By Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827). Arranged by Poor. For concert band. Concert...(+)
By Ludwig van Beethoven
(1770-1827). Arranged by
Poor. For concert band.
Concert Band. Symphony
Band Series. Grade 4.
Score and parts. Composed
2010. Duration 5 minutes,
12 seconds. Published by
C.L. Barnhouse
Sonata da Chiesa Orchestre d'harmonie [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Intermédiaire De Haske Publications
Concert Band/Harmonie and Organ - Grade 4 SKU: BT.DHP-1033416-010 Compose...(+)
Concert Band/Harmonie and
Organ - Grade 4
SKU:
BT.DHP-1033416-010
Composed by Kees
Schoonenbeek. Solo
Spectrum. Concert Piece.
Set (Score & Parts).
Composed 2003. De Haske
Publications #DHP
1033416-010. Published by
De Haske Publications
(BT.DHP-1033416-010).
Sonata da
Chiesa for organ and wind
orchestra is a work in
three movements. The
first movement presents
three melodic lines which
are developed in turn.
The second movement
introduces a theme by
Johann Pachelbel followed
by several variations on
the theme - a technique
favoured by Kees
Schoonenbeek. The third
movement is a neo-Baroque
rondo which introduces
thematic elements from
the first movement. This
is a work rich in colour
and sound.
Sonata da
Chiesa ist eine
vielseitige Komposition
für Orgel und
Blasorchester. Das in
einer Art Neobarock
geschriebene Werk beginnt
mit einem kontrastreichen
ersten Teil, gefolgt von
einer Reihe Variationen
über ein Thema von
Pachelbel im zweiten
Satz, und wird
schließlich durch ein
Rondo abgeschlossen. Mit
Sonata da Chiesa
schrieb Kees Schonenbeek
ein eindrucksvolles,
eigenständiges Werk,
das mit seiner
Namensgeberin, der
ursprünglichen
Kirchensonate wenig mehr
als die Orgel als
Soloinstrument gemeinsam
hat.
Trombone & Band SKU: SU.32040020 For Trombone & Band. Composed by ...(+)
Trombone & Band
SKU:
SU.32040020
For
Trombone & Band.
Composed by Amy Riebs
Mills. Brass, Trombone,
Concert Band/Wind
Ensemble. Full Score.
Subito Music Corporation
#32040020. Published by
Subito Music Corporation
(SU.32040020).
Solo Trombone,
Band parts - picc, 2fls,
2 obs, EH, 2bsns, 3 cls,
bcl, 2asx, tsx, bsx, 4
hns, 3 tpts, 3 tbns,
euph, tba, timp, 3 perc
Duration: 17' Composed:
2013 Published by: Amy
Mills Music, LLC
…the audience loved
Red Dragonfly. Definitely
a keeper in my
repertoire! Dr. James
Bicigo, Associate
Professor of Trombone,
University of Alaska,
Anchorage Virtuoso piece,
the dramatic first
movement opens with a
Bold statement followed
by the beautiful love
theme. It reaches up to
the Cry of the Heart,
then everything ruptures
and crashes. Now the
trombonist must rebuild
and gain strength through
dramatic cadenzas until
reaching the
recapitulation where the
opening Bold melody is
transformed into a
majestic march in 3/4
time. The love theme
returns, and the movement
ends in triumph. The
second movement is a
setting of the famous
Japanese folksong, Red
Dragonfly. The trombonist
and pianist play the
lovely song amidst the
sound of fluttering wings
that appear and disappear
like memories of the
heart. Thank you to the
Nihon Gakugeki Kyoukai
Foundation for permission
to use the melody in this
trombone sonata. A solo
glissando opens the third
movement in American folk
dance style with tongue
in cheek and twinkle in
both eyes. The subsequent
variations include a
perfect triple canon, a
taste of New Orleans
jazz, and a dramatic
augmentation which spills
into a flashback of the
first movement’s
love theme. This melts
away and we recapture a
glimpse of the Red
Dragonfly melody, this
time growing to the
Triumphant restatement of
the first
movement’s main
theme. And finally, the
exuberant coda drives to
a spectacular ending.
