Semele, HWV 58 Soli, choeur mixte et accompagnement Soli, chœur mixte et orchestre Barenreiter
Soloists, Mixed choir, Orchestra SKU: BA.BA04025-01 Composed by George Fr...(+)
Soloists, Mixed choir,
Orchestra
SKU:
BA.BA04025-01
Composed by George
Frideric Handel. Edited
by
Georg-Friedrich-Händel
-Gesellschaft e. V.
Risinger and Mark. This
edition: Complete
edition. Linen. Complete
edition, Score. HWV 58.
Baerenreiter Verlag
#BA04025-01. Published by
Baerenreiter Verlag
(BA.BA04025-01).
ISBN
9790006443222. 33 x 26 cm
inches. Text Language:
English.
Handelâ??
s â??Semeleâ?, which
premiered in February
1744, is based on an
adapted version of
William Congreveâ??s
opera libretto titled
â??The Story of
Semeleâ?, originally
published in 1706.
However, neither Handel
nor his librettist
referred to
â??Semeleâ? as an
opera or an oratorio,
which, according to the
understanding at the
time, would have required
a biblical and/or
Christian subject matter.
Contemporary audiences
also disagreed on the
genre. The problematic
classification as an
oratorio has persisted
into the present day,
likely due to the edition
labeled as such by
Chrysander. The â??Halle
Handel Editionâ? (HHA)
distances itself from
this classification and,
considering the available
sources, refrains from
assigning a genre
label.
Congreve
deviates from the
mythological source
multiple times in order
to create tensions among
the characters. The
desired marriage between
Semele and Athamas, whom
she does not love, is an
addition by Congreve to
provoke the envy of her
sister Ino, who desires
Athamas herself.
Therefore, Ino sees her
own advantage in
Semeleâ??s abduction by
Jupiter. While
Jupiterâ??s wife Juno
decides to destroy Semele
out of jealousy for his
relationship with her,
Jupiter brings Ino to his
palace to console Semele.
The vengeful Juno takes
advantage of Inoâ??s
presence and transforms
into her likeness,
persuading Semele to
carry out a plan that
later proves fatal. In
the end, Ino emerges as
the winner, as she is
able to convince their
father, Cadmus, to marry
her to Athamas. The
appearance of Apollo in
the final scene to
announce that Semeleâ??s
immortal son Bacchus was
saved from her ashes
provides little
consolation. However,
this twist allows the
drama to conclude with
exuberant joy and a
magnificent final chorus
after the tragic scenes
in the third act,
culminating in the death
of the
protagonist.
Hande
lâ??s autograph score
shows significant
deviations from and
numerous revisions of the
original version
premiered. All surviving
early versions, the
musical movements deleted
before the premiere, and
the version of the
December 1744, are given
in the appendix to the
HHA.
Cantata for
Whitsunday. Composed
by Johann Sebastian Bach.
Edited by Dietrich
Kilian. This edition:
urtext edition. Stapled.
Barenreiter Urtext. C
major version. Choral
score. BWV 172. 8 pages.
Baerenreiter Verlag
#BA10172_91. Published by
Baerenreiter Verlag
(BA.BA10172-91).
ISBN
9790006491513. 27 x 19 cm
inches. Key: C
major.
Erschallet,
ihr Lieder (BWV 172) is
one of those early Bach
cantatas which were often
revived at Leipzig. The
first performance of this
work was given in Weimar
1714. Although only a few
instrumental parts from
this performance are
extant, it may be assumed
that at that time the
cantata already had the
form familiar to us from
its first Leipzig
revival. It was given in
C major (church pitch,
corresponding to D major
in chamber pitch), and
the first number was
intended to be repeated
at the end of the
work.
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
Cantata
for the 2nd Sunday afer
Trinity / Reformation
Day. Composed by
Johann Sebastian Bach.
Edited by Ulrich
Leisinger. Arranged by
Paul Horn. This edition:
Paperbound. German title:
Die Himmel erzahlen die
Ehre Gottes. Sacred vocal
music, Cantatas, Psalms,
German. Study score.
