(Featuring According to Plan, Remains of the Day and The Wedding Song) Composed ...(+)
(Featuring According to
Plan, Remains of the Day
and The Wedding Song)
Composed by Danny Elfman,
arranged by Douglas E.
Wagner. Conductor's score
and set of performance
parts for string or full
orchestra (2 - flute, 2 -
oboe, 1 - 1st clarinet, 1
- 2nd clarinet, 1 - bass
clarinet, 2 - bassoon, 4
- horn in F, 1 - 1st
trumpet, 1 - 2nd trumpet,
3 - trombone, 1 - tuba, 2
- mallet percussion, 3 -
percuss
Cantata for the 1st
day of Christmas.
Composed by Johann
Sebastian Bach. Edited by
Pieter Dirksen. Vocal
score. Composed
1728/1729. BWV 197a /
197.1. Duration 25
minutes. Carus Verlag
#3140203. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3140203).
ISBN
9790007295080.
German/English. Text:
Henrici (Picander),
Christian
Friedrich.
Only the
text and the last page of
the autograph score of
the Christmas Cantata
“Ehre sei Gott in
der Höhe†BWV
197.1 (197a) have
survived, beginning with
the end of the 2nd aria.
This, along with the
complete surviving 3rd
aria are found in parody
versions in the Wedding
Cantata BWV 197 / BWV3
197.2, from which this
cantata takes its BWV
number. For a long time
there has been a
fascinating theory about
the missing opening
chorus: could this have
been the parody source
for the Gloria in the
Mass in B minor?
The musicologist
and organist Pieter
Dirksen has pursued this,
creating a four-part
choral version largely
derived from corrections
made in the autograph of
the Mass in B minor. He
has underlaid this with
the text of the opening
chorus (the German
translation of the
Gloria). What results is
a convincing version of
the Christmas Cantata
– with one of
Bach’s best-known
choruses as the prominent
opening chorus and
plausible solutions for
the other sections
missing in the
autograph.
Cantata for the 1st
day of Christmas.
Composed by Johann
Sebastian Bach. Edited by
Pieter Dirksen. Composed
1728/1729. BWV 197a /
197.1. Duration 25
minutes. Carus Verlag
#3140212. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3140212).
ISBN
9790007301590.
German/English. Text:
Henrici (Picander),
Christian
Friedrich.
Only the
text and the last page of
the autograph score of
the Christmas Cantata
“Ehre sei Gott in
der Höhe†BWV
197.1 (197a) have
survived, beginning with
the end of the 2nd aria.
This, along with the
complete surviving 3rd
aria are found in parody
versions in the Wedding
Cantata BWV 197 / BWV3
197.2, from which this
cantata takes its BWV
number. For a long time
there has been a
fascinating theory about
the missing opening
chorus: could this have
been the parody source
for the Gloria in the
Mass in B minor?
The musicologist
and organist Pieter
Dirksen has pursued this,
creating a four-part
choral version largely
derived from corrections
made in the autograph of
the Mass in B minor. He
has underlaid this with
the text of the opening
chorus (the German
translation of the
Gloria). What results is
a convincing version of
the Christmas Cantata
– with one of
Bach’s best-known
choruses as the prominent
opening chorus and
plausible solutions for
the other sections
missing in the
autograph.
Cantata for the 1st
day of Christmas.
Composed by Johann
Sebastian Bach. Edited by
Pieter Dirksen. Composed
1728/1729. BWV 197a /
197.1. Duration 25
minutes. Carus Verlag
#3140211. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3140211).
ISBN
9790007301583.
German/English. Text:
Henrici (Picander),
Christian
Friedrich.
Only the
text and the last page of
the autograph score of
the Christmas Cantata
“Ehre sei Gott in
der Höhe†BWV
197.1 (197a) have
survived, beginning with
the end of the 2nd aria.
This, along with the
complete surviving 3rd
aria are found in parody
versions in the Wedding
Cantata BWV 197 / BWV3
197.2, from which this
cantata takes its BWV
number. For a long time
there has been a
fascinating theory about
the missing opening
chorus: could this have
been the parody source
for the Gloria in the
Mass in B minor?