Difficulty Level:
Trombone 6 (Professional)
Band 5 (Advanced) See
also Red Dragonfly,
Sonata for Trombone and
Piano for the version
with piano accompaniment.
See composer website for
audio sample. Performance
materials available on
rental only:.
Composed by Adam Gorb.
Arranged by Michael
Brand. Band Music. Score
only. Duration 4:20.
Published by G & M Brand
Music Publishers
(CN.S11242).
Scenes from an
English Landscape is a
brief nostalgic tone poem
taking its inspiration
from visions of rural
England as depicted in
the paintings of John
Constable, the novels of
Thomas Hard, and the
music of Gustav Holst and
Ralph Vaughan Williams. A
chorale-like theme is
stated in the brass and
then taken up at three
times the tempo in the
woodwinds. At the end of
the work, both versions
of the theme are stated
together to bring the
piece to a triumphant
climax.
This is a
brief nostalgic tone poem
taking its inspiration
from visions of rural
England as depicted in
the paintings of John
Constable, the novels of
Thomas Hard, and the
music of Gustav Holst and
Ralph Vaughan Williams. I
imagined a community of
villagers coming out of
church and filling a
village square with their
vibrant presence. A
chorale-like theme is
stated in the brass and
then taken up at three
times the tempo in the
woodwinds. At the end o
the work, both versions
of the theme are stated
together to bring the
piece to a triumphant
climax. Adam Gorb was
born in Cardiff and
started composing at the
age of ten. His first
work broadcast on
national radio was
written when he was
fifteen. He studied at
Cambridge University
(1977-1980) and the Royal
Academy of Music
(1991-1993) where he
graduated with the
highest honours including
the Principal's Prize. He
has been on the staff at
the London College of
Music and Media, the
junior Academy of the
Royal Academy of Music
and, since 2000 he has
been the Head of School
of Composition at the
Royal Northern College of
Music in Manchester .
International recognition
came in 1994 with the US
Walter Beeler Prize for
his work Metropolis .
With it began what has
developed into probably
the most important wind
ensemble catalogue by a
contemporary composer,
ranging from extremely
challenging to the most
accessible, at all
technical levels, seized
on by players
internationally, widely
recorded and now
absolutely central to the
world's wind repertoire.
Equally important though
are his works for dance,
and concert pieces like
the chamber orchestral
Weimar , the Violin
Sonata , a Clarinet
Concerto for the Royal
Liverpool Philharmonic
Orchestra and Diaspora
for strings (for the
Goldberg Ensemble).
Deceptively mainstream at
first glance, they
display the same
inventive brilliance,
pulsating sound world,
striking use of rhythm
and an undogmatic absence
of stylistic hang-ups to
embrace jazz and
serialism in works where
power, poetry, irony and
pathos, often underlaid
by a theatrical and
deeply subversive
element, coalesce in an
integrated, highly
individual musical voice.
Gorb is also not afraid
to draw on the vivid
musical heritage of his
Jewish roots, sometimes
directly, often in a more
subsumed or radically
creative way. The crucial
and consistent feature of
Gorb's work though is
that it communicates
strongly without
patronizing players or
audiences. He firmly
believes that if
contemporary music - any
music - does not impact
on listeners then its
message is irrelevant; it
is lost.
Moonlight Sonata Orchestre d'harmonie [Conducteur] - Intermédiaire Opus III Wind Orchestra Publications
Grade 4 SKU: CL.012-3945-01 Composed by Ludwig van Beethoven. Arranged by...(+)
Grade 4
SKU:
CL.012-3945-01
Composed by Ludwig van
Beethoven. Arranged by
Poor. Concert Band.
Symphony Band Series.
Audio recording available
separately (item
CL.WFR368). Extra full
score. Composed 2010.
Duration 5 minutes, 12
seconds. Opus III Wind
Orchestra Publications
#012-3945-01. Published
by Opus III Wind
Orchestra Publications
(CL.012-3945-01).
