String Quartet No. 2 Quatuor à cordes: 2 violons, alto, violoncelle Merion Music
Chamber Music String Quartet SKU: PR.14440265S Composed by Sydney F. Hodk...(+)
Chamber Music String
Quartet
SKU:
PR.14440265S
Composed
by Sydney F. Hodkinson.
Large Score. With
Standard notation.
Duration 25 minutes.
Merion Music #144-40265S.
Published by Merion Music
(PR.14440265S).
UPC:
680160027910.
The
Second and Third Quartets
were conceived at the
same time; indeed, their
composition intermingled,
over half of No. 3 being
sketched before No. 2 was
completed. Accordingly,
they share similar
material but, like the
intertwining blood of
cousins, their natures
differ: No. 2 being
somewhat acerbic and
declamatory, No. 3 more
lyric and gentler. An
annunicatory 'leaping
motive' (derived from a
motto generated by my
name) opens Quartet No. 2
and inhabits the course
of the piece as a
cyclical binding-force. A
five-note motive, usually
very deliberate, also
keeps recurring like an
insistent caller. All
three movements are based
on tonal centers (I on B
and E, II on D, III on C)
and the harmonic
'grammar' spoken tends to
recall the jazz world of
my youth. To hopefully
achieve a certain
classical ambience was
one of the goals of this
piece, and all three
movements have
traditional forms. The
first movement is a
modified Sonata-Allegro
design, with a
severely-truncated
recapitulation balanced
by a lengthy, and
decaying Coda. The second
movement is a set of
strophic variants and an
epilogue interspersed
with both solo ritornelli
and first-movement
material (the motto and
the five-note motive) in
the nature of a
fantasia-like
'call-and-response.' It
is dedicated to the
memory of the American
mezzo-soprano Jan
DeGaetani. The third
movement is a modified
Rondo (ABACBA) which
evolves out of the
opening motto. All three
movements make much use
of canonic stretti,
similar gestures, and
repetition. For example,
the climax of movement
III's Rondo throws the
first movement back at us
again, as if the players
were reluctant to let it
go, so that the entire
piece could perhaps be
viewed as a single large,
extended, Sonata
movement, with
introduction and
Coda. The Second and
Third Quartets were
conceived at the same
time; indeed, their
composition intermingled,
over half of No. 3 being
sketched before No. 2 was
completed.Â
Accordingly, they share
similar material but,
like the intertwining
blood of cousins, their
natures differ: No. 2
being somewhat acerbic
and declamatory, No. 3
more lyric and gentler.An
annunicatory
‘leaping
motive’ (derived
from a motto generated by
my name) opens Quartet
No. 2 and inhabits the
course of the piece as a
cyclical
binding-force. A
five-note motive, usually
very deliberate, also
keeps recurring like an
insistent caller. All
three movements are based
on tonal centers (I on B
and E, II on D, III on C)
and the harmonic
‘grammar’
spoken tends to recall
the jazz world of my
youth.To hopefully
achieve a certain
classical ambience was
one of the goals of this
piece, and all three
movements have
traditional forms.Â
The first movement is a
modified Sonata-Allegro
design, with a
severely-truncated
recapitulation balanced
by a lengthy, and
decaying Coda. The
second movement is a set
of strophic variants and
an epilogue interspersed
with both solo ritornelli
and first-movement
material (the motto and
the five-note motive) in
the nature of a
fantasia-like
‘call-and-response.
’ It is
dedicated to the memory
of the American
mezzo-soprano Jan
DeGaetani. The third
movement is a modified
Rondo (ABACBA) which
evolves out of the
opening motto.All three
movements make much use
of canonic stretti,
similar gestures, and
repetition. For
example, the climax of
movement III’s
Rondo throws the first
movement back at us
again, as if the players
were reluctant to let it
go, so that the entire
piece could perhaps be
viewed as a single large,
extended, Sonata
movement, with
introduction and
Coda.
(23 Arrangements of Gems from the Baroque Period). By Various. Arranged by Joel ...(+)
(23 Arrangements of Gems
from the Baroque Period).
By Various. Arranged by
Joel Lish. String
quartet. For 2 Violins,
Viola and Cello.
Quartets. Baroque.
Advanced. Set of 4 parts.
Published by Middle
Fiddle Music
& String Quartet Version of the Piano Sonata, Op. 14, No. 1. By Ludwig van Beeth...(+)
& String Quartet Version
of the Piano Sonata, Op.
14, No. 1. By Ludwig van
Beethoven. Edited by E.
Herttrich. STUDY EDITION.
Pages: VI and 161. Study
score-no details.
Published by G. Henle.