The musicologist
and organist Pieter
Dirksen has pursued this,
creating a four-part
choral version largely
derived from corrections
made in the autograph of
the Mass in B minor. He
has underlaid this with
the text of the opening
chorus (the German
translation of the
Gloria). What results is
a convincing version of
the Christmas Cantata
– with one of
Bach’s best-known
choruses as the prominent
opening chorus and
plausible solutions for
the other sections
missing in the
autograph.
Cantata for the 1st
day of Christmas.
Composed by Johann
Sebastian Bach. Edited by
Pieter Dirksen. Composed
1728/1729. BWV 197a /
197.1. Duration 25
minutes. Carus Verlag
#3140249. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3140249).
ISBN
9790007301620.
German/English. Text:
Henrici (Picander),
Christian
Friedrich.
Only the
text and the last page of
the autograph score of
the Christmas Cantata
“Ehre sei Gott in
der Höhe†BWV
197.1 (197a) have
survived, beginning with
the end of the 2nd aria.
This, along with the
complete surviving 3rd
aria are found in parody
versions in the Wedding
Cantata BWV 197 / BWV3
197.2, from which this
cantata takes its BWV
number. For a long time
there has been a
fascinating theory about
the missing opening
chorus: could this have
been the parody source
for the Gloria in the
Mass in B minor?
The musicologist
and organist Pieter
Dirksen has pursued this,
creating a four-part
choral version largely
derived from corrections
made in the autograph of
the Mass in B minor. He
has underlaid this with
the text of the opening
chorus (the German
translation of the
Gloria). What results is
a convincing version of
the Christmas Cantata
– with one of
Bach’s best-known
choruses as the prominent
opening chorus and
plausible solutions for
the other sections
missing in the
autograph.
By Danny Elfman. Arranged by Douglas E. Wagner. By Danny Elfman / arr. Douglas W...(+)
By Danny Elfman. Arranged
by Douglas E. Wagner. By
Danny Elfman / arr.
Douglas Wagner. For Full
Orchestra. Full
Orchestra. Pop
Intermediate Full
Orchestra. Conductor
Score. Published by
Alfred Publishing.
Level: 3 (grade 3).
Cantata for the 1st
day of Christmas.
Composed by Johann
Sebastian Bach. Edited by
Pieter Dirksen. Single
Part, viola. Composed
1728/1729. BWV 197a /
197.1. Duration 25
minutes. Carus Verlag
#3140213. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3140213).
ISBN
9790007301606.
German/English. Text:
Henrici (Picander),
Christian
Friedrich.
Only the
text and the last page of
the autograph score of
the Christmas Cantata
“Ehre sei Gott in
der Höhe†BWV
197.1 (197a) have
survived, beginning with
the end of the 2nd aria.
This, along with the
complete surviving 3rd
aria are found in parody
versions in the Wedding
Cantata BWV 197 / BWV3
197.2, from which this
cantata takes its BWV
number. For a long time
there has been a
fascinating theory about
the missing opening
chorus: could this have
been the parody source
for the Gloria in the
Mass in B minor?
The musicologist
and organist Pieter
Dirksen has pursued this,
creating a four-part
choral version largely
derived from corrections
made in the autograph of
the Mass in B minor. He
has underlaid this with
the text of the opening
chorus (the German
translation of the
Gloria). What results is
a convincing version of
the Christmas Cantata
– with one of
Bach’s best-known
choruses as the prominent
opening chorus and
plausible solutions for
the other sections
missing in the
autograph.
Cantata for the 1st
day of Christmas.
Composed by Johann
Sebastian Bach. Edited by
Pieter Dirksen. Choral
Score. Composed
1728/1729. BWV 197a /
197.1. Duration 25
minutes. Carus Verlag
#3140205. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3140205).
ISBN
9790007295097.
German/English. Text:
Henrici (Picander),
Christian
Friedrich.
Only the
text and the last page of
the autograph score of
the Christmas Cantata
“Ehre sei Gott in
der Höhe†BWV
197.1 (197a) have
survived, beginning with
the end of the 2nd aria.
