Spaur Mass. Composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791). Edited by Be...(+)
Spaur Mass.
Composed by Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart
(1756-1791). Edited by
Bernhard Janz. Arranged
by Volker Blumenthaler.
This edition: urtext.
Stuttgart Urtext Edition:
Mozart. German title:
Missa In C Kv 258
(Spaur-Messe) Rev.2003.
Sacred vocal music,
Masses, Latin.
Orchestral Parts.
Composed circa 1775-1777.
KV 258. Duration 20
minutes. Carus Verlag #CV
40.627/19. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.4062719).
Commedia in due atti
(comedy in two acts).
Composed by Gioachino
Rossini. Edited by
Patricia B. Brauner. This
edition: Edition of
selected works, Urtext
edition. Linen. Works of
Gioachino Rossini, Volume
2. Edition of selected
works, Score.
Baerenreiter Verlag
#BA10506_01. Published by
Baerenreiter Verlag
(BA.BA10506-01).
ISBN
9790006552009. 33 x 26 cm
inches. Text Language:
Italian. Text: Sterbini,
Cesare.
Barenreiter
's publication of a new
volume of theWorks of
Gioachino Rossini, in
collaboration with the
Center for Italian Opera
Studies at the University
of Chicago, makes
available an edition of
the operaIl barbiere di
Sivigliawhich meets
modern demands. The
editors have recently
identified numerous
carelessly edited places
in the last critical
edition by referring to
additional sources. The
greatest changes relate
to the overture; for the
new edition, no fewer
than twenty different
autograph manuscripts
have been consulted.
A detailed appendix
containing alternative
vocal parts, advice on
ornamentation and
compositions by Rossini
significant in the
performance history of
the opera complete the
volume.
A
420-page Critical
Commentary is published
separately. With this, a
critical edition is now
available to
interpreters, enabling
them to perform Rossini's
,,Barber of Sevillewith
the greatest possible
confidence in the
accuracy of the musical
material. The performance
material is available on
hire, and a vocal score
will be published at the
end of 2009.
Through 1829 Rossini was
an extraordinarily
prolific composer of
operas, comic, serious,
and semiserious, in
Italian and French, as
well as of a great deal
of vocal and instrumental
music. He composed sacred
music, vocal treatises,
cantatas. Then, for many
different reasons, he
wrote very little music
for more than twentyfive
years, if we except some
songs and the ' Stabat
Mater' . Only after he
left Italy definitively
for Paris in 1855 did he
find his voice again.
Between 1857 and
1868 a fresh group of
masterpieces issued from
his pen, the so-called '
Peches de vieillesse'
(Sins of Old Age),
including chamber music,
songs, and the 'Petite
Messe Solennelle'.
Philip Gossett,
General Editor of Works
of Gioachino Rossini, is
the Robert W. Reneker
Distinguished Service
Professor at The
University of Chicago and
a professordi chiara
famaat the University of
RomeLa Sapienza. He is
also general editor of
The Works of Giuseppe
Verdi.
Barenreiter in
cooperation with the
Center for Italian Opera
Studies at The University
of Chicago will publish
ten volumes in the series
Works of Gioachino
Rossini, in critical
editions, during the
period 2007-2011. These
are all volumes that were
not issued in theEdizione
critica delle opere di
Gioachino Rossini.
About
Barenreiter
Urtext
What can I
expect from a Barenreiter
Urtext
edition?<
/p>
MUSICOLOGICA
LLY SOUND - A
reliable musical text
based on all available
sources - A
description of the
sources -
Information on the
genesis and history of
the work - Valuable
notes on performance
practice - Includes
an introduction with
critical commentary
explaining source
discrepancies and
editorial decisions
... AND
PRACTICAL -
Page-turns, fold-out
pages, and cues where you
need them - A
well-presented layout and
a user-friendly
format - Excellent
print quality -
Superior paper and
binding
Composed
by Robert Schumann.
Edited by Hansjörg
Ewert. Set of Orchestra
Parts. Composed 1852. Op.
147. Duration 40 minutes.
Carus Verlag #4068719.
Published by Carus Verlag
(CA.4068719).
ISBN
9790007311384. Key: C
minor. Latin.
A
mass setting by Robert
Schumann? This is still
likely to cause surprise
among audiences â
after all, Schumann is
not generally viewed as a
sacred composer. Indeed,
his little-known late
work, the Missa sacra,
Op. 147, is a discovery
not just for listeners
but often for the
performers themselves.
