Peanuts Gallery Piano et Orchestre [Reduction] Theodore Presser Co.
For Piano and Orchestra (Solo Piano and Piano Reduction). By Ellen Taaffe Zwilic...(+)
For Piano and Orchestra
(Solo Piano and Piano
Reduction). By Ellen
Taaffe Zwilich. For Piano
Solo, Piano Reduction.
Junior Class I-B piece
for the One Hand Piano
Music for the Concerto
Event with the National
Federation of Music Clubs
(NFMC) Festivals Bulletin
2008-2009-2010. Solo part
with piano reduction.
Composed 1996. 31 pages.
Duration 13:00. Published
by Theodore Presser
Company
I got Rhythm Piano et Orchestre [Conducteur] - Intermédiaire Baton Music
(Variations for Piano and Orchestra). By George Gershwin (1898-1937). Arranged b...(+)
(Variations for Piano and
Orchestra). By George
Gershwin (1898-1937).
Arranged by Douglas
McLain. For Piano and
Concert Band. Grade 4.
Score. Duration 08:30
I got Rhythm Piano et Orchestre [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Intermédiaire Baton Music
(Variations for Piano and Orchestra). By George Gershwin (1898-1937). Arranged b...(+)
(Variations for Piano and
Orchestra). By George
Gershwin (1898-1937).
Arranged by Douglas
McLain. For Piano and
Concert Band. Grade 4.
Full score and set of
parts. Duration 08:30
String Orchestra and Piano SKU: BT.EMBZ13548 Leichte Trios aus vier Ja...(+)
String Orchestra and
Piano
SKU:
BT.EMBZ13548
Leichte Trios aus vier
Jahrhunderten. By
Arpad Pejtsik.
Educational Tool. Book
Only. Composed 1993. 248
pages. Editio Musica
Budapest #EMBZ13548.
Published by Editio
Musica Budapest
(BT.EMBZ13548).
At first sight,
this publication appears
to merely be a collection
of pieces due to the lack
of drier technical
studies that are
characteristic of tutors.
Yet the selection of the
works, their order
according to the
development of ensemble
playing, and the advice
towards technical
realization included
after the foreword -
these all make this
publication a tutor. The
works form a
cross-section of a longer
period of the history of
chamber music and offer
an insight into the
different methods of
composition.Volume I
contains easy chamber
music from the
Renaissance to Viennese
Classicism for two
violins and cello, in the
first position. (In some
works the 2nd violin part
or others thecello part,
respectively, can also be
played on the viola.) The
easier pieces can be
played after two years of
active instrumental
study.
Kaintuck' Piano et Orchestre [Conducteur] Carl Fischer
(Poem for Piano and Orchestra - Full Score). By William Grant Still (1895-1978)....(+)
(Poem for Piano and
Orchestra - Full Score).
By William Grant Still
(1895-1978). Orchestra.
For Flute I, Flute II,
Flute III, Piccolo, Oboe
I, Oboe II, English Horn,
Clarinet I, Clarinet II,
Clarinet III, Bass
Clarinet, Bassoon I,
Bassoon II, Horn I, Horn
II, Horn III, Horn IV,
Trumpet I, Trumpet II,
Trumpet III, Tenor I,
Tenor II, Tenor III,
Tuba, . Full score
(large). Standard
notation. 48 pages.
Published by Carl Fischer
Piano Concerto No. 1 Piano et Orchestre [Conducteur d'étude / Miniature] Theodore Presser Co.
(For Piano and Orchestra - Study Score). By Iain Hamilton. Orchestra. For Flute ...(+)
(For Piano and Orchestra
- Study Score). By Iain
Hamilton. Orchestra. For
Flute I, Flute II,
Piccolo, Oboe I, Oboe II,
Clarinet I, Clarinet II,
Bassoon I, Bassoon II,
Horn I, Horn II, Horn
III, Horn IV, Trumpet I,
Trumpet II, Tenor I,
Tenor II, Bass Tromb full
score (study)
For Piano. Includes a complete printed music score on high-quality ivory paper; ...(+)
For Piano. Includes a
complete printed music
score on high-quality
ivory paper; and a
compact disc containing
the complete version of
each piece with soloist
and accompaniment; then a
second performance with
accompaniments minus you,
the soloist. Published by
Music Minus One.
Piano and Orchestra SKU: HL.14030961 Composed by Bent Sorensen. Music Sal...(+)
Piano and Orchestra
SKU: HL.14030961
Composed by Bent
Sorensen. Music Sales
America. Classical.