This, along with the
complete surviving 3rd
aria are found in parody
versions in the Wedding
Cantata BWV 197 / BWV3
197.2, from which this
cantata takes its BWV
number. For a long time
there has been a
fascinating theory about
the missing opening
chorus: could this have
been the parody source
for the Gloria in the
Mass in B minor?
The musicologist
and organist Pieter
Dirksen has pursued this,
creating a four-part
choral version largely
derived from corrections
made in the autograph of
the Mass in B minor. He
has underlaid this with
the text of the opening
chorus (the German
translation of the
Gloria). What results is
a convincing version of
the Christmas Cantata
– with one of
Bach’s best-known
choruses as the prominent
opening chorus and
plausible solutions for
the other sections
missing in the
autograph.
Cantata for the 1st
day of Christmas.
Composed by Johann
Sebastian Bach. Edited by
Pieter Dirksen. Carus
digital: Extra digital
products. Full Score.
Composed 1728/1729. BWV
197a / 197.1. Duration 25
minutes. Carus Verlag
#3140200. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3140200).
ISBN
9790007295066.
German/English. Text:
Henrici (Picander),
Christian
Friedrich.
Only the
text and the last page of
the autograph score of
the Christmas Cantata
“Ehre sei Gott in
der Höhe†BWV
197.1 (197a) have
survived, beginning with
the end of the 2nd aria.
This, along with the
complete surviving 3rd
aria are found in parody
versions in the Wedding
Cantata BWV 197 / BWV3
197.2, from which this
cantata takes its BWV
number. For a long time
there has been a
fascinating theory about
the missing opening
chorus: could this have
been the parody source
for the Gloria in the
Mass in B minor?
The musicologist
and organist Pieter
Dirksen has pursued this,
creating a four-part
choral version largely
derived from corrections
made in the autograph of
the Mass in B minor. He
has underlaid this with
the text of the opening
chorus (the German
translation of the
Gloria). What results is
a convincing version of
the Christmas Cantata
– with one of
Bach’s best-known
choruses as the prominent
opening chorus and
plausible solutions for
the other sections
missing in the
autograph.
Cantata for the 1st
day of Christmas.
Composed by Johann
Sebastian Bach. Edited by
Pieter Dirksen. Set of
Orchestra Parts. Composed
1728/1729. BWV 197a /
197.1. Duration 25
minutes. Carus Verlag
#3140209. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3140209).
ISBN
9790007301576.
German/English. Text:
Henrici (Picander),
Christian
Friedrich.
Only the
text and the last page of
the autograph score of
the Christmas Cantata
“Ehre sei Gott in
der Höhe†BWV
197.1 (197a) have
survived, beginning with
the end of the 2nd aria.
This, along with the
complete surviving 3rd
aria are found in parody
versions in the Wedding
Cantata BWV 197 / BWV3
197.2, from which this
cantata takes its BWV
number. For a long time
there has been a
fascinating theory about
the missing opening
chorus: could this have
been the parody source
for the Gloria in the
Mass in B minor?
The musicologist
and organist Pieter
Dirksen has pursued this,
creating a four-part
choral version largely
derived from corrections
made in the autograph of
the Mass in B minor. He
has underlaid this with
the text of the opening
chorus (the German
translation of the
Gloria). What results is
a convincing version of
the Christmas Cantata
– with one of
Bach’s best-known
choruses as the prominent
opening chorus and
plausible solutions for
the other sections
missing in the
autograph.
Cantata for the 1st
day of Christmas.
Composed by Johann
Sebastian Bach. Edited by
Pieter Dirksen. Set of
Orchestra Parts. Composed
1728/1729. BWV 197a /
197.1. Duration 25
minutes. Carus Verlag
#3140219. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3140219).
ISBN
9790007300258.
German/English. Text:
Henrici (Picander),
Christian
Friedrich.
Only the
text and the last page of
the autograph score of
the Christmas Cantata
“Ehre sei Gott in
der Höhe†BWV
197.1 (197a) have
survived, beginning with
the end of the 2nd aria.