The mass combines an
acute fascination with
sacred liturgy typical of
Schumannâs time with
the pragmatism of its
intended use by a local
choral society. The
composer employs his
considerable skills to
create a captivating and
varied score that is
almost ethereal in the
Kyrie, leading to
passages of an intimate
and lyrical piano that
alternate with fortissimo
for words of praise,
while always displaying
the utmost sensitivity
and a delight in
dissonance. The composer
declared his setting to
be âfashioned with
great loveâ. The
demanding orchestral mass
can be realized with
limited means. The solo
parts can be filled from
the choir. The work,
which the composer
himself did not have
published, is here
reissued on the basis of
Schumannâs partial
autograph score.
Carus has also
produced an arrangement
of the work for choir and
organ, enabling
performances without
orchestra in smaller
venues (Carus
40.687/45).
.
Score and parts available
separately - see item
CA.4068700.
Composed
by Robert Schumann.
Edited by Hansjörg
Ewert. Choral Score.
Composed 1852. Op. 147.
Duration 40 minutes.
Carus Verlag #4068706.
Published by Carus Verlag
(CA.4068706).
ISBN
9790007239725. Key: C
minor. Latin.
A
mass setting by Robert
Schumann? This is still
likely to cause surprise
among audiences â
after all, Schumann is
not generally viewed as a
sacred composer. Indeed,
his little-known late
work, the Missa sacra,
Op. 147, is a discovery
not just for listeners
but often for the
performers themselves.
The mass combines an
acute fascination with
sacred liturgy typical of
Schumannâs time with
the pragmatism of its
intended use by a local
choral society. The
composer employs his
considerable skills to
create a captivating and
varied score that is
almost ethereal in the
Kyrie, leading to
passages of an intimate
and lyrical piano that
alternate with fortissimo
for words of praise,
while always displaying
the utmost sensitivity
and a delight in
dissonance. The composer
declared his setting to
be âfashioned with
great loveâ. The
demanding orchestral mass
can be realized with
limited means. The solo
parts can be filled from
the choir. The work,
which the composer
himself did not have
published, is here
reissued on the basis of
Schumannâs partial
autograph score.
Carus has also
produced an arrangement
of the work for choir and
organ, enabling
performances without
orchestra in smaller
venues (Carus
40.687/45).
.
Score available
separately - see item
CA.4068700.
Composed
by Robert Schumann.
Edited by Hansjörg
Ewert. Set of Orchestra
Parts. Composed 1852. Op.
147. Duration 40 minutes.
Carus Verlag #4068709.
Published by Carus Verlag
(CA.4068709).
ISBN
9790007311322. Key: C
minor. Latin.
A
mass setting by Robert
Schumann? This is still
likely to cause surprise
among audiences â
after all, Schumann is
not generally viewed as a
sacred composer. Indeed,
his little-known late
work, the Missa sacra,
Op. 147, is a discovery
not just for listeners
but often for the
performers themselves.
The mass combines an
acute fascination with
sacred liturgy typical of
Schumannâs time with
the pragmatism of its
intended use by a local
choral society. The
composer employs his
considerable skills to
create a captivating and
varied score that is
almost ethereal in the
Kyrie, leading to
passages of an intimate
and lyrical piano that
alternate with fortissimo
for words of praise,
while always displaying
the utmost sensitivity
and a delight in
dissonance. The composer
declared his setting to
be âfashioned with
great loveâ. The
demanding orchestral mass
can be realized with
limited means. The solo
parts can be filled from
the choir. The work,
which the composer
himself did not have
published, is here
reissued on the basis of
Schumannâs partial
autograph score.
Carus has also
produced an arrangement
of the work for choir and
organ, enabling
performances without
orchestra in smaller
venues (Carus
40.687/45).
.
Score and parts available
separately - see item
CA.4068700.
Composed
by Robert Schumann.
Edited by Hansjörg
Ewert. Carus digital:
Extra digital products.
Full Score. Composed
1852. Op. 147. Duration
40 minutes. Carus Verlag
#4068700. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.4068700).
ISBN
9790007239701. Key: C
minor. Latin.
A
mass setting by Robert
Schumann? This is still
likely to cause surprise
among audiences â??
after all, Schumann is
not generally viewed as a
sacred composer. Indeed,
his little-known late
work, the Missa sacra,
Op. 147, is a discovery
not just for listeners
but often for the
performers themselves.