String Quartet - difficult SKU: HL.49008206 Score and Parts. Compo...(+)
String Quartet -
difficult
SKU:
HL.49008206
Score
and Parts. Composed
by Peteris Vasks. This
edition: Saddle
stitching. Sheet music.
Edition Schott.
Classical. Score and
Parts. Composed
1977/1997. 86 pages.
Duration 15'. Schott
Music #ED 8899. Published
by Schott Music
(HL.49008206).
ISBN
9790001124003. UPC:
073999655742.
9.0x12.0x0.34
inches.
With
serious string players
this Latvian composer has
long been recognized
because of his sonorous
tonal concepts and his
modal, occasionally
aleatoric idiom. Works
like 'Cantabile per
Archi' or 'Musica
dolorosa' are already
quite well-known, but
newer pieces like the
violin concerto with
string orchestra 'Fernes
Licht', commissioned by
Gidon Kremer for his
Kremerata Baltica, are
also gaining wide
international exposure.
The genre of the string
quartet is well
represented in Vasks'
output. The 2nd string
quartet 'Summer Tunes'
(ED 8512) has been
published for some time
and the 3rd was premiered
by the Kronos Quartet who
were so enthused that
they commissioned a 4th
quartet. In 1996,
prompted by a complete
recording of all his
string quartets by the
Miami String Quartet for
Conifer Records Vasks
totally revised his early
1st string quartet 1996,
it is here presented for
the first time in a
printed edition.
String Quartet No. 1 Quatuor à cordes: 2 violons, alto, violoncelle [Set de Parties séparées] Barenreiter
Inspired by Leo Tolstoy's "Kreutzer Sonata". By Leos Janacek. Edited by Leos Fal...(+)
Inspired by Leo Tolstoy's
"Kreutzer Sonata". By
Leos Janacek. Edited by
Leos Faltus; Milos
Stedron. For Viola,
Violin (2), Violoncello.
Published by
Baerenreiter-Ausgaben
(German import).
Quatuor à cordes: 2 violons, alto, violoncelle [Partition] G. Henle
Version of the Piano Sonata, Op. 14, No. 1 - Revised Edition - for 2 Violins, Vi...(+)
Version of the Piano
Sonata, Op. 14, No. 1 -
Revised Edition - for 2
Violins, Viola and
Violoncello. By Ludwig
van Beethoven. Edited by
E. Herttrich. String
Quartets. Pages: Parts -
Vl I = 67* Vl II = 59 *
Va = 58 * Vc = 54. Urtext
edition without
fingering-paper bound.
Published by G. Henle.
Kongsgaard Variations Quatuor à cordes: 2 violons, alto, violoncelle Faber Music Limited
SKU: AP.12-057153970X Composed by Anders Hillborg. Masterworks; Quartet; ...(+)
SKU:
AP.12-057153970X
Composed by Anders
Hillborg. Masterworks;
Quartet; Solo Small
Ensembles; String
Quartet. Faber Edition.
20th Century; Masterwork.
Score. Faber Music
#12-057153970X. Published
by Faber Music
(AP.12-057153970X).
ISBN 9780571539703.
English.
In his
Kongsgaard Variations
(2006), Swedish composer
Anders Hillborg takes the
Arietta theme from
Beethoven's last
piano-sonata, No. 32 in C
Minor, Op. 111 as the
basis for an evocative
16-minute string quartet.
Beethoven's sublime music
drifts strangely through
the centuries and is
warped, vaporised, and
refashioned as if, in the
words of Hillborg, the
Arietta is dreaming yet
another variation on
itself.
Tango Quatuor à cordes: 2 violons, alto, violoncelle Schott
Score and Parts String Quartet (Score & Parts) SKU: HL.49045929 No. 7 ...(+)
Score and Parts String
Quartet (Score & Parts)
SKU: HL.49045929
No. 7 from:
“Jazz-like. Partita
for Piano†String
Quartet Score and
Parts. Composed by
Erwin Schulhoff. Arranged
by Wolfgang Birtel.
String Ensemble.
Classical. Softcover. 12
pages. Schott Music
#ED22607. Published by
Schott Music
(HL.49045929).
9.0x12.0x0.057
inches.
The
Austro-Hungarian composer
Erwin Schulhoff
(1894-1942) was musically
precocious: At the
suggestion of AntonÃn
Dvorák, he
receivedpiano lessons at
the age of seven, and at
the age of ten became a
student at the Prague
Conservatory. Further
piano studies in Vienna,
Cologne and Leipzig as
well as composition
lessons with Max Reger
supplemented his
education. His Jewish
heritage, which defamed
his music as
“degenerateâ€,
and his sympathy for
communism, however, cost
him his life. In Prague
and finally interned in
Wülzburg near
Weissenburg in Bavaria,
he died of tuberculosis.