Composed 1723. BWV 76. 72
pages. Duration 35
minutes. Carus Verlag #CV
31.076/07. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3107607).
ISBN
9790007044923. Key: C
major / a minor.
Language:
German/English.
The
cantata Die Himmel
erzahlen die Ehre Gottes
(The heavens are telling
of God in glory) BWV 76
by Johann Sebastian Bach
was written for the 2nd
Sunday after Trinity,
which fell on 6 June 1723
in the year it was first
performed. This ambitious
two-part work was the
second cantata which Bach
wrote after taking up the
position of Kantor of St.
Thomas's in Leipzig.
Bach's aim was evidently
to demonstrate a
particularly wide range
of musical forms in both
the arias and the
recitatives in this
cantata. The opening
chorus is based on verses
2 and 4 of Psalm 19, with
verse 4 structured as a
choral fugue. Both parts
of the cantata end with a
chorale movement with
different verses from the
Lutheran hymn Es woll uns
Gott genadig sein. The
text refers loosely to
the epistle reading from
the 1st letter of St
John, but deals more with
general thoughts about
the temptations of the
Christian which can be
overcome through love.
Bach also performed the
first part of the cantata
later with minor
revisions, but evidently
no alterations to the
text, on Reformation Day
in Leipzig. Score
available separately -
see item CA.3107600.
Oratorio. Composed
by Louis Spohr. Edited by
Dieter Zeh, Irene
Schallhorn. Awards /
Prizes: Deutscher
Musikeditionspreis Best
Edition. Awards / Prizes:
Deutscher
Musikeditionspreis Best
Edition. German title:
Die Letzten Dinge
(Oratorium). Sacred vocal
music, Oratorios. Set of
Orchestra Parts. Composed
1865-68. Op. 61. Duration
80 minutes. Carus Verlag
#CV 23.003/19. Published
by Carus Verlag
(CA.2300319).
ISBN
9790007133849. Language:
German/English.
In
honor of the 150th
anniversary of the death
of Louis Spohr, for the
first time Carus is
publishing a critical
edition of The Last
Judgment, the most
important of his four
oratorios. It was first
performed on Good Friday,
1826 in Kassel. It is
based on the
theologically most
significant portions of
the Revelations of John
in the New Testament,
whose visions of death
and eternity Spohr
vividly portrayed in
music. The work
represents an important
enrichment to the
repertoire of the
oratorio, especially
suitable for the end of
the church year. It is
captivating on account of
its masterful
instrumentation,
excellent use of
chromaticism, large-scale
solo recitatives and
accessible choral
passages filled with
heartfelt sensitivity on
the one hand, and
exciting drama on the
other. Score and parts
available separately -
see item CA.2300300.
Oratorio. Composed
by Louis Spohr. Edited by
Dieter Zeh, Irene
Schallhorn. Awards /
Prizes: Deutscher
Musikeditionspreis Best
Edition. Awards / Prizes:
Deutscher
Musikeditionspreis Best
Edition. German title:
Die Letzten Dinge
(Oratorium). Sacred vocal
music, Oratorios. Set of
Orchestra Parts. Op. 61.
244 pages. Duration 80
minutes. Carus Verlag #CV
23.003/09. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.2300309).
ISBN
9790007198589. Language:
German/English.
In
honor of the 150th
anniversary of the death
of Louis Spohr, for the
first time Carus is
publishing a critical
edition of The Last
Judgment, the most
important of his four
oratorios. It was first
performed on Good Friday,
1826 in Kassel. It is
based on the
theologically most
significant portions of
the Revelations of John
in the New Testament,
whose visions of death
and eternity Spohr
vividly portrayed in
music. The work
represents an important
enrichment to the
repertoire of the
oratorio, especially
suitable for the end of
the church year. It is
captivating on account of
its masterful
instrumentation,
excellent use of
chromaticism, large-scale
solo recitatives and
accessible choral
passages filled with
heartfelt sensitivity on
the one hand, and
exciting drama on the
other. Score and parts
available separately -
see item CA.2300300.
Composed by Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart. Edited by
Michael Ostrzyga. This
edition: urtext edition.