The mass combines an
acute fascination with
sacred liturgy typical of
Schumannâ??s time with
the pragmatism of its
intended use by a local
choral society. The
composer employs his
considerable skills to
create a captivating and
varied score that is
almost ethereal in the
Kyrie, leading to
passages of an intimate
and lyrical piano that
alternate with fortissimo
for words of praise,
while always displaying
the utmost sensitivity
and a delight in
dissonance. The composer
declared his setting to
be â??fashioned with
great loveâ?. The
demanding orchestral mass
can be realized with
limited means. The solo
parts can be filled from
the choir. The work,
which the composer
himself did not have
published, is here
reissued on the basis of
Schumannâ??s partial
autograph score.
Carus has also
produced an arrangement
of the work for choir and
organ, enabling
performances without
orchestra in smaller
venues (Carus
40.687/45).
Missa in honorem Sanctae Ursulae Soli, choeur mixte et accompagnement satb (soli), SATB (chœur), Orchestre [Set de Parties séparées] Carus Verlag
Chiemsee-Messe. Composed by Michael Haydn (1737-1806). Edited by Armin Ki...(+)
Chiemsee-Messe.
Composed by Michael Haydn
(1737-1806). Edited by
Armin Kircher. This
edition: urtext.
Stuttgart Urtext Edition:
Johann Michael Haydn.
German title: Missa Stae
Ursulae/Chiemsee MH 546.
Latin Masses. Complete
orchestral parts.
Composed 1793. MH 546.
Duration 40 minutes.
Published by Carus Verlag
(CA.5454619).
Composed
by Robert Schumann.
Edited by Hansjörg
Ewert. Vocal score.
Composed 1852. Op. 147.
Duration 40 minutes.
Carus Verlag #4068703.
Published by Carus Verlag
(CA.4068703).
ISBN
9790007239718. Key: C
minor. Latin.
A
mass setting by Robert
Schumann? This is still
likely to cause surprise
among audiences
ââ¬â after
all, Schumann is not
generally viewed as a
sacred composer. Indeed,
his little-known late
work, the Missa sacra,
Op. 147, is a discovery
not just for listeners
but often for the
performers themselves.
The mass combines an
acute fascination with
sacred liturgy typical of
Schumannââ¬â¢s
time with the pragmatism
of its intended use by a
local choral society. The
composer employs his
considerable skills to
create a captivating and
varied score that is
almost ethereal in the
Kyrie, leading to
passages of an intimate
and lyrical piano that
alternate with fortissimo
for words of praise,
while always displaying
the utmost sensitivity
and a delight in
dissonance. The composer
declared his setting to
be
ââ¬Åfashioned
with great
loveââ¬Â.
The demanding
orchestral mass can be
realized with limited
means. The solo parts can
be filled from the choir.
The work, which the
composer himself did not
have published, is here
reissued on the basis of
Schumannââ¬â¢s
partial autograph score.
Carus has also
produced an arrangement
of the work for choir and
organ, enabling
performances without
orchestra in smaller
venues (Carus
40.687/45).
Missa Divi Xaverii ZWV 12 Soli, choeur mixte et accompagnement Soli, chœur mixte et orchestre [Conducteur] - Avancé Barenreiter
Solo soprano voice, solo alto voice, solo tenor voice, solo bass voice, Mixed ch...(+)
Solo soprano voice, solo
alto voice, solo tenor
voice, solo bass voice,
Mixed choir-SATB,
orchestra (Soprano solo,
Alto solo, Tenor solo,
Bass solo, Mixed choir
(SATB), Orchestra) -
Level 5
SKU:
BA.BA09594
Composed
by Jan Dismas Zelenka.
Edited by Václav Luks.
This edition: urtext
edition. Paperback.
Barenreiter Urtext.
Score. ZWV 12.
Baerenreiter Verlag
#BA09594_00. Published by
Baerenreiter Verlag
(BA.BA09594).
ISBN
9790260107526. 31 x 24.3
cm inches. Text language:
Czech, English, German.
Preface: Stockigt, Janice
B. / Luks,
Václav.
The
â??Missa Divi
Xaveriiâ? ZWV 12, an
expansive and unusually
richly scored work, marks
a highlight in the uvre
of Jan Dismas Zelenka
(1679-1745). It was
composed in 1729 while he
was working at the
Dresden court.