The lush and
haunting sounds of
Beethoven's universally
loved Moonlight Sonata
are faithfully brought to
life in Andrew F. Poor's
colorful setting for
band. Listeners and
performers alike will be
able to imagine Beethoven
sitting at a piano as the
sounds of the band
dramatically emerge from
the musical score. As an
added feature, this
beautiful setting
includes an optional
piano part that, along
with the band, are sure
to make this work a
favorite with both your
students and audiences
alike. Perfect for any
concert or contest
program.
The Best Of Beethoven Orchestre d'harmonie [Conducteur et Parties séparées] C.L. Barnhouse
Composed by Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827). Arranged by Ed Huckeby. Conc...(+)
Composed by Ludwig van
Beethoven (1770-1827).
Arranged by Ed Huckeby.
Concert Band Series.
Composed 2020. Duration 4
minutes, 15 seconds.
Published by C.L.
Barnhouse
Concert Band/Harmonie and Piano SKU: BT.BMP8095417 Composed by Leroy Ande...(+)
Concert Band/Harmonie and
Piano
SKU:
BT.BMP8095417
Composed by Leroy
Anderson. Arranged by
Jörg Murschinski.
Score Only. Composed
2008. Beriato Music
#BMP8095417. Published by
Beriato Music
(BT.BMP8095417).
A lot is known
about the American
composer Leroy Anderson.
This son of Swedish
immigrants played the
piano, organ, accordion,
trombone, tuba and double
bass. He spoke several
languages fluently and
graduated from Harvard
with first-class
honours.While on military
service, the army also
commissioned him to write
a manual on Icelandic
grammar.He already
started writing musical
arrangements as a
student, and from his
30th year arranged and
composed for the Boston
Pops Orchestra. Such
melodiesas Serenata, The
Typewriter, Sleigh Ride
and Bugler�s
Holiday made him world
famous. His best-known
work, Blue Tango, reached
number one in the US
charts in 1952, and it
sold more than a million
copies. In 1975, a year
after hisdeath, he was
given a star at the Walk
of Fame in Hollywood.Most
of his works last no
longer than three
minutes, about the
maximum length of a
single at that time. One
work that lasts longer is
his 1953 Piano Concerto
in C for piano and
orchestra.The first
performance was in
Chicago, conducted by the
composer and with Eugene
List at the piano.
However, after three
performances he was no
longer happy with the
work and withdrew it. He
always intended to revise
it, but never got round
to it. Itwas only in 1989
that the Anderson family
decided to republish the
work.This three-part
composition is on the one
hand characterised by a
careless elegance, but on
the other one can hear
the influence of
Rachmaninoff, Copland,
Gershwin, and
evenBeethoven and Mozart,
as well as the Viennese
classics.Anderson used
the sonata form for the
first movement. It ends
with a cadenza that
carries us on into the
second part (in e minor).
The third part is a
typically cheerful
American folk dance in2/4
time, a so-called Hoe
Down, with a lilting,
lyrical passage as its
middle section. At the
end comes a solo passage
followed by a rapid
close.In this piano
concerto, Anderson
combines a rigidly
classical form of
composition with simple
andappealing themes and
elements from light
music. So this work is a
perfect synthesis of
light music and what is
called serious music, in
the same way as
Gershwin�s
Rhapsody in Blue. A work
that can be played
equally well in a
concerthall, at an
open-air concert or even
a pop
concert.
Concert Band/Harmonie and Piano SKU: BT.BMP8091417 Composed by Leroy Ande...(+)
Concert Band/Harmonie and
Piano
SKU:
BT.BMP8091417
Composed by Leroy
Anderson. Arranged by
Jörg Murschinski. Set
(Score & Parts). Composed
2008. Beriato Music
#BMP8091417. Published by
Beriato Music
(BT.BMP8091417).
A lot is known
about the American
composer Leroy Anderson.