Score. 96 pages. Edition
Wilhelm Hansen #KP00980.
Published by Edition
Wilhelm Hansen
(HL.14030961).
ISBN
9788759857458.
English.
Score of
the Danish Composer's
Concerto for Piano and
Orchestra written in
1996. Bent Sorensen
writes: 'The title of
this piano concerto came,
as usual, very early to
me, when my thoughts
about the work had
started to circulate, but
before 'real' music was
written down. I held on
to the Italian title,
even though its
association with Vivaldi
had no influence on my
music, and even when
German, French, English,
and Danish titles
covering almost the same
content -'Nachtmusik',
'Nocturne', 'By Night',
'Om Natten', were just
about to get the upper
hand. The piano concerto
has, then, in my opinion,
something to do with
night, but to describe
this further is at least
as difficult to me as it
is to defend the final
Italian title against
those which were
rejected. The Piano
Concerto is in two
movements. The first,
swarming, is perhaps the
mystery of the night, and
the second perhaps the
dreams of the night; with
this, however, I have
already given the
concerto a more
programmatic content than
I can defend. Each
movement ends with a
cadenza and perhaps the
last of those - the
ending of the work that
is - is inspired by a
sequence from Bruce
Chatwin's wonderful book
'The Viceroy of Ouidah':
Or the Amazons howling.
'No, No, No. It was not
the leopard that killed
him. Not the buffalo that
killed him. It was night.
Night that killed
him!'.
Full Score. Composed by Poul Ruders. Music Sales America. Classical. Scor...(+)
Full Score.
Composed by Poul Ruders.
Music Sales America.
Classical. Score Only.
Composed 2017. 80 pages.
Edition Wilhelm Hansen
#WH32201. Published by
Edition Wilhelm Hansen
(HL.232526).
Piano, orchestra SKU: SA.41762 Composed by Antonin Dvorak. Edited by Berk...(+)
Piano, orchestra
SKU:
SA.41762
Composed by
Antonin Dvorak. Edited by
Berkovec. Arranged by
Vilem Kurz. Original
Works, Concerto,
Instrumental Solo.
Reprint Source: Prague:
SNKLHU, 1956. Plate H
1790. Romantic, Czech.
Study score. Composed
1876. 260 pages. Duration
38-40 minutes. Petrucci
Library Press #41762.
Published by Petrucci
Library Press (SA.41762).
ISBN 9781608741762.
9.5 x 12.5
inches.
Composed in
the late summer of 1876,
Dvorak's first effort at
a full-blown concerto
shows signs of an unusual
amount of revision in the
composer's hand -
especially for the solo
piano part. This might
explain the delay in the
concerto's premiere,
which was given at the
Provisional Theatre in
Prague on March 24, 1878
with Karel Slavkovsky as
soloist accompanied by
the Provisional Theatre
Orchestra under the baton
of Adolf Cech. The
composer himself wrote: I
see I am unable to write
a Concerto for a
virtuoso; I must think of
other things. The
ungainly solo part no
doubt also played a role
in the work's dely in
publication, which didn't
take place until 1883.
Even after this, and
despite much beauty in
the music itself,
performances were scarce
due to the difficulty and
charchter of the solo
part. The solo part was
revised heavily by the
Czech pianist Vilem Kurz
(1872-1945), whose
version was premired by
his daughter Ilona
KurzovA! and the Czech
Philharmonic on December
9, 1919 and is the one
most often performed
today. This new study
score is a digitally
enhanced reissue of the
full score first
published in 1956 by the
Czech State Publishers as
part of the Dvorak
collected works, edited
by Jiri Berkovec and
Karel Solc, which
includes both the
composer's original solo
part and the re-arranged
one made by Kurz. Unlike
so many of the on-demand
scores now available,
this one comes with all
the pages and the images
have been thoroughly
checked to make sure it
is readable. As with all
PLP scores a percentage
of each sale is donated
to the amazing online
archive of free music
scores and recordings,
IMSLP - Petrucci Music
Library.
Schirmer's Library of Musical Classics, Vol. 2052. By Dimitri Kabalevsky. (Piano...(+)
Schirmer's Library of
Musical Classics, Vol.
2052. By Dimitri
Kabalevsky. (Piano).
Piano. Book only. Size
9x12 inches. 64 pages.
Published by G. Schirmer,
Inc.