Paperback. New
Completion. Vocal Score.
Baerenreiter Verlag
#BA11310_90. Published by
Baerenreiter Verlag
(BA.BA11310-90).
ISBN
9790006569267. 27 x 19 cm
inches. Text Language:
Latin.
This
publication offers a
source-critical edition
of Mozartâ??s
fragmentary
â??Requiemâ? as well
as an alternative to the
traditional Sü�mayr
version. It makes it
possible to perform 1)
the fragment, identified
in print in both the
score and the parts, 2)
the authentic sections
left incomplete by
Mozart, now in a
stylistically appropriate
orchestration, and 3)
those sections missing
entirely in the fragment,
newly added in
Mozartâ??s idiom taking
into account historical
additions by Sü�mayr
and Eybler.
When
completing the fragment,
the editor drew on
comprehensive comparative
and analytical studies of
Mozartâ??s church style
and compositional
workmanship. The
influence of Handel and
Bach manifested in his
final years, particularly
in the â??Requiemâ?
fragment, is taken into
account in those sections
requiring completion or
fresh
composition.
At
two points readers may
choose between
alternative movements (or
sections), since
proceeding from
SüÃ?mayrâ??s
historical version, two
divergent options cannot
be weighed against each
other but each one may
well reflect Mozartâ??s
intentions: the
â??Lacrimosaâ? may
end with or without
â??Amenâ? fugue, and
the â??Sanctusâ? may
begin in the customary D
major or in D minor.
Above all, this makes it
possible to retain the
B-flat major
â??Hosannaâ? from
SüÃ?mayrâ??s
autograph, a movement
which, until now, has not
been appreciated as
compositionally
flawless.
â?¢
Scholarly-critical
edition of the
â??Requiemâ?
fragment â?¢ With
performance material for
presentation of 1) the
fragment, 2) a version
with completions of the
authentic Mozart sections
or 3) a full
completion consistent
with Mozartâ??s musical
idiom â?¢ Missing
sections were completed
by drawing from other
fragmentary sacred works
by Mozart â?¢ Added
or completed sections
incorporate influences
from Bach and Handel
already detectable in the
fragment â?¢
Alternative performance
options for the
â??Lacrimosaâ?,
â??Sanctusâ? and
â??Benedictusâ? â
?¢ Easy-to-play piano
reduction â?¢
Extensive foreword
(Ger/Eng) on the
workâ??s history,
reception and modern
completions, with
analytical stylistic
critique â?¢
Detailed Critical
Commentary (Eng), partly
available on the
Bärenreiter
website â?¢ Tried
and tested on many
occasions, e.g. at
Harvard University, the
Rheingau Music Festival,
the Monadnock Music
Festival (New Hampshire),
in Salt Lake City (Utah),
as well as in radio
broadcasts (NDR, SWR,
WDR) and CD recordings
with Concerto Köln,
Chorwerk Ruhr and Florian
Helgath (â??Le Disque
classique du jourâ?
from francemusique.fr and
three nominations for
Opus Klassik 2021 in the
categories
â??Ensembleâ?,
â??Choral Recordingâ?
and â??Editorial
Achievementâ?)
Cantata
for the 2nd Sunday afer
Trinity / Reformation
Day. Composed by
Johann Sebastian Bach.
Edited by Ulrich
Leisinger. Arranged by
Paul Horn. 1x 31.076/21
Oboe and Oboe d'amore, 1x
31.076/22 oboe 2, 1x
31.076/31 trumpet. German
title: Die Himmel
erzahlen die Ehre Gottes
5. Sacred vocal music,
Cantatas, Psalms, German.
Set of Orchestra Parts.
Composed 1723. BWV 76. 24
pages. Duration 35
minutes. Carus Verlag #CV
31.076/09. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3107609).
ISBN
9790007044930. Key: C
major / a minor.
Language:
German/English.
The
cantata Die Himmel
erzahlen die Ehre Gottes
(The heavens are telling
of God in glory) BWV 76
by Johann Sebastian Bach
was written for the 2nd
Sunday after Trinity,
which fell on 6 June 1723
in the year it was first
performed. This ambitious
two-part work was the
second cantata which Bach
wrote after taking up the
position of Kantor of St.
