Trumpet or Cornet and