SKU: SU.00220263 Composed by Alexander Glazunov, Antonin Dvorak, and Pete...(+)
SKU: SU.00220263
Composed by Alexander
Glazunov, Antonin Dvorak,
and Peter Ilyich
Tchaikovsky. Chamber
Music, String
Trio/Quartet/Quintet. CD
(PDF Scores). CD Sheet
Music #00220263.
Published by CD Sheet
Music (SU.00220263).
This CD Sheet
Musicâ„¢ collection
makes available full
scores and parts for
string quartets by 19th C
Slavic masters Dvorák,
Glazunov and Tchaikovsky.
DVORÃK: String
Quartets No. 2 in B-flat
major (parts only); No. 5
in F minor, Op. 9 (parts
only); No. 7 in A minor,
Op. 16 (parts only); No.
8 in E major, Op. 80; No.
9, Op. 34; No. 10 in
E-flat major, Op. 51
Slavonic; No. 11 in C
major, Op. 61; No. 12 in
F major, Op. 96 American;
No. 13 in G major, Op.
106; No. 14 in A-flat
major, Op. 105 GLAZUNOV:
String Quartets No. 1 in
D Major, Op. 1; No. 2 in
F Major, Op. 10; No. 3 in
G major, Op. 26, Quartet
Slave; No. 4 in A Minor,
Op. 64; No. 5 in D Minor,
Op. 70; No. 6 in Bb
Major, Op. 106; Suite in
C Major for String
Quartet, Op. 35; 5
Novelettes for String
Quartet, Op. 15
TCHAIKOVSKY: String
Quartet, No 1 in D major;
Op. 11; No. 2 in F major,
Op. 22; No. 3 in E-flat
minor, Op. 30 Also
includes composer bios
and relevant articles
from the 1911 edition of
Grove's Dictionary of
Music and Musicians 2000+
pages
Please note,
customers using Macintosh
computers running macOS
Catalina (version 10.5)
have reported hardware
compatibility issues with
this product. If you
encounter these issues,
we recommend copying the
entire contents of the
disk to a contained
folder on a thumb drive
or other storage device
for use on your
Mac.
(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
Urtext. Composed
by Joachim Raff. Edited
by Severin Kolb and
Stefan Konig. This
edition: Urtext. Chamber
music; Folder. Edition
Breitkopf.
Orchestrally-conceived,
full of energetic vigor,
and at times
uncompromisingly modern:
The two captivating
quartets are now
available as Urtext
editions. Romantic
period. Set of parts. 88
pages. Breitkopf and
Haertel #EB 8939.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.EB-8939).
ISBN
9790004186084.
With
his first String Quartet
in D minor, op. 77,
composed in 1855, the
native Swiss composer
Joachim Raff bid a
brilliant farewell to
Weimar. He had been there
as Franz Liszt's
assistant since 1850 and
had made a name for
himself in the city's art
scene - now he embarked
on new paths. He composed
his second Quartet in A
major, op. 90, already in
1857 in Wiesbaden, the
spa town that was to
become his home for 21
years. The two quartets
are unequivocal works:
orchestrally-conceived,
full of energetic vigor,
and at times
uncompromisingly modern.
They confidently continue
the Beethoven tradition
and attest at the same
time to Raff's intensive
confrontation with
Richard Wagner's music
during the Weimar years.
In his chamber music, the
composer wanted to
achieve progress in an
inherently historical way
and to ground the
individual substance in
existing forms, as he
told the Viennese
violinist Josef
Hellmesberger, who
launched opus 77. The
quartets, first published
in 1860/62, found
illustrious interpreters,
among them, the Muller
brothers' renowned
ensemble, to which opus
90 was also dedicated,
and Joseph Joachim.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.
First Quartet Quatuor à cordes: 2 violons, alto, violoncelle [Conducteur et Parties séparées] Subito Music
String Quartet SKU: SU.27040400 For String Quartet. Composed by Gr...(+)
String Quartet
SKU:
SU.27040400
For
String Quartet.
Composed by Gregory J.
Hutter. Chamber Music,
String
Trio/Quartet/Quintet.
Score & Parts. Subito
Music Corporation
#27040400. Published by
Subito Music Corporation
(SU.27040400).
The First
Quartet is set in two
segued movements. The
first is a Passacaglia
based on a 12-tone row in
which the pitches are
arranged to explore its
tonal possibilities,
which in this case led to
a subtle emphasis of the
key of e minor. The
second movement, Elegia,
is entirely tonal, in
which the chromatic
intensity of the
Passacaglia finally
yields to a pan-diatonic
e minor. The main
three-note motive of this
movement is derived from
the theme from the first
movement.String Quartet
Duration: 14' Composed:
1992 Published by: Hutter
Music.
String Quartet (2vl,va,vc) SKU: BR.PB-5622-07 Urtext. Composed by ...(+)
String Quartet
(2vl,va,vc)
SKU:
BR.PB-5622-07
Urtext. Composed
by Joachim Raff. Edited
by Severin Kolb and
Stefan Konig. Chamber
music; Softbound.
Partitur-Bibliothek
(Score Library).
With
his first String Quartet
in D minor, op. 77,
composed in 1855, the
native Swiss composer
Joachim Raff (1822-1882)
bid a brilliant farewell
to Weimar.
Romantic
period. Study Score. 176
pages. Breitkopf and
Haertel #PB 5622-07.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.PB-5622-07).
ISBN
9790004215197. 6.5 x 9
inches.