Thomas's in Leipzig.
Bach's aim was evidently
to demonstrate a
particularly wide range
of musical forms in both
the arias and the
recitatives in this
cantata. The opening
chorus is based on verses
2 and 4 of Psalm 19, with
verse 4 structured as a
choral fugue. Both parts
of the cantata end with a
chorale movement with
different verses from the
Lutheran hymn Es woll uns
Gott genadig sein. The
text refers loosely to
the epistle reading from
the 1st letter of St
John, but deals more with
general thoughts about
the temptations of the
Christian which can be
overcome through love.
Bach also performed the
first part of the cantata
later with minor
revisions, but evidently
no alterations to the
text, on Reformation Day
in Leipzig. Score and
parts available
separately - see item
CA.3107600.
Cantata
for the 2nd Sunday afer
Trinity / Reformation
Day. Composed by
Johann Sebastian Bach.
Edited by Ulrich
Leisinger. Arranged by
Paul Horn. German title:
Die Himmel erzahlen die
Ehre Gottes. Sacred vocal
music, Cantatas, Psalms,
German. Choral Score.
Composed 1723. BWV 76. 12
pages. Duration 35
minutes. Carus Verlag #CV
31.076/05. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3107605).
ISBN
9790007044916. Key: C
major / a minor.
Language:
German/English.
The
cantata Die Himmel
erzahlen die Ehre Gottes
(The heavens are telling
of God in glory) BWV 76
by Johann Sebastian Bach
was written for the 2nd
Sunday after Trinity,
which fell on 6 June 1723
in the year it was first
performed. This ambitious
two-part work was the
second cantata which Bach
wrote after taking up the
position of Kantor of St.
Thomas's in Leipzig.
Bach's aim was evidently
to demonstrate a
particularly wide range
of musical forms in both
the arias and the
recitatives in this
cantata. The opening
chorus is based on verses
2 and 4 of Psalm 19, with
verse 4 structured as a
choral fugue. Both parts
of the cantata end with a
chorale movement with
different verses from the
Lutheran hymn Es woll uns
Gott genadig sein. The
text refers loosely to
the epistle reading from
the 1st letter of St
John, but deals more with
general thoughts about
the temptations of the
Christian which can be
overcome through love.
Bach also performed the
first part of the cantata
later with minor
revisions, but evidently
no alterations to the
text, on Reformation Day
in Leipzig. Score
available separately -
see item CA.3107600.
Cantata
for the 2nd Sunday afer
Trinity / Reformation
Day. Composed by
Johann Sebastian Bach.
Edited by Ulrich
Leisinger. Arranged by
Paul Horn. German title:
Die Himmel erzahlen die
Ehre Gottes. Sacred vocal
music, Cantatas, Psalms,
German. Single Part,
Violin 1. Composed 1723.
BWV 76. 12 pages.
Duration 35 minutes.
Carus Verlag #CV
31.076/11. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3107611).
ISBN
9790007044947. Key: C
major / a minor.
Language:
German/English.
The
cantata Die Himmel
erzahlen die Ehre Gottes
(The heavens are telling
of God in glory) BWV 76
by Johann Sebastian Bach
was written for the 2nd
Sunday after Trinity,
which fell on 6 June 1723
in the year it was first
performed. This ambitious
two-part work was the
second cantata which Bach
wrote after taking up the
position of Kantor of St.
Thomas's in Leipzig.
Bach's aim was evidently
to demonstrate a
particularly wide range
of musical forms in both
the arias and the
recitatives in this
cantata. The opening
chorus is based on verses
2 and 4 of Psalm 19, with
verse 4 structured as a
choral fugue. Both parts
of the cantata end with a
chorale movement with
different verses from the
Lutheran hymn Es woll uns
Gott genadig sein. The
text refers loosely to
the epistle reading from
the 1st letter of St
John, but deals more with
general thoughts about
the temptations of the
Christian which can be
overcome through love.
