimmigen
Chor. Edited by Ulrich
Zimmer. For Mixed
Choir-SATB. Singing
Score; Collection.
Published by
Baerenreiter-Ausgaben
(German import).
Mixed Choir div.
unaccompanied.
Composed by Ilona
Meskó. EMB. Classical.
Octavo. Composed 2013.
Editio Musica Budapest
#Z14826. Published by
Editio Musica Budapest
(HL.50499270).
ISBN
9790080148266. A/4
inches. Latin. Ilona
Dobszay-Mesko.
Mixed Choir div.
unaccompanied.
Composed by Rezsö Ott.
EMB. Classical. Octavo.
Composed 2013. Editio
Musica Budapest #Z14827.
Published by Editio
Musica Budapest
(HL.50499271).
Composed
by Carl Maria von Weber.
Edited by Frank Ziegler
and Johannes Kepper. This
edition: Full-cloth
binding. Sheet music.
Edition Schott. Score and
critical commentary,
complete edition. 306
pages. Schott Music
#WGA1021. Published by
Schott Music
(HL.49042434).
ISBN
9783795794491.
10.25x13.5x1.141 inches.
German.
Carl Maria
von Weber's fame rests
mainly on 'Der
Freischutz'. The
unprecedented success of
this opera overshadowed
all his other works and
contributed to their
increasing fall into
oblivion. Certain works
such as 'Preciosa',
'Oberon', and
'Euryanthe', the
overtures, solo concertos
and piano sonatas, the
lieder and chamber works
enjoyed great popularity
and were widely known in
Germany and abroad as
late as the second half
of the 19th century.
However, any chance of a
revival of Weber's
influential and
substantial oeuvre was
wasted in the 1920s, when
a complete edition -
begun by Hans Joachim
Moser and with potential
contributors including
Wilhelm Kempff, Hans
Pfitzner, Max von
Schillings, Fritz Stein
and Richard Strauss -
failed after the third
volume.Ever since there
have been numerous
attempts to restart a
complete edition of
Weber's works, but as
this kind of project
would have required the
co-operation of scholars
from both sides of the
inter-German border, the
political situation after
1945 was not conducive to
any such enterprise.
Careful negotiations led
to the first tangible
steps in the 1980s. The
intention, right from the
beginning, was to place
Weber's work in context,
and not to separate his
musical output from his
influential work as a
writer, critic and
organiser in the musical
field, but to publish his
compositions together
with his letters, diaries
and other literary output
as the best way to
document the
cross-fertilisation
between his musical,
literary and practical
activities.Since the
German re-unification
both working-parties
concerned - at the
Staatsbibliothek zu
Berlin, and at the
Musikwissenschaftliches
Seminar,
Detmold/Paderborn - have
co-operated on the
complete edition of the
musical works (c. 45
volumes in 10 series:
sacred music; cantatas,
odes and other occasional
works; stage works;
lieder and vocal works;
orchestral works; chamber
music; music for piano;
piano reductions;
miscellanea, arrangements
and orchestrations; works
of doubtful attribution).
The diaries (6-8 vols.)
are edited in Berlin and
the letters (8-10 vols.)
and other writings (2
vols.) in Detmold. This
complete edition aims to
be a reliable basis of
scholarly debate as well
as for the authentic
performance practice of
Carl Maria von Weber's
music. Conforming to the
standards of recent
historico-critical
editions, the textual
material will be based on
all available authentic
sources, accompanied by a
detailed documentation of
the genesis and a list of
variants for each work.
The musicological
importance of the works
will be evaluated by
placing them in their
historical context, the
presentation of their
genesis, history and
Critical Commentaries.
The letters, writings and
diaries will be treated
as inter-related and
relevant to each other in
the commentaries,
therefore readers should
benefit from a wealth of
concise information and
cross-references.
Choral (SATB Choir) SKU: HL.48021234 From Cantata academica, Carmen ba...(+)
Choral (SATB Choir)
SKU: HL.48021234
From Cantata
academica, Carmen
basiliense. Composed
by Benjamin Britten.
Boosey & Hawkes Sacred
Choral. Classical.
Octavo. 16 pages. Boosey
& Hawkes #M051482474.
Published by Boosey &
Hawkes (HL.48021234).
ISBN 9781458423542.
UPC: 884088642037.
6.75x10.5
inches.