The
principal source of this
first edition is the
damaged autograph score
which had long been kept
under lock and key.
Passages missing because
of its damaged condition
have been supplemented
using secondary sources
or reconstructed by
Václav Luks, clearly
marked as such in the
musical text.
The
first performance to use
the present new edition
took place in the summer
of 2014, when it was
performed at the Utrecht
Early Music Festival. A
CD recording by Collegium
1704, conducted by
Václav Luks, has been
released by the label
Accent (ACC
24301).
About
Barenreiter
Urtext
What can I
expect from a Barenreiter
Urtext
edition?<
/p>
MUSICOLOGICA
LLY SOUND - A
reliable musical text
based on all available
sources - A
description of the
sources -
Information on the
genesis and history of
the work - Valuable
notes on performance
practice - Includes
an introduction with
critical commentary
explaining source
discrepancies and
editorial decisions
... AND
PRACTICAL -
Page-turns, fold-out
pages, and cues where you
need them - A
well-presented layout and
a user-friendly
format - Excellent
print quality -
Superior paper and
binding
Solo and SS choir divisi (a cappella) - Early Intermediate SKU: MN.56-0031(+)
Solo and SS choir divisi
(a cappella) - Early
Intermediate
SKU:
MN.56-0031
Composed
by Howard Goodall. 21st
Century. Instrument
parts. Duration 4
minutes, 39 seconds.
MorningStar Music
Publishers #56-0031.
Published by MorningStar
Music Publishers
(MN.56-0031).
Written for
the Enchanted Voices CD,
this is one of many
settings of texts either
from the Beatitudes (or
springing from them)
available from this
composer. For Solo and SS
divisi, a cappella, the
music has a light,
ethereal feeling.
ââ¬ÅBeatiââ
¬Â can be taken as
a sort of
ââ¬ÅBlessed are
theyââ¬Â prefix
for the movements which
are not direct quotes
from the Beatitudes. This
movement is a unison,
chant-like setting of the
Latin texts for Genesis
20:13 (ââ¬ÅThou
shalt do me this
kindnessââ¬Â¦Ã
â¬Â) and Numbers
11:17 (ââ¬ÅAnd
I will take of thy
spiritââ¬Â).
The soloist begins and
sometimes takes over from
the choral voices. Mostly
unison except for about
ten measures (out of the
69) in two-part texture
and four measures in
three parts. Duration
4:39
Composed
by Wolfgang Amadeus
Mozart. Arranged by Paul
Horn. This edition:
urtext. Stuttgart Urtext
Edition: Mozart. German
title: Missa Brevis In D
Kv 194 Rev.2000.
Innovative practice aids,
Sacred vocal music,
Masses, Latin, Missa
brevis in Latin. Set of
Orchestra Parts. Composed
1774. KV 194. Duration 18
minutes. Carus Verlag #CV
40.625/19. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.4062519).
ISBN
9790007138097. Key: D
major. Language:
Latin.
During the
summer of 1774 Mozart
wrote two Masses within a
few weeks: the Missa
brevis in F major, K.
192, and the Missa brevis
in D major, K. 194. A
feature common to both
compositions as well as
to the Dixit et
Magnificat K. 193,
written at about the same
time, and the Trinitias
Mass K. 167 of the
previous year, is a more
or less strongly evident
tendency towards
contrapuntal writing.
However, while the Dixit
et Magnificat and the
Trinitas Mass approach
the late-baroque style,
in these two brevis
Masses Mozart sought to
combine traditional
polyphonic techniques
with a more modern
musical language. This
work is now available in
carus music, the choir
app! Score and parts
available separately -
see item CA.4062500.
Dialogus von der Geburt Christi Soli, choeur mixte et accompagnement satb (soli), SATB (chœur), Orchestre [Conducteur] Carus Verlag
(Weihnachtsoratorium in drei Teilen). By Reinhard Keiser (1674-1739). Edited by ...(+)
(Weihnachtsoratorium in
drei Teilen). By Reinhard
Keiser (1674-1739).
Edited by Christine
Blanken. For Soli SATB,
SSAATTBB Choir, 3
Contrabassons, Timpani, 3
Oboes, 3 Bassoon, 2
Violin, Viola, Basso
Continuo. This edition:
paperbound. Full score
available separately -
see item CA.1038600.