Bach also performed the
first part of the cantata
later with minor
revisions, but evidently
no alterations to the
text, on Reformation Day
in Leipzig. Score and
part available separately
- see item
CA.3107600.
Cantata
for the 2nd Sunday afer
Trinity / Reformation
Day. Composed by
Johann Sebastian Bach.
Edited by Ulrich
Leisinger. Arranged by
Paul Horn. German title:
Die Himmel erzahlen die
Ehre Gottes. Sacred vocal
music, Cantatas, Psalms,
German. Single Part,
Violin 2. Composed 1723.
BWV 76. 8 pages. Duration
35 minutes. Carus Verlag
#CV 31.076/12. Published
by Carus Verlag
(CA.3107612).
ISBN
9790007044954. Key: C
major / a minor.
Language:
German/English.
The
cantata Die Himmel
erzahlen die Ehre Gottes
(The heavens are telling
of God in glory) BWV 76
by Johann Sebastian Bach
was written for the 2nd
Sunday after Trinity,
which fell on 6 June 1723
in the year it was first
performed. This ambitious
two-part work was the
second cantata which Bach
wrote after taking up the
position of Kantor of St.
Thomas's in Leipzig.
Bach's aim was evidently
to demonstrate a
particularly wide range
of musical forms in both
the arias and the
recitatives in this
cantata. The opening
chorus is based on verses
2 and 4 of Psalm 19, with
verse 4 structured as a
choral fugue. Both parts
of the cantata end with a
chorale movement with
different verses from the
Lutheran hymn Es woll uns
Gott genadig sein. The
text refers loosely to
the epistle reading from
the 1st letter of St
John, but deals more with
general thoughts about
the temptations of the
Christian which can be
overcome through love.
Bach also performed the
first part of the cantata
later with minor
revisions, but evidently
no alterations to the
text, on Reformation Day
in Leipzig. Score and
part available separately
- see item
CA.3107600.
Cantata
for the 2nd Sunday afer
Trinity / Reformation
Day. Composed by
Johann Sebastian Bach.
Edited by Ulrich
Leisinger. Arranged by
Paul Horn. German title:
Die Himmel erzahlen die
Ehre Gottes. Sacred vocal
music, Cantatas, Psalms,
German. Single Part,
Viola. Composed 1723. BWV
76. 8 pages. Duration 35
minutes. Carus Verlag #CV
31.076/13. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3107613).
ISBN
9790007044961. Key: C
major / a minor.
Language:
German/English.
The
cantata Die Himmel
erzahlen die Ehre Gottes
(The heavens are telling
of God in glory) BWV 76
by Johann Sebastian Bach
was written for the 2nd
Sunday after Trinity,
which fell on 6 June 1723
in the year it was first
performed. This ambitious
two-part work was the
second cantata which Bach
wrote after taking up the
position of Kantor of St.
Thomas's in Leipzig.
Bach's aim was evidently
to demonstrate a
particularly wide range
of musical forms in both
the arias and the
recitatives in this
cantata. The opening
chorus is based on verses
2 and 4 of Psalm 19, with
verse 4 structured as a
choral fugue. Both parts
of the cantata end with a
chorale movement with
different verses from the
Lutheran hymn Es woll uns
Gott genadig sein. The
text refers loosely to
the epistle reading from
the 1st letter of St
John, but deals more with
general thoughts about
the temptations of the
Christian which can be
overcome through love.
Bach also performed the
first part of the cantata
later with minor
revisions, but evidently
no alterations to the
text, on Reformation Day
in Leipzig. Score and
part available separately
- see item
CA.3107600.
Cantata
for the 2nd Sunday afer
Trinity / Reformation
Day. Composed by
Johann Sebastian Bach.
Edited by Ulrich
Leisinger. Arranged by
Paul Horn. German title:
Die Himmel erzahlen die
Ehre Gottes. Sacred vocal
music, Cantatas, Psalms,
German. Set of Orchestra
Parts. Composed 1723. BWV
76. Duration 35 minutes.
Carus Verlag #CV
31.076/19. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.3107619).