Piano and orchestra SKU: FG.55011-372-5 Composed by Matthew Whittall. Stu...(+)
Piano and orchestra
SKU:
FG.55011-372-5
Composed by Matthew
Whittall. Study score.
Fennica Gehrman
#55011-372-5. Published
by Fennica Gehrman
(FG.55011-372-5).
ISBN
9790550113725.
Imag
es of the sea figure
prominently throughout my
life and memories: from
holidays on the Atlantic
coast during my Canadian
childhood to my current
Baltic home, and the
imagined, only later
experienced Mediterranean
of my ancestral heritage.
As an immigrant (son of
an immigrant) bound to
two northern countries,
the sea is emblematic of
my twin homelands, from
the expanses of water
surrounding them to those
separating them. A Mari
usque ad Mare. The sea is
also an enduring image of
the unknown, of expanses
unexplored, of the raw
power of nature and, for
too many currently, of
terror holding a hope of
refuge - or the pain of
loss. Such disparate
ideas were captured for
me in the seascapes of
the New York painter
MaryBeth Thielhelm, whom
I met in 2008 during a
residency on the Gulf of
Mexico. Her vast,
abstract, nearly
monochromatic depictions
of imaginary seas in
wildly varying moods were
the catalyst for a
concerto where the piano
is frequently far from a
hero battling a
collective, but rather
acts as a channel for
elemental forces surging
up from the orchestra,
floating - sometimes
barely so - on its
constantly shifting
surface. There are few
themes to speak of,
beyond a handful of
iconic ideas that
periodically cycle
upward. Rather, the
piano's material is
largely an ornamentation
of the more primal
rhythmic and harmonic
impulses from the
orchestra below - a
poetic interpretation, if
you will, of the more
immediate experience of
facing the vastness of
some unknown body of
water. The title
Nameless Seas is borrowed
from one of Thielhelm's
exhibitions, as are those
of the four movements,
which are bridged
together into two halves
of roughly equal weight -
one rhapsodic and free,
the other more
single-minded and direct,
separated only by a short
breath. The opening
movement, Nocturne, is
predominantly calm, if
brooding, darkness and
light alternating
throughout. Lyrical
arabesques sparkle over
gently lapping
cross-currents in the
strings and mirrored
timpani, the piano's full
power only rarely
deployed. The waves
gradually build, drawing
in the full orchestra for
a meeting of forces in
Land and Sea, a brighter,
more warmly lyrical scene
that unfolds in series of
dreamlike, sometimes even
nostalgic visions, which
for me carry strong
memories of sitting on
rocks above surging
Atlantic waves. The third
movement, Wake, is a
fast, perpetual-motion
texture of glinting,
darting rhythms and
sudden shafts of light,
with a prominent part for
the steel drums, limning
the piano's quicksilver
figurations. An ecstatic
climax crashes into a
solo cadenza that grows
progressively calmer and
more introspective rather
than virtuosic. Much of
the tension finally
releases into Unclaimed
Waters, a drifting,
meditative seascape in
which the piano is
progressively engulfed by
a series of ever-taller
waves, ultimately
dissolving into a
tolling, rippling
continuum of sound.
It has been a great
privilege to realize such
a long-held dream as this
piece, and to write it
for not one, but two
great pianists.
Risto-Matti Marin and
Angela Hewitt, both of
whose friendship and
support have been
unfailing and humbling,
share the dedication.
Nameless Seas was
commissioned by the
PianoEspoo festival and
Canada's National Arts
Centre, with the
premieres in Ottawa and
Helsinki led by Hannu
Lintu and Olari Elts.
Thanks are due also to
the Jenny and Antti
Wihuri fund, whose
generous grant provided
me with much-needed time,
and Escape to Create in
Seaside, Florida, the
source to which I
returned to do a large
part of the work.
Piano/harpsichord and orchestra (picc.2.2.cor ang.2.2 - 4.2.3.1 - timp - perc(4)...(+)
Piano/harpsichord and
orchestra (picc.2.2.cor
ang.2.2 - 4.2.3.1 - timp
- perc(4) - hp - str)
SKU: BR.PB-15160
Urtext. Composed
by Sergej Rachmaninow.
Edited by Norbert
Gertsch. Orchestra;
Softbound.
Partitur-Bibliothek
(Score Library).
Variations; Solo
concerto; Late-romantic;
Early modern. Sheet
Music. Duration 22'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #PB
15160. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.PB-15160).