Oratorios; Use during
church year: Christmas.
Piano/Vocal score.
Language: German. 48
pages. Duration 40 min.
Published by Carus Verlag
Cantata
for the 13th Sunday after
Trinity. Composed by
Johann Sebastian Bach.
Edited by Frieder Rempp.
Arranged by Paul Horn.
This edition: urtext.
Stuttgart Urtext Edition:
Bach vocal. Basso
continuo. Sacred vocal
music, Cantatas, Whitsun.
Single Part, basso
continuo. Composed 1725.
BWV 164. 12 pages.
Duration 17 minutes.
Carus Verlag #CV
31.164/14. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3116414).
ISBN
9790007209056. Text
language:
German/English.
Thi
s six-movement cantata
was performed for the
first time on 26 August
1725 in Leipzig. The text
was written by Bach's
Weimar cantata poet
Salomon Franck and had
been published earlier in
1715 in his collection
Evangelisches
Andachts-Opffer. Here,
Bach bases his work
around the form of the
Weimar cantatas which
take their texts from
Franck's printed
collection (BWV 132, 152,
161-163, 165): movements
1-5 are performed by
vocal soloists, whilst
only the final chorus is
given to the chorus. The
key concepts of the text
are Barmherzigkeit
[compassion], Erbarmen
[mercy] and wahre
Christenliebe [true
Christian love]; the
chamber music arrangement
of the cantata
corresponds with this.
The two arias for tenor
and alto, and the duet
for soprano and bass do
not contain da capo
sections, but repeat the
entire text in a
condensed form. The
instruments do not
contrast as a rule, but
are treated as a string
group (movements 1, 4),
duetting (movement 3),
and as full unison
(movement 5). What is
remarkable in all three
movements is the thematic
linking of the
instrumental ritornello
parts with the vocal
parts through which Bach
achieves a kind of unity
of form. Score and part
available separately -
see item CA.3116400.
Cantata
for the 13th Sunday after
Trinity. Composed by
Johann Sebastian Bach.
Edited by Frieder Rempp.
Arranged by Paul Horn.
This edition: urtext.
Stuttgart Urtext Edition:
Bach vocal. Violin 2.
Sacred vocal music,
Cantatas, Whitsun. Single
Part, Violin 2. Composed
1725. BWV 164. 8 pages.
Duration 17 minutes.
Carus Verlag #CV
31.164/12. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3116412).
ISBN
9790007209032. Text
language:
German/English.
Thi
s six-movement cantata
was performed for the
first time on 26 August
1725 in Leipzig. The text
was written by Bach's
Weimar cantata poet
Salomon Franck and had
been published earlier in
1715 in his collection
Evangelisches
Andachts-Opffer. Here,
Bach bases his work
around the form of the
Weimar cantatas which
take their texts from
Franck's printed
collection (BWV 132, 152,
161-163, 165): movements
1-5 are performed by
vocal soloists, whilst
only the final chorus is
given to the chorus. The
key concepts of the text
are Barmherzigkeit
[compassion], Erbarmen
[mercy] and wahre
Christenliebe [true
Christian love]; the
chamber music arrangement
of the cantata
corresponds with this.
The two arias for tenor
and alto, and the duet
for soprano and bass do
not contain da capo
sections, but repeat the
entire text in a
condensed form. The
instruments do not
contrast as a rule, but
are treated as a string
group (movements 1, 4),
duetting (movement 3),
and as full unison
(movement 5). What is
remarkable in all three
movements is the thematic
linking of the
instrumental ritornello
parts with the vocal
parts through which Bach
achieves a kind of unity
of form. Score and part
available separately -
see item CA.3116400.
Cantata
for the 13th Sunday after
Trinity. Composed by
Johann Sebastian Bach.
Edited by Frieder Rempp.
Arranged by Paul Horn.
This edition: urtext.
Stuttgart Urtext Edition:
Bach vocal. Viola. Sacred
vocal music, Cantatas,
Whitsun. Single Part,
Viola. Composed 1725. BWV
164. 4 pages. Duration 17
minutes. Carus Verlag #CV
31.164/13. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3116413).
ISBN
9790007209049. Text
language:
German/English.