ISBN
9790007134082. Key: C
major / a minor.
Language:
German/English.
The
cantata Die Himmel
erzahlen die Ehre Gottes
(The heavens are telling
of God in glory) BWV 76
by Johann Sebastian Bach
was written for the 2nd
Sunday after Trinity,
which fell on 6 June 1723
in the year it was first
performed. This ambitious
two-part work was the
second cantata which Bach
wrote after taking up the
position of Kantor of St.
Thomas's in Leipzig.
Bach's aim was evidently
to demonstrate a
particularly wide range
of musical forms in both
the arias and the
recitatives in this
cantata. The opening
chorus is based on verses
2 and 4 of Psalm 19, with
verse 4 structured as a
choral fugue. Both parts
of the cantata end with a
chorale movement with
different verses from the
Lutheran hymn Es woll uns
Gott genadig sein. The
text refers loosely to
the epistle reading from
the 1st letter of St
John, but deals more with
general thoughts about
the temptations of the
Christian which can be
overcome through love.
Bach also performed the
first part of the cantata
later with minor
revisions, but evidently
no alterations to the
text, on Reformation Day
in Leipzig. Score and
parts available
separately - see item
CA.3107600.
Seven
sacred compositions.
Composed by George
Frideric Handel. Edited
by Gerald Hendrie. This
edition: complete
edition, urtext edition.
Linen. Halle Handel
Edition (HHA) Series III,
Volume 9. Complete
edition, Score. Duration
3 hours. Baerenreiter
Verlag #BA04051_00.
Published by Baerenreiter
Verlag (BA.BA04051).
ISBN 9790006443611. 33
x 26 cm inches. Text
Language: English,
German.
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
Requiem Soli, choeur mixte et accompagnement Soli, chœur mixte et piano [Vocal Score] Carus Verlag
Solo voices, SATB chorus, orchestra (2 Corni di bassetto, 2 Fg, 2 Tr, 3 Trb, Tim...(+)
Solo voices, SATB chorus,
orchestra (2 Corni di
bassetto, 2 Fg, 2 Tr, 3
Trb, Timp, 2 Vl, Va, Bc)
SKU: CA.5165203
Completed and edited
by Howard Arman.
Composed by Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart. Edited by
Howard Arman. Arranged by
Howard Arman. Vocal
score. KV 626. Duration
50 minutes. Carus Verlag
#5165203. Published by
Carus Verlag
(CA.5165203).
ISBN
9790007294243. Key: D
minor. Latin.
The
English conductor and
composer Howard Arman has
presented us with a
completed version of
Mozartâ??s Requiem.
â??Another one?â? you
might ask, since this
publication is only the
latest in a long line
reaching back to the
traditional Sü�mayr
version. Yet such is the
enormous power of
Mozartâ??s score that
the challenge and appeal
of completing it remain
undiminished. After two
decades of intensive
study, Howard Armanâ??s
additions to Mozartâ??s
great original show the
requisite care and
respect while
incorporating many new
insights.
Armanâ?
?s approach is
particularly fruitful.
Always aware of the
appropriate limits to
such re-creative work, he
orients himself towards
the typical
characteristics of
Mozartâ??s brilliant
composing style: The
masterly compositional
technique, the search for
innovative solutions to
every problem, and even
the terse treatment of
the text with extremely
suggestive harmonies. All
of this leads to a number
of new listening
experiences. In the Tuba
mirum, for example, we
enjoy a warm, cohesive
ensemble sound, supported
by the bassoons, which
depart from the bass
line. The Confutatis
presents a quite
different picture: Even
the basset horns are
drawn down into the
infernal depths. This
effect is reinforced by
the independence of the
trombones; rather than
simply following the
choral parts, the
instrumentâ??s unique
sound is given an
opportunity to shine.
Armanâ??s Lacrimosa
achieves a lively
Mozartian feel by
granting the voices
considerable freedom
rather than following a
rigid pattern. And he
concludes the movement
with a fugal Amen,
whereby the focus is not
so much on the
counterpoint itself, but
rather â?? in the spirit
of Mozart â?? on
creating a sense of drama
and illuminating the
theme in all its possible
facets. Mozartâ??s
fragment ends with the
Hostias, and so does
Armanâ??s completion.