Text: in
Latin compiled from the
charter of the
University, and from
older orations in praise
of Basle by Bernhard
Wyss.
Publisher:
Boosey &
Hawkes
Difficulty
level: 4 (for
chorus)
Britten's
genius lifts this work
above being just a worthy
celebration of the 500th
anniversary of the
foundation of Basle
University. It is
tongue-in-cheek and
mockingly non-academic
while referring all the
time to academic musical
forms and formulae. It is
written in two parts
(everything is in the
statutory Latin including
the titles of the parts -
Pars I and Pars II). The
titles of the movements
show Britten's intention
to show off a wide
variety of techniques.
Here are some examples:
Chorale/Alla Rovescio
(the theme is given and
responded to with the
same melody upside
down)/Recitativo/Tema
seriale con fuga/Canone
ed ostinato. There is a
good deal of humour
here.
There are
seven movements in Pars I
and six in Pars II. The
tenor soloist is given
three florid recitatives,
accompanied only by a
piano, which act as
bridges between other
orchestrally accompanied
movements. Of these the
most noteworthy are the
Arioso con canto popolare
for soprano solo with
tenors and basses who hum
a student song; another
terrific Britten scherzo;
and a wonderfully raucous
final pair of movements
(Canon ed ostinato and
Corale con canto) where
Britten seems to be aping
the Vivat Regina! cries
in Parry's I was glad or
encouraging the kind of
noisy 'I'm from the best
university' kind of
student touchline shout.
This has outrageously
high notes for the tenors
(top B) which further
endorse this feeling.
There are real echoes of
the Spring Symphony (see
separate entry) final
movement here which are
further underlined by the
last section of the
Cantata which brings in
the bells, piano, huge
percussion and the
inevitable chorale in
which the choir sings
'that a free academy may
thrive in a free
community, for ever the
ornament and treasure of
illustrious
Basle'.
This may
not be Britten at his
most soul-searching but,
as always, there is
plenty here to enjoy,
especially if the work is
not taken too seriously.
It is a celebratory,
occasional piece and it
could be well taken up by
other academic
establishments
celebrating big
anniversaries. The chorus
parts are not very
difficult, though they do
present challenges for
the choir - not least in
having tenors capable of
those very high notes at
the end. The Tema seriale
con fuga is sinewy and
needs careful tuning. It
also has the subject
regularly given upside
down after its initial
sounding by the basses.
All good
fun.
(Choral Highlights). Composed by Stephen Schwartz. Arranged by Lisa DeSpain. Cho...(+)
(Choral Highlights).
Composed by Stephen
Schwartz. Arranged by
Lisa DeSpain. Choir
Secular. SATB choir.
Choral Octavo. Pop
Choral. Form: Medley.
Secular. 28 pages.
Published by Alfred Music
Sing to the Lord Chorale SATB SATB [Octavo] Hope Publishing Company
By Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741). Arranged by Hal H. Hopson. For Choir (SATB). Acc...(+)
By Antonio Vivaldi
(1678-1741). Arranged by
Hal H. Hopson. For Choir
(SATB). Accessible Anthem
Series. Call To Worship,
General Worship, Praise,
Psalms, Classics and
Sacred. Choral octavo
(SATB)
ISBN
9790006558209. 33.5 x
25.7 cm inches. Text
Language: French.
Preface: Sylvie Bouissou.
Louis de
Cahusac.
The opera
“Naïs†was
premiered on 22 April
1749 at the Acadmie
royale in the
Palais-Royal, Paris, in
celebration of the
signing of the so-called
Treaty of Aachen. It was
revived again in August
1764 shortly before
Rameau’s death and
achieved great success as
the “opera of
peace,†even though
it did not appear in
print during the
composer’s
lifetime.
In
numerous arias Rameau
provides his singers
ample opportunity to
shine, while he reveals
his orchestral mastery,
in particular in the
chaconne and the various
other ballets.
The
work appears here for the
first time in a vocal
score with a keyboard
reduction. The reduction
is by François
Saint-Yves on the basis
of the new critical
edition by Pascal
Dencheau which is part of
Opera Omnia Rameau edited
by Sylvie
Bouissou.
This
edition is the result of
a meticulous comparison
of all known musical
sources. In the main
section, it presents the
version that Rameau
approved for the
performances of 1749. The
appendix contains those
passages that the
composer cut during the
rehearsals in 1749 and
all changes that he
undertook for the 1764
revival.
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