This son of Swedish
immigrants played the
piano, organ, accordion,
trombone, tuba and double
bass. He spoke several
languages fluently and
graduated from Harvard
with first-class
honours.While on military
service, the army also
commissioned him to write
a manual on Icelandic
grammar.He already
started writing musical
arrangements as a
student, and from his
30th year arranged and
composed for the Boston
Pops Orchestra. Such
melodiesas Serenata, The
Typewriter, Sleigh Ride
and Bugler�s
Holiday made him world
famous. His best-known
work, Blue Tango, reached
number one in the US
charts in 1952, and it
sold more than a million
copies. In 1975, a year
after hisdeath, he was
given a star at the Walk
of Fame in Hollywood.Most
of his works last no
longer than three
minutes, about the
maximum length of a
single at that time. One
work that lasts longer is
his 1953 Piano Concerto
in C for piano and
orchestra.The first
performance was in
Chicago, conducted by the
composer and with Eugene
List at the piano.
However, after three
performances he was no
longer happy with the
work and withdrew it. He
always intended to revise
it, but never got round
to it. Itwas only in 1989
that the Anderson family
decided to republish the
work.This three-part
composition is on the one
hand characterised by a
careless elegance, but on
the other one can hear
the influence of
Rachmaninoff, Copland,
Gershwin, and
evenBeethoven and Mozart,
as well as the Viennese
classics.Anderson used
the sonata form for the
first movement. It ends
with a cadenza that
carries us on into the
second part (in e minor).
The third part is a
typically cheerful
American folk dance in2/4
time, a so-called Hoe
Down, with a lilting,
lyrical passage as its
middle section. At the
end comes a solo passage
followed by a rapid
close.In this piano
concerto, Anderson
combines a rigidly
classical form of
composition with simple
andappealing themes and
elements from light
music. So this work is a
perfect synthesis of
light music and what is
called serious music, in
the same way as
Gershwin�s
Rhapsody in Blue. A work
that can be played
equally well in a
concerthall, at an
open-air concert or even
a pop
concert.
Composed by
Derek Bourgeois. Band
Music. Score and parts.
Duration 4:30. Published
by G & M Brand Music
Publishers (CN.R10214).
Adapted from
the slow movement of
Bourgeois' own Sonata for
Brass Quintet, Northern
Lament is a powerful work
with a fiery climax in
the middle and thematic
material derived from a
simple & memorable
melody.
This piece
originated in the slow
movement of Sonata for
Brass Quintet, which I
wrote in 1965 whilst
still a pupil of Herbert
Howells at the Royal
College of Music, London.
It had been commissioned
by the Halle Brass
Quintet, although they
never performed the work.
In 1997, Timothy Reynish
suggested that I should
arrange the work for wind
orchestra. I decided to
expand the movement into
something more than
double its original
length, adding a fiery
climax to its central
section. The whole
movement derives from the
simple melody stated at
the beginning. Because of
Timothy Reynish's
association with the
Royal Northern College of
Music in Manchester,
England and because the
original sonata was never
played by the
northern-based Halle
Brass Quintet who invited
me to write it, I decided
to call the new piece
Northern Lament..
Composed by
Derek Bourgeois. Band
Music. Score only.
Duration 4:30. Published
by G & M Brand Music
Publishers (CN.S11214).
Adapted from
the slow movement of
Bourgeois' own Sonata for
Brass Quintet, Northern
Lament is a powerful work
with a fiery climax in
the middle and thematic
material derived from a
simple & memorable
melody.
This piece
originated in the slow
movement of Sonata for
Brass Quintet, which I
wrote in 1965 whilst
still a pupil of Herbert
Howells at the Royal
College of Music, London.
It had been commissioned
by the Halle Brass
Quintet, although they
never performed the work.
In 1997, Timothy Reynish
suggested that I should
arrange the work for wind
orchestra. I decided to
expand the movement into
something more than
double its original
length, adding a fiery
climax to its central
section. The whole
movement derives from the
simple melody stated at
the beginning. Because of
Timothy Reynish's
association with the
Royal Northern College of
Music in Manchester,
England and because the
original sonata was never
played by the
northern-based Halle
Brass Quintet who invited
me to write it, I decided
to call the new piece
Northern Lament..