This, along with the
complete surviving 3rd
aria are found in parody
versions in the Wedding
Cantata BWV 197 / BWV3
197.2, from which this
cantata takes its BWV
number. For a long time
there has been a
fascinating theory about
the missing opening
chorus: could this have
been the parody source
for the Gloria in the
Mass in B minor?
The musicologist
and organist Pieter
Dirksen has pursued this,
creating a four-part
choral version largely
derived from corrections
made in the autograph of
the Mass in B minor. He
has underlaid this with
the text of the opening
chorus (the German
translation of the
Gloria). What results is
a convincing version of
the Christmas Cantata
– with one of
Bach’s best-known
choruses as the prominent
opening chorus and
plausible solutions for
the other sections
missing in the
autograph.
Cantata for the 1st
day of Christmas.
Composed by Johann
Sebastian Bach. Edited by
Pieter Dirksen. Single
Part, basso continuo.
Composed 1728/1729. BWV
197a / 197.1. Duration 25
minutes. Carus Verlag
#3140214. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3140214).
ISBN
9790007301613.
German/English. Text:
Henrici (Picander),
Christian
Friedrich.
Only the
text and the last page of
the autograph score of
the Christmas Cantata
“Ehre sei Gott in
der Höhe†BWV
197.1 (197a) have
survived, beginning with
the end of the 2nd aria.
This, along with the
complete surviving 3rd
aria are found in parody
versions in the Wedding
Cantata BWV 197 / BWV3
197.2, from which this
cantata takes its BWV
number. For a long time
there has been a
fascinating theory about
the missing opening
chorus: could this have
been the parody source
for the Gloria in the
Mass in B minor?
The musicologist
and organist Pieter
Dirksen has pursued this,
creating a four-part
choral version largely
derived from corrections
made in the autograph of
the Mass in B minor. He
has underlaid this with
the text of the opening
chorus (the German
translation of the
Gloria). What results is
a convincing version of
the Christmas Cantata
– with one of
Bach’s best-known
choruses as the prominent
opening chorus and
plausible solutions for
the other sections
missing in the
autograph.
No. 2 from the
Symphonic Poem My
Fatherland. Composed
by Bedrich Smetana.
Edited by Milan Pospisil.
Softbound. Eulenburg
Orchestral Series.
Today, it is hard to
believe that Bedrich
Smetana kept receiving
rejections when he tried
to get his enormously
popular Moldau
printed.
Symphonic
poem; Romantic. Full
score. 84 pages. Duration
13'. Breitkopf and
Haertel #EOS 20472-00.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.EOS-20472-00).
ISBN 9790004780008. 10
x 12.5
inches.
What is
also amazing is that the
first text-critical
edition prepared by the
Czech Smetana expert
Milan Pospisil in 1999,
which had entailed an
exhaustive evaluation of
the sources and been
given a full
text-critical editorial
treatment as a Eulenburg
study score, had no
resonance of any kind
among performers since no
performance material had
been published. After 15
years, Pospisils edition
is finally being
completed in a manner
suitable for practice:
with a conducting score
and orchestral parts
which will ensure that
all future performances
are based on a musical
text that is as reliable
as can
be.
The
work depicts the course
of the river Vltava,
beginning with its first
two sources, the cold and
warm Vltava, and the
confluence of the two
streams that join to form
a single river; then the
course of the Vltava
through forests and
meadows, and through open
countryside where a
peasant wedding is being
celebrated; water-sprites
dance by the light of the
moon; on the nearby
cliffs castles, mansions
and ruins rise proudly
into the air; the Vltava
eddies in the St John's
Rapids, then flows in a
broad stream as it
continues its course
towards Prague, where the
Vysehrad appears, before
the river finally
disappears into the
distance as it flows
majestically into the
Elbe.
Vltava
(The Moldau),
Smetana's best-known and
most frequently performed
orchestral work, was
written between 19
November and 8 December
1874, at a time when
Smetana was already
completely deaf. The
world premiere took place
in Prague on 4 April
1875, but the score was
not published until
1880.