Schulhoff's musical
significance lies in the
integration of jazz into
art music, for example in
his oratorio H.M.S. Royal
Oak or in his Hot Sonata
for alto saxophone and
piano. He earned his
living as a jazz pianist
for a long time. In
August 1922 he wrote four
short piano pieces, his
Rag Music, to which he
added four more phrases
in November: released as
Partita, also known as
Jazz-like Partita - with
the fashion dances
Ragtime, Foxtrott,
Shimmy, Boston and - as
No. 7 - a tango. From a
piano to a string quartet
movement, the arrangement
presents itself as a
delicate and smart,
technically not too
difficult sweet, suitable
as a diversion or
addition in a quartet
program.
Special Import
titles are specialty
titles that are not
generally offered for
sale by US based
retailers. These items
must be obtained from our
overseas suppliers. When
you order a special
import title, it will be
shipped from our overseas
warehouse. The shipment
time will be slower than
items shipped directly
from our US warehouse and
may be subject to
delays.
String Quartet SKU: BR.PB-5708 Urtext. Composed by Joachim Raff. E...(+)
String Quartet
SKU:
BR.PB-5708
Urtext. Composed
by Joachim Raff. Edited
by Stefan Konig. Chamber
music; Softbound.
Partitur-Bibliothek
(Score Library). Romantic
period. Study Score.
Breitkopf and Haertel #PB
5708. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.PB-5708).
ISBN
9790004216453. 6.5 x 9
inches.
When his
musical triad op. 192 was
created in the winter of
1873/74, Raff was one of
Germany's most successful
composers and the central
artistic authority in the
Hessian spa, royal
residence and imperial
city of Wiesbaden. With
op. 192, Raff cultivated
his reputation as an
erudite composer who was
a master of contrapuntal
forms. By the time the
string quartets were
composed, he had already
established himself as
one of the most prolific
and versatile suite
composers of the 19th
century, as is evident
here in the various suite
conceptions: Opus 192 No.
1 (in C minor), as Suite
in the ancient style, has
with Baroque labels
stylized dance movements
follow one another. Die
schone Mullerin [The Fair
Maid of the Mill] op. 192
No. 2 (in D major), on
the other hand,
interprets the suite as a
sequence of chapters in a
musical narrative and
thus becomes probably the
first tone poem in string
quartet scoring. In the
third quartet (in C
major), of which Raff the
artist was proudest,
other genre designations
mix in among the dance
movements, and with its
free succession of
different movement types,
not usual for a sonata,
it preserves structural
openness. In
collaboration with the
Joachim-Raff-Archiv
Lachen (CH)
Some
eighteen years elapsed
between Raff's first
counted String Quartet
op. 77 and his Quartets
Nos. 6-8 op. 192,
combined as one work. As
such, Raff parted with
the weighty single opus
in quartet composition -
without, however,
sacrificing musical
quality.
Study score SKU: BR.PB-5708-07 Urtext. Composed by Joachim Raff. E...(+)
Study score
SKU:
BR.PB-5708-07
Urtext. Composed
by Joachim Raff. Edited
by Stefan Konig. Chamber
music.
Partitur-Bibliothek
(Score Library). Romantic
period. Study Score.
Breitkopf and Haertel #PB
5708-07. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.PB-5708-07).
ISBN
9790004216453. 6.5 x 9
inches.
When his
musical triad op. 192 was
created in the winter of
1873/74, Raff was one of
Germany's most successful
composers and the central
artistic authority in the
Hessian spa, royal
residence and imperial
city of Wiesbaden. With
op. 192, Raff cultivated
his reputation as an
erudite composer who was
a master of contrapuntal
forms. By the time the
string quartets were
composed, he had already
established himself as
one of the most prolific
and versatile suite
composers of the 19th
century, as is evident
here in the various suite
conceptions: Opus 192 No.
1 (in C minor), as Suite
in the ancient style, has
with Baroque labels
stylized dance movements
follow one another. Die
schone Mullerin [The Fair
Maid of the Mill] op. 192
No. 2 (in D major), on
the other hand,
interprets the suite as a
sequence of chapters in a
musical narrative and
thus becomes probably the
first tone poem in string
quartet scoring. In the
third quartet (in C
major), of which Raff the
artist was proudest,
other genre designations
mix in among the dance
movements, and with its
free succession of
different movement types,
not usual for a sonata,
it preserves structural
openness. In
collaboration with the
Joachim-Raff-Archiv
Lachen (CH)
Some
eighteen years elapsed
between Raff's first
counted String Quartet
op. 77 and his Quartets
Nos. 6-8 op. 192,
combined as one work. As
such, Raff parted with
the weighty single opus
in quartet composition -
without, however,
sacrificing musical
quality.