For the four
following movements
(Sanctus to Communio) we
have nothing from Mozart,
and so here, where the
master is silent, Arman
finally returns to
Sü�mayr, the man who
was closest to Mozart at
the time of his death and
whose efforts to fill the
blank manuscripts still
garner our respect
today.
Armanâ??s
version has already
proven its practical
value. The premiere with
the Bavarian Radio Choir
was enthusiastically
received by audiences and
press alike â?? and
celebrated as offering a
scholarly, entirely fresh
perspective on
Mozartâ??s
masterpiece.
-
World premiere by the
Bavarian Radio Choir -
Enthusiastically received
by audience and
press.
Urtext der Neuen
Mozart-Ausgabe.
Composed by Johann
Sebastian Bach. Edited by
Werner Neumann. This
edition: complete
edition, urtext edition.
Linen. New Bach Edition
(NBA) I/36. Complete
edition, Score,
anthology. Baerenreiter
Verlag #BA05020_01.
Published by Baerenreiter
Verlag (BA.BA05020-01).
ISBN 9790006461813. 33
x 26 cm
inches.
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
Stabat Mater (Srnka, Kachlik) Soli, choeur mixte et accompagnement satb (soli), SATB (chœur), Clavier [Reduction] Barenreiter
Piano reduction by Antonin Dvorak. Composed by Antonin Dvorak (1841-1904). Edite...(+)
Piano reduction by
Antonin Dvorak. Composed
by Antonin Dvorak
(1841-1904). Edited by
Jan Kachlik / Miroslav
Srnka. This edition:
urtext edition.
Paperback. Barenreiter
Urtext. Version in 10
movements. Classical.
Vocal score. With
Language: Latin, Text
Language:
Czech/English/German.
Opus 58. Duration 1 hour,
27 minutes. Editio
Baerenreiter Praha
#H07920. Published by
Editio Baerenreiter Praha
By George Frideric Handel ; Donald Burrows (Editor). For Soprano, Tenor, Bass, S...(+)
By George Frideric Handel
; Donald Burrows
(Editor). For Soprano,
Tenor, Bass, SATB Choir,
Piano Accompaniment.
Baroque. Sheet Music. 168
pages. Published by
Novello and Co Ltd.
WithL'Etoil
e, Chabrier composed a
light-hearted opera which
has increasingly enjoyed
revivals in recent
years.
The plot
is introduced by King Ouf
I who offers his subjects
an execution every year
on his birthday.
Unfortunately the problem
now arises that no crime
has recently been
committed which might
serve as a reason for an
execution. Finally, he
finds a would-be victim
in the young Lazuli.
However, according to
predictions by the
astrologer Siroco,
Lazuli's fate is closely
linked to the king's own
life. The comic opera is
further bolstered by a
story of mistaken
identities which involves
a great deal of
diplomacy, a love story
and a large number of
refined, yet catchy
melodies. Chabrier was
a master of the sensitive
and complicated art of
musical comedy, a field
where he can be compared
in equal measure to
Offenbach, Rossini and
Mozart.
This vocal
score is based on the
full score edited by Hugh
Macdonald which is
published as part of the
seriesL'Opera
francais.
-
Authoritative Urtext
edition based on the
seriesL'Opera
francais - Original
French text with a German
singing translation -
Comprehensive foreword
(Ger/Eng/Fr)
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
Opera-ballet with one prologue and 3 acts. Composed by Jean-Philippe Rameau ...(+)
Opera-ballet with one
prologue and 3 acts.
Composed
by Jean-Philippe Rameau
(1683-1764). Edited by
Julien
Dubruque. This edition:
complete edition, urtext
edition. Cloth bound.
Jean-
Philippe Rameau. Opera
Omnia
(OOR) IV/12. Versions of
1746
and 1745. Complete
edition,
Score. RCT 59.
Baerenreiter
Verlag #BA08859-01.
Published
by Baerenreiter Verlag