Thi
s six-movement cantata
was performed for the
first time on 26 August
1725 in Leipzig. The text
was written by Bach's
Weimar cantata poet
Salomon Franck and had
been published earlier in
1715 in his collection
Evangelisches
Andachts-Opffer. Here,
Bach bases his work
around the form of the
Weimar cantatas which
take their texts from
Franck's printed
collection (BWV 132, 152,
161-163, 165): movements
1-5 are performed by
vocal soloists, whilst
only the final chorus is
given to the chorus. The
key concepts of the text
are Barmherzigkeit
[compassion], Erbarmen
[mercy] and wahre
Christenliebe [true
Christian love]; the
chamber music arrangement
of the cantata
corresponds with this.
The two arias for tenor
and alto, and the duet
for soprano and bass do
not contain da capo
sections, but repeat the
entire text in a
condensed form. The
instruments do not
contrast as a rule, but
are treated as a string
group (movements 1, 4),
duetting (movement 3),
and as full unison
(movement 5). What is
remarkable in all three
movements is the thematic
linking of the
instrumental ritornello
parts with the vocal
parts through which Bach
achieves a kind of unity
of form. Score and part
available separately -
see item CA.3116400.
Cantata
for the 13th Sunday after
Trinity. Composed by
Johann Sebastian Bach.
Edited by Frieder Rempp.
Arranged by Paul Horn.
This edition: urtext.
Stuttgart Urtext Edition:
Bach vocal. Violin 1.
Sacred vocal music,
Cantatas, Whitsun. Single
Part, Violin 1. Composed
1725. BWV 164. 8 pages.
Duration 17 minutes.
Carus Verlag #CV
31.164/11. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3116411).
ISBN
9790007209025. Text
language:
German/English.
Thi
s six-movement cantata
was performed for the
first time on 26 August
1725 in Leipzig. The text
was written by Bach's
Weimar cantata poet
Salomon Franck and had
been published earlier in
1715 in his collection
Evangelisches
Andachts-Opffer. Here,
Bach bases his work
around the form of the
Weimar cantatas which
take their texts from
Franck's printed
collection (BWV 132, 152,
161-163, 165): movements
1-5 are performed by
vocal soloists, whilst
only the final chorus is
given to the chorus. The
key concepts of the text
are Barmherzigkeit
[compassion], Erbarmen
[mercy] and wahre
Christenliebe [true
Christian love]; the
chamber music arrangement
of the cantata
corresponds with this.
The two arias for tenor
and alto, and the duet
for soprano and bass do
not contain da capo
sections, but repeat the
entire text in a
condensed form. The
instruments do not
contrast as a rule, but
are treated as a string
group (movements 1, 4),
duetting (movement 3),
and as full unison
(movement 5). What is
remarkable in all three
movements is the thematic
linking of the
instrumental ritornello
parts with the vocal
parts through which Bach
achieves a kind of unity
of form. Score and part
available separately -
see item CA.3116400.
Mass in C major Soli, choeur mixte et accompagnement [Conducteur d'étude / Miniature] Carus Verlag
Spaur-Messe. Composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791). Edited by B...(+)
Spaur-Messe.
Composed by Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart
(1756-1791). Edited by
Bernhard Janz. Arranged
by Volker Blumenthaler.
This edition: urtext.
Stuttgart Urtext Edition:
Mozart. German title:
Missa in C KV 258
(Spaur-Messe) rev.2003.
Latin Masses. Study
score. Composed circa
1775-1777. KV 258. 64
pages. Duration 20
minutes. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.4062707).
Soloists, Mixed choir, Orchestra SKU: BA.BA05576 Composed by Franz Schube...(+)
Soloists, Mixed choir,
Orchestra
SKU:
BA.BA05576
Composed
by Franz Schubert. Edited
by Rudolf Faber. This
edition: urtext edition.
Paperback. Score.
Baerenreiter Verlag
#BA05576. Published by
Baerenreiter Verlag
(BA.BA05576).
ISBN
9790006575954. 31 x 24.3
cm inches. Key: E-flat
major. Text Language:
Latin.
We know
relatively little about
the genesis of
Schubertâ??s Mass in
E-flat major (D 950)
which he completed in
1828, a few months before
his death. The work was
not performed during his
lifetime and we can only
speculate what might have
caused the composer to
write this Missa
solemnis.
In the
preface to this volume of
the New Schubert Edition,
editor Rudolf Faber
assembles all documented
facts. Furthermore, he
focuses on the accents,
which are such a
characteristic element of
Schubertâ??s autograph
scores, and explains how
Schubert used them in a
very differentiated
manner, in particular in
the Mass in E-flat major.