ISBN
9790004215654. 10 x 12.5
inches.
Paganini's
Capricci served as
inspiration for many
composers. In addition to
Brahms, Schumann and
Liszt, Rachmaninoff was
also inspired by the
idea. His Rhapsody on a
Theme by Paganini has
since become one of his
best known and most
popular works and was an
immediate success. In
1934, between two intense
concert seasons,
Rachmaninoff took
advantage of the peace
and quiet at his villa on
Lake Lucerne to compose
the Variations.
Paganini's virtuosity and
joy of playing are
juxtaposed with the
Gregorian sequence Dies
irae. A symbol of the
evil spirit to which
Paganini sold his soul?
At least that is how
Rachmaninoff wrote it in
a letter to the
choreographer Fokine. For
the demanding piano part,
the composer and
celebrated pianist
himself had to start
practicing very early:
The composition is very
difficult, and I should
really start practicing
now, but I get lazier
with my finger exercises
year after year.The
editor, Norbert Gertsch,
presents with this
edition for the first
time an Urtext edition of
the work that Joachim
Kaiser described as
Rachmaninoff's most
spiritual, witty, elegant
work for piano..
Urtext. Composed
by George Gershwin.
Orchestra; Softbound.
Edition Breitkopf. Solo
concerto; Early modern;
Music post-1945. Piano
reduction. 88 pages.
Duration 36'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #EB 10859.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.EB-10859).
ISBN
9790201808598. 9.5 x 12
inches.
After
achieving sensational
success with the musical
Lady, be good! , with
evergreens such as
Fascinating Rhythm and
The Man I love, as well
as with his Rhapsody in
Blue , Gershwin premiered
his Concerto in F for
piano and orchestra as a
soloist at Carnegie Hall
in 1925. Now, the new
superstar of Broadway had
also arrived at the
center of New York's
classical music scene. In
its eventful history, the
work went through
numerous changes,
cuttings, arrangements,
many of which doubtful
and unauthorized. Even
the first and so far only
printed orchestral score,
edited by Frank
Campbell-Watson,
published in 1942 five
years after Gershwin's
death, contains many
unauthorized
interventions. Through
years of research, editor
Norbert Gertsch has
succeeded in ridding the
work of all unauthorized
additions and alterations
and thus reconstructing
an Urtext in its original
literal sense from the
complex source material -
from autograph sketches
to early recordings. The
first text-critical
edition of the work is a
joint production of
Breitkopf
(score/orchestral parts)
and G. Henle Verlag
(piano reduction).
String Orchestra and Piano SKU: BT.EMBZ3679 Pour violon (flute), viole...(+)
String Orchestra and
Piano
SKU:
BT.EMBZ3679
Pour
violon (flute), viole
(violoncelle ou 2.
violon) et clavecin,
Concert Nr. 1.
Composed by Jean-Philippe
Rameau. Book Only.
Composed 1966. 36 pages.
Editio Musica Budapest
#EMBZ3679. Published by
Editio Musica Budapest
(BT.EMBZ3679).
Urtext. Composed
by George Gershwin.
Edited by Norbert
Gertsch. Orchestra;
Softbound.
Partitur-Bibliothek
(Score Library). Solo
concerto; Early modern;
Music post-1945. Full
score. 136 pages.
Duration 36'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #PB 15140.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.PB-15140).
ISBN
9790004214763. 10 x 12.5
inches.
After
achieving sensational
success with the musical
Lady, be good!, with
evergreens such as
Fascinating Rhythm and
The Man I love, as well
as with his Rhapsody in
Blue, Gershwin premiered
his Concerto in F for
piano and orchestra as a
soloist at Carnegie Hall
in 1925. Now, the new
superstar of Broadway had
also arrived at the
center of New York's
classical music scene. In
its eventful history, the
work went through
numerous changes,
cuttings, arrangements,
many of which doubtful
and unauthorized. Even
the first and so far only
printed orchestral score,
edited by Frank
Campbell-Watson,
published in 1942 five
years after Gershwin's
death, contains many
unauthorized
interventions. Through
years of research, editor
Norbert Gertsch has
succeeded in ridding the
work of all unauthorized
additions and alterations
and thus reconstructing
an Urtext in its original
literal sense from the
complex source material -
from autograph sketches
to early recordings. The
first text-critical
edition of the work is a
joint production of
Breitkopf
(score/orchestral parts)
and G. Henle Verlag
(piano reduction).