With his
first String Quartet in D
minor, op. 77, composed
in 1855, the native Swiss
composer Joachim Raff bid
a brilliant farewell to
Weimar. He had been there
as Franz Liszt's
assistant since 1850 and
had made a name for
himself in the city's art
scene - now he embarked
on new paths. He composed
his second Quartet in A
major, op. 90, already in
1857 in Wiesbaden, the
spa town that was to
become his home for 21
years. The two quartets
are unequivocal works:
orchestrally-conceived,
full of energetic vigor,
and at times
uncompromisingly modern.
They confidently continue
the Beethoven tradition
and attest at the same
time to Raff's intensive
confrontation with
Richard Wagner's music
during the Weimar years.
In his chamber music, the
composer wanted to
achieve progress in an
inherently historical way
and to ground the
individual substance in
existing forms, as he
told the Viennese
violinist Josef
Hellmesberger, who
launched opus 77. The
quartets, first published
in 1860/62, found
illustrious interpreters,
among them, the Muller
brothers' renowned
ensemble, to which opus
90 was also dedicated,
and Joseph Joachim.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.
String Quartet SKU: HL.49047454 Score and Parts. Composed by Julia...(+)
String Quartet
SKU:
HL.49047454
Score
and Parts. Composed
by Julian Anderson.
String Ensemble. Chamber,
Classical. Softcover. 148
pages. Duration 1380
seconds. Schott Music
#ED13989. Published by
Schott Music
(HL.49047454).
UPC:
842819101086.
9.0x12.0x0.358
inches.
My 3rd
String Quartet is in six
contrasted movements.
Certain musical figures
recur across the work,
but there are few themes
as such. The main
emphasis is on contrast
of mood, texture,
harmony, pacing and
timing. Unlike many of my
works this quartet had no
extra-musical
inspiration, and in
principle should have no
subtitle. Certain
features already present
in my music became more
prominent in this new
work: modes (limited
collections of pitches)
have always helped me to
focus musical character,
but here a sense of key
note for each mode became
much more pronounced, as
did the difference
between modes for each
section of the work. A
sort of hybrid key-system
emerged (even with
equivalents of major and
minor) which is not
normal tonality, nor does
it aim to imitate it.
Unlike tonality this
key-system includes
noises, extended
performance techniques
and intervals outside
Western tuning as
available resources. What
I hope it does is to
focus the listening
experience onto different
musical areas, to
encourage a sense of both
modulation from one area
to another and to give
the music a sense of
goal. No conscious
knowledge of this is
needed when listening:
the music should
communicate directly on
its own. Here, then, is
this collection of six
musical colours, related
and unrelated, different
yet belonging together,
variable yet in a set
order. Hence the
subtitle, chosen both for
both its sound and its
sense: 'hana no hanataba'
meaning, in Japanese,
'bouquet of flowers'. A
brief description: 1)
Moderately fast. Short
droplets of sounds gather
increasing momentum. 2)
Very fast. Canons and
bells at different
speeds. 3) Very slow -
fast - very slow - very
fast - very slow. The
main slow movement and
its main scherzo. An
emphasis on non-tempered
tunings and on inhaling
and exhaling waves of
sound. The slow sections
feature florid melodic
writing. In the exuberant
scherzo competing duos
and trios create
imaginary folk music. 4)
Extremely fast/extremely
slow. Open strings and
harmonics fuse into a
single string instrument
- like a sort of large
resonating Medieval
tromba marina. 5) Very
fast. A variation on
movement 2). Variation,
Schoenberg told Cage, is
just a sort of repetition
'with some things changed
and others not.' 6) Slow
- Very Fast - Fast -
Slow. The opening calm
harmonies and florid
melodies evoke movement
3) in different music.
The fast part features
one overt theme: a
fanfare-like call to
attention which is
subject to extensive
development. There is
much use of non-Western
tuning. At its climax the
music freezes into a
frieze - a wall of sound
standing in front of the
audience with increasing
obstinacy and certainty
as the work grinds
towards its cadence.
String Quartet SKU: BR.PB-5622 Urtext. Composed by Joachim Raff. E...(+)
String Quartet
SKU:
BR.PB-5622
Urtext. Composed
by Joachim Raff. Edited
by Severin Kolb and
Stefan Konig. Chamber
music; Softbound.
Partitur-Bibliothek
(Score Library). Romantic
period. Study Score.
Breitkopf and Haertel #PB
5622. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.PB-5622).
ISBN
9790004215197. 6.5 x 9
inches.
With his
first String Quartet in D
minor, op. 77, composed
in 1855, the native Swiss
composer Joachim Raff bid
a brilliant farewell to
Weimar. He had been there
as Franz Liszt's
assistant since 1850 and
had made a name for
himself in the city's art
scene - now he embarked
on new paths. He composed
his second Quartet in A
major, op. 90, already in
1857 in Wiesbaden, the
spa town that was to
become his home for 21
years. The two quartets
are unequivocal works:
orchestrally-conceived,
full of energetic vigor,
and at times
uncompromisingly modern.
They confidently continue
the Beethoven tradition
and attest at the same
time to Raff's intensive
confrontation with
Richard Wagner's music
during the Weimar years.
In his chamber music, the
composer wanted to
achieve progress in an
inherently historical way
and to ground the
individual substance in
existing forms, as he
told the Viennese
violinist Josef
Hellmesberger, who
launched opus 77. The
quartets, first published
in 1860/62, found
illustrious interpreters,
among them, the Muller
brothers' renowned
ensemble, to which opus
90 was also dedicated,
and Joseph Joachim.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.