In order to do justice to
these subtle differences,
the New Schubert Edition
has introduced a new
symbol: an accent which
is flexible with regard
to its length and which
makes it possible to
visualize Schubertâ??s
sophisticated employment
of emphasis and
accentuation.
The
work is scored for large
orchestra (without
flutes), chorus, and one
soprano as well as two
tenors as soloists. In
Schubertâ??s autograph
the organ is not
explicitly called for,
but Ferdinand Schubert
added an organ part for
the posthumous premiere
on 4 October 1829 at the
Dreifaltigkeitskirche of
Vienna
Alservorstadt.
About
Barenreiter
Urtext
What can I
expect from a Barenreiter
Urtext
edition?<
/p>
MUSICOLOGICA
LLY SOUND - A
reliable musical text
based on all available
sources - A
description of the
sources -
Information on the
genesis and history of
the work - Valuable
notes on performance
practice - Includes
an introduction with
critical commentary
explaining source
discrepancies and
editorial decisions
... AND
PRACTICAL -
Page-turns, fold-out
pages, and cues where you
need them - A
well-presented layout and
a user-friendly
format - Excellent
print quality -
Superior paper and
binding
Soloists, Mixed choir, Orchestra SKU: BA.BA10726-01 Oratorio in three ...(+)
Soloists, Mixed choir,
Orchestra
SKU:
BA.BA10726-01
Oratorio in three
parts. Composed by
George Frideric Handel.
Edited by Michael
Pacholke. This edition:
Complete edition. Linen.
Complete edition, Score.
HWV 46. Baerenreiter
Verlag #BA10726-01.
Published by Baerenreiter
Verlag (BA.BA10726-01).
ISBN 9790006575596. 33
x 26 cm inches. Text
Language: Italian.
Preface: Pacholke,
Michael.
In the
brief half-year period
from August 14, 1736, to
January 27, 1737, Georg
Friedrich Handel achieved
an unprecedented level of
productivity in his opera
compositions, creating
three operas.
Additionally, in March
1737, he also composed a
largely new oratorio
titled â??Il trionfo del
Tempo e della
Verità â? (â??The
Triumph of Time and
Truthâ?) HWV 46b. The
libretto of this oratorio
closely corresponds to
that of the oratorio
â??La Bellezza ravveduta
nel trionfo del Tempo e
del Disingannoâ?
(â??Beauty Reconciled in
the Triumph of Time and
Enlightenmentâ?) HWV
46a written in 1707. With
â??La Bellezza
ravvedutaâ?, Handel
composed an allegorical
and particularly dramatic
oratorio right at the
beginning of his oratorio
compositions. In this
work, there is no chorus
inclined towards
reflection. Not only do
the four allegorical
figures, Bellezza
(Beauty), Piacere
(Pleasure), Tempo (Time),
and Disinganno
(Enlightenment), listen
to each other and react
to the ideas presented by
the others, but this
prevailing dramatic
principle of dispute is
also found in the
recitatives.
In
1737, when reworking the
oratorio material as
â??Il trionfo del Tempo
e della Verità â?,
Handel approached the
task pragmatically. He
needed a new non-dramatic
work to fulfill the
eveningâ??s program for
his audience at the
Covent Garden Theatre
during the fasting season
when theatrical
performances were
prohibited. Although he
had excellent Italian
vocal soloists, notorious
for their pronunciation
in Handelâ??s English
oratorios and who
naturally preferred
singing in Italian,
Handel found a solution.
It was evident to Handel
that, in response to the
ban on performances of
his Italian operas during
the fasting season of
1737, he should promptly
create a new oratorio in
the Italian language but
following the three-part
â??Englishâ? oratorio
form that he had
developed in
â??Estherâ? HWV 50b
in 1732. Unlike in Rome
in 1707, he had access to
a chorus in London in
1737, and the English
oratorio, with its
substantial choral
sections, a preference
for concert-like rather
than dramatic
composition, and frequent
inclusion of organ
concertos loosely related
to the narrative, was
already
established.
The
new volume of the HHA
includes the original
version of the 1737
premiere as well as all
the surviving early and
later versions (the
latter being exceptional
highlights) of individual
musical pieces from
â??Il trionfo del Tempo
e della
Verità â?.