Brass Band - Grade 4 SKU: BT.DHP-1206265-130 Andantino. Composed b...(+)
Brass Band - Grade 4
SKU:
BT.DHP-1206265-130
Andantino.
Composed by Sir Malcolm
Arnold. Arranged by Ray
Farr. Great Classics.
Classical. Score Only.
Composed 2020. 12 pages.
De Haske Publications
#DHP 1206265-130.
Published by De Haske
Publications
(BT.DHP-1206265-130).
English
Dances, Set I, opus
27, is a light
classic composition that
was written for orchestra
by the British composer
Malcolm Arnold in 1950.
The set contains four
dances that continue
without pause: the
individual movements are
indicated by the tempo
markings. The work came
about at the request of
Bernard de Nevers, at the
time the head of
publisher Alfred Lengnick
& Co., who asked Arnold
to write a suite of
dances as an English
counterpart to Dvo
ák’s Slavonic
Dances and
Bartók’s
Romanian Folk Dances. The
première took place in
the spring of 1951,
played by the London
Philharmonic Orchestra,
conducted by Sir Adrian
Boult. Following the
success of the first set,
DeNevers asked the
composer to write a
second one, which Arnold
completed the next year
(Op. 33). The
Andantino from the
first set has been
skilfully arranged and
orchestrated for brass
band by Ray Farr.
English
Dances, Set I, opus
27, is een licht
klassieke compositie die
in 1950 door de Britse
componist Malcolm Arnold
voor orkest geschreven
werd. De set bestaat uit
vier dansen die zonder
onderbreking in elkaar
overgaan: de
afzonderlijke delen
worden aangegeven met de
tempomarkering. Het werk
kwam tot stand op verzoek
van Bernard de Nevers,
destijds het hoofd van
uitgeverij Alfred
Lengnick & Co., die
Arnold vroeg om een reeks
dansen te schrijven als
een Engelse tegenhanger
voor de Slavische dansen
van Dvo ák en de
Roemeense volksdansen van
Bartók. De première
werd in het voorjaar van
1951 gebracht door het
London Philharmonic
Orchestra, onder leiding
van Sir Adrian Boult.Na
het succes van de eerste
set vroeg De Nevers om
een tweede, die Arnold
een jaar later voltooide
(opus 33). Het
Andantino uit de
eerste set is door Ray
Farr meesterlijk
gearrangeerd en ge
nstrumenteerd voor
brassband.
English
Dances, Set I, opus
27, ist eine leicht
Klassische Komposition,
die 1950 von dem
britischen Komponisten
Malcolm Arnold für
Orchester geschrieben
wurde. Die Reihe
enthält vier Tänze,
die ohne Unterbrechung
gespielt werden. Die
einzelnen Sätze sind
mit Tempoangaben
versehen. Das Werk
entstand auf Wunsch von
Bernard de Nevers, dem
damaligen Leiter des
Verlags Alfred Lengnick &
Co., der Arnold bat, eine
Reihe von Tänzen als
englisches Gegenstück
zu Dvo áks Slawischen
Tänzen“ und
Bartóks Rumänischen
Volkstänzen“ zu
schreiben. Die
Uraufführung fand im
Frühjahr 1951 mit dem
London Philharmonic
Orchestra unter der
Leitung von Sir Adrian
Boult statt. Nach
demErfolg der ersten
Reihe bat de Nevers den
Komponisten, eine zweite
Reihe zu schreiben, die
Arnold im darauffolgenden
Jahr fertigstellte (op.
33). Das Andantino
aus der ersten Reihe
wurde von Ray Farr
gekonnt für Brass Band
arrangiert und
orchestriert.
The Binding of the Wolf Ensemble de cuivres [Conducteur] - Intermédiaire Gobelin Music Publications
Brass Band - Grade 4 SKU: BT.GOB-000149-130 Composed by Torstein Aagaard-...(+)
Brass Band - Grade 4
SKU:
BT.GOB-000149-130
Composed by Torstein
Aagaard-Nilsen. Score
Only. 34 pages. Gobelin
Music Publications #GOB
000149-130. Published by
Gobelin Music
Publications
(BT.GOB-000149-130).
This piece was
commissioned by
Nordhordland Brass
Seminar in 1990 and
written for a youth
band.
The title
referes to a story from
norse mythology.
“The Binding of the
Wolf” is not a
programmatic piece of
music, but I felt that
there was a kind of
coherence between the
music and the dramatic
story:
“...The
wolf Fenrir was one of
the demonic offspring of
Loki, and as he grew up
in Asgard among the gods,
he became so huge and
fierce that only Tyr was
willing to feed him. It
was decided that he must
be bound, and Odin in his
wisdom caused the cunning
dwarfs to forge a chain
which could not be
broken. It was made
from the invisible and
yet potent powers ofthe
world, such as the roots
of a mountain, the noise
of a moving cat, the
breath of a fish.
When completed, this
chain seemed to be no
more than a silken cord,
but the wolf refused to
let it be laid upon him
unless one of the gods
would put a hand between
his jaws as a pledge that
it was harmless. Only
Tyr was prepared to do
this, and when the wolf
found that the chain was
unbreakable, the gods
rejoiced, but Tyr lost
his hand. The binding
of the wolf may be seen
as a means of protecting
the world of men, as well
as that of the gods, from
destruction. The
story of the god losing
his hand appears to be
one of the fundamental
myths of nothern
Europe...”.
The Binding of the Wolf Ensemble de cuivres [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Intermédiaire Gobelin Music Publications
Brass Band - Grade 4 SKU: BT.GOB-000149-030 Composed by Torstein Aagaard-...(+)
Brass Band - Grade 4
SKU:
BT.GOB-000149-030
Composed by Torstein
Aagaard-Nilsen. Set
(Score & Parts). 58
pages. Gobelin Music
Publications #GOB
000149-030. Published by
Gobelin Music
Publications
(BT.GOB-000149-030).
This piece was
commissioned by
Nordhordland Brass
Seminar in 1990 and
written for a youth
band.
The title
referes to a story from
norse mythology.
“The Binding of the
Wolf” is not a
programmatic piece of
music, but I felt that
there was a kind of
coherence between the
music and the dramatic
story:
“...The
wolf Fenrir was one of
the demonic offspring of
Loki, and as he grew up
in Asgard among the gods,
he became so huge and
fierce that only Tyr was
willing to feed him. It
was decided that he must
be bound, and Odin in his
wisdom caused the cunning
dwarfs to forge a chain
which could not be
broken. It was made
from the invisible and
yet potent powers ofthe
world, such as the roots
of a mountain, the noise
of a moving cat, the
breath of a fish.
When completed, this
chain seemed to be no
more than a silken cord,
but the wolf refused to
let it be laid upon him
unless one of the gods
would put a hand between
his jaws as a pledge that
it was harmless. Only
Tyr was prepared to do
this, and when the wolf
found that the chain was
unbreakable, the gods
rejoiced, but Tyr lost
his hand. The binding
of the wolf may be seen
as a means of protecting
the world of men, as well
as that of the gods, from
destruction. The
story of the god losing
his hand appears to be
one of the fundamental
myths of nothern
Europe...”.