Chamber Music Clarinet, Horn, Piano SKU: PR.114423640 Composed by Stacy G...(+)
Chamber Music Clarinet,
Horn, Piano
SKU:
PR.114423640
Composed
by Stacy Garrop. Set of
Score and Parts. 36+12+12
pages. Duration 14:15.
Theodore Presser Company
#114-42364. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.114423640).
UPC:
680160688562.
The
first time I saw
slipstreaming in action
with professional
cyclists, I was in awe.
The competitors were
riding inches away from
each other; when the lead
rider would swerve left
or right, the pursuers
would immediately follow
suit. The physics behind
what appears on the
surface to be sheer
daredevil antics are
quite solid: the cyclists
riding directly behind
the leader are
benefitting from reduced
air and wind resistance.
On a larger scale, a
peloton (the French term
for a pack of riders)
benefits multiple riders
whoare behind the leaders
of the pack. While riding
so close to other riders
carries great risk of
colliding, that risk is
outweighed by the benefit
of preserving
one’s
energy.Slipstream was
inspired by the love of
cycling shared by Haley
Hoops, horn, and Stephen
Ahearn, clarinet, for
whom the piece was
commissioned. They are
drawn to cycling for the
adventure of it, to
discover new places, and
to meet new people. Haley
also expressed her
enjoyment of taking solo
bike rides. Additionally,
I found great inspiration
in watching the daily
highlight videos of the
three-week 2020 Tour de
France, which happened to
be taking place while I
composed Slipstream.The
piece opens with The
Horizon Beckons. A
cyclist hears an enticing
call emanating from the
mountains, then the
cyclist starts pedaling
towards the mountains in
search of adventure.
Riding Solo, the second
movement, explores the
quiet of riding alone,
the beauty of the
landscape, and the
shifting of the light and
clouds, all while we hear
the bike’s wheels
in constant motion.
Adrenaline Rush, the
third and final movement,
depicts the heat of
competition. We hear the
constant jockeying of
cyclists within a peloton
as they slipstream with
each other and move with
the wind. At the very end
of the movement, we hear
sprinters race for the
finish line with
everything they have left
in their legs.
Horn and piano (solo: hn - 0.2.0.0 - 2.0.0.0 - str) SKU: BR.EB-10702 U...(+)
Horn and piano (solo: hn
- 0.2.0.0 - 2.0.0.0 -
str)
SKU:
BR.EB-10702
Urtext. Composed
by Wolfgang Amadeus
Mozart. Edited by Henrik
Wiese. Arranged by Jan
Philip Schulze. Solo
instruments; stapled.
Edition Breitkopf.
In
Cooperation with G. Henle
Verlag
Solo concerto;
Classical. Piano
reduction. 40 pages.
Duration 15'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #EB 10702.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.EB-10702).
ISBN
9790201807027. 9.5 x 12.5
inches.
Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart's horn
concertos: the Mozart
expert Henrik Wiese edits
the central work genre of
Viennese classicism
according to the current
status of international
Mozart research. Mozart
wrote the Horn Concerto
K. 417 - like the other
works of this genre as
well - for his
horn-playing friend
Joseph Leutgeb. The jokes
which the composer made
at Leutgeb's expense are
wellknown. For example,
he called the dedicatee a
donkey in the autograph,
and, as Henrik Wiese
evidences in his preface,
Mozart also occasionally
enjoyed a bit of
tomfoolery with the
soloist in the musical
text as well.Otherwise
the editor's task was
anything but amusing. The
main source - the
autograph score - is
incomplete: missing are
the close of Movement I
as well as the entire
slow middle movement. For
these two sections, Wiese
used a copy of the score
from the archive of the
publisher Johann Andre.
The unusual circumstance
that Mozart generally
left the horn part almost
unmarked recurs in the
Concerto K. 417 and was
deliberately maintained
in the Urtext
edition.
Horn and piano SKU: BR.EB-32113 Urtext. Composed by Camillo Schuma...(+)
Horn and piano
SKU:
BR.EB-32113
Urtext. Composed
by Camillo Schumann. Solo
instruments; stapled.
Edition Breitkopf.
The
first edition of a
forgotten treasure
Sonata; Late-romantic.
Score. 48 pages.
Breitkopf and Haertel #EB
32113. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.EB-32113).
ISBN
9790004186787. 9 x 12
inches.
Schumann's
horn sonatas were
composed in 1936/37.
Considering the slim
repertoire offered horn
players from this period,
it is more than
surprising that these two
masterpieces could have
slumbered for so long.
Both sonatas are similar
in structure, with op.
118 being one Schumann's
few three-movement
sonatas. The first
movements of the pieces
sparkle with
melancholically lyrical
melodies, whereas
passages strongly marked
rhythmically, variously
shape the two outer
movements. Virtuoso
moments can be found,
respectively, in the
final movements, bringing
the works to a brilliant
close. The horn parts
predominantly range
within the full, sonorous
middle register, where
occasional outbursts up
to the notated a flat''
are also not lacking. The
clever handling of the
balance of sounds, the
possibilities on the
early valve horn as well
as the inner interweaving
of themes differentiating
horn and piano make the
sonatas an exceedingly
vivid testimony to
Schumann's mature
compositional
art.
Schumann's
horn sonatas are a
crucial enhancement to
each horn player's
repertoire. The first
edition of a forgotten
treasure.
Horn and piano SKU: BR.EB-32114 Urtext. Composed by Camillo Schuma...(+)
Horn and piano
SKU:
BR.EB-32114
Urtext. Composed
by Camillo Schumann. Solo
instruments; stapled.
Edition Breitkopf.
The
first edition of a
forgotten treasureThis
edition contains the
original solo part for
horn in D as well as a
version for horn in
F.
Sonata;
Late-romantic. Score. 68
pages. Breitkopf and
Haertel #EB 32114.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.EB-32114).
ISBN
9790004186794. 9 x 12
inches.
Schumann's
horn sonatas were
composed in 1936/37.
Considering the slim
repertoire offered horn
players from this period,
it is more than
surprising that these two
masterpieces could have
slumbered for so long.
Both sonatas are similar
in structure, with op.
118 being one Schumann's
few three-movement
sonatas. The first
movements of the pieces
sparkle with
melancholically lyrical
melodies, whereas
passages strongly marked
rhythmically, variously
shape the two outer
movements. Virtuoso
moments can be found,
respectively, in the
final movements, bringing
the works to a brilliant
close. The horn parts
predominantly range
within the full, sonorous
middle register, where
occasional outbursts up
to the notated a flat''
are also not lacking. The
clever handling of the
balance of sounds, the
possibilities on the
early valve horn as well
as the inner interweaving
of themes differentiating
horn and piano make the
sonatas an exceedingly
vivid testimony to
Schumann's mature
compositional
art.
Schumann's
horn sonatas are a
crucial enhancement to
each horn player's
repertoire.