Orchestra 2.2.2.2: 4.2.0.0: Timp: Str (9-8-7-6-5 in set): Solo Piano SKU: AP....(+)
Orchestra 2.2.2.2:
4.2.0.0: Timp: Str
(9-8-7-6-5 in set): Solo
Piano
SKU:
AP.36-A134548
Composed by Johannes
Brahms. Arranged by
Clinton Nieweg and Robert
Sutherland. This edition:
Kalmus Orchestra Library.
Full Orchestra;
Performance Music
Ensemble; Single Titles.
Kalmus Orchestra Library.
Part(s). LudwigMasters
Publications #36-A134548.
Published by
LudwigMasters
Publications
(AP.36-A134548).
UPC:
735816434267.
English.
Johannes
Brahms (1833-1897)
composed his Piano
Concerto No. 1 in 1858
and performed the work's
debut in Hanover,
Germany, in 1859, to
mixed reviews. The work
initially began as a
sonata for two pianos,
then a four-movement
symphony. Under the
counsel of friends Julius
Otto Grimm and violinist
Joseph Joachim, Brahms
landed on a
three-movement piano
concerto. After its fifth
performance in December
1861, with Clara Schumann
as piano soloist, the
work still received mixed
audience reception. It
has since grown in
popularity and has been
recognized as a
masterpiece.
Instrumentation: 2.2.2.2:
4.2.0.0: Timp: Str
(9-8-7-6-5 in set): Solo
Piano.
These products
are currently being
prepared by a new
publisher. While many
items are ready and will
ship on time, some others
may see delays of several
months.
Adagio in E Major, K. 261 Orchestre d'harmonie [Conducteur et Parties séparées] LudwigMasters Publications
Concert Band; Orchestra 2.0.0.0: 2.0.0.0: Str (4-4-3-3-3 in set): Solo Violin in...(+)
Concert Band; Orchestra
2.0.0.0: 2.0.0.0: Str
(4-4-3-3-3 in set): Solo
Violin in set
SKU:
AP.36-A744690
Composed by Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart. Full
Orchestra, Conductor
Score & Parts. Kalmus
Orchestra Library. Score
and Part(s).
LudwigMasters
Publications #36-A744690.
Published by
LudwigMasters
Publications
(AP.36-A744690).
UPC:
659359882814.
English.
It is
widely believed that
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
(1756-1791) wrote the
Adagio in E major, K. 261
in or around 1776 as a
replacement for the
second movement of his
Violin Concerto No. 5 in
A, K. 219. The likely
reason for the
replacement is a
complaint by Italian
violinist Antonio
Brunetti, recently
brought to the Salzburg
court orchestra by the
Prince-Archbishop of
Salzburg, Heironymus
Colloredo, that the
original movements was
too artificial, according
to a letter from Leopold
Mozart. The Mozarts,
finding Brunetti boorish
and morally
objectionable, also would
have thought his
complaint regarding the
artificial second
movement to confirm their
worst opinions of Italian
taste. Still, young
Mozart wrote the
replacement Adagio as
requested, and its serene
beauty in sonata form
remains a fine example of
his lyrical ability.
Instrumentation: 2.0.0.0:
2.0.0.0: Str (4-4-3-3-3
in set): Solo Violin in
set.
These
products are currently
being prepared by a new
publisher. While many
items are ready and will
ship on time, some others
may see delays of several
months.
Concert Band; Orchestra 2.0.0.0: 2.0.0.0: Str (4-4-3-3-3 in set): Solo Violin in...(+)
Concert Band; Orchestra
2.0.0.0: 2.0.0.0: Str
(4-4-3-3-3 in set): Solo
Violin in set
SKU:
AP.36-A744601
Composed by Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart. Full
Orchestra, Conductor
Score. Kalmus Orchestra
Library. Score.
LudwigMasters
Publications #36-A744601.
Published by
LudwigMasters
Publications
(AP.36-A744601).
ISBN
9798888529805. UPC:
659359863653.
English.
It is
widely believed that
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
(1756-1791) wrote the
Adagio in E major, K. 261
in or around 1776 as a
replacement for the
second movement of his
Violin Concerto No. 5 in
A, K. 219. The likely
reason for the
replacement is a
complaint by Italian
violinist Antonio
Brunetti, recently
brought to the Salzburg
court orchestra by the
Prince-Archbishop of
Salzburg, Heironymus
Colloredo, that the
original movements was
too artificial, according
to a letter from Leopold
Mozart. The Mozarts,
finding Brunetti boorish
and morally
objectionable, also would
have thought his
complaint regarding the
artificial second
movement to confirm their
worst opinions of Italian
taste. Still, young
Mozart wrote the
replacement Adagio as
requested, and its serene
beauty in sonata form
remains a fine example of
his lyrical ability.
Instrumentation: 2.0.0.0:
2.0.0.0: Str (4-4-3-3-3
in set): Solo Violin in
set.
These
products are currently
being prepared by a new
publisher. While many
items are ready and will
ship on time, some others
may see delays of several
months.
Concert Band; Orchestra 2.0.0.0: 2.0.0.0: Str (4-4-3-3-3 in set): Solo Violin in...(+)
Concert Band; Orchestra
2.0.0.0: 2.0.0.0: Str
(4-4-3-3-3 in set): Solo
Violin in set
SKU:
AP.36-A744648
Composed by Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart. Full
Orchestra, Solo Violin
Part. Kalmus Orchestra
Library. Part(s).
LudwigMasters
Publications #36-A744648.
Published by
LudwigMasters
Publications
(AP.36-A744648).
ISBN
9798888529812. UPC:
659359901379.
English.
It is
widely believed that
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
(1756-1791) wrote the
Adagio in E major, K. 261
in or around 1776 as a
replacement for the
second movement of his
Violin Concerto No. 5 in
A, K. 219. The likely
reason for the
replacement is a
complaint by Italian
violinist Antonio
Brunetti, recently
brought to the Salzburg
court orchestra by the
Prince-Archbishop of
Salzburg, Heironymus
Colloredo, that the
original movements was
too artificial, according
to a letter from Leopold
Mozart. The Mozarts,
finding Brunetti boorish
and morally
objectionable, also would
have thought his
complaint regarding the
artificial second
movement to confirm their
worst opinions of Italian
taste. Still, young
Mozart wrote the
replacement Adagio as
requested, and its serene
beauty in sonata form
remains a fine example of
his lyrical ability.
Instrumentation: 2.0.0.0:
2.0.0.0: Str (4-4-3-3-3
in set): Solo Violin in
set.
These
products are currently
being prepared by a new
publisher. While many
items are ready and will
ship on time, some others
may see delays of several
months.
Composed by
Derek Bourgeois. Band
Music. Score only.
Duration 10:00. Published
by G & M Brand Music
Publishers (CN.S11190).
In 1969 I was
teaching music at
Cranleigh School in
Surrey. I was asked to
write a work for the
orchestra and produced a
four-movement piece
entitled Concerto for
School Orchestra. I have
now reworked the music
for wind band and
re-titled it Perchance to
Dream. the piece has a
slow introduction
followed by a loose
sonata form movement in
which the introductory
material is
reintroduced.
Composed by
Derek Bourgeois. Band
Music. Score and parts.
Duration 10:00. Published
by G & M Brand Music
Publishers (CN.R10190).
In 1969 I was
teaching music at
Cranleigh School in
Surrey. I was asked to
write a work for the
orchestra and produced a
four-movement piece
entitled Concerto for
School Orchestra. I have
now reworked the music
for wind band and
re-titled it Perchance to
Dream. the piece has a
slow introduction
followed by a loose
sonata form movement in
which the introductory
material is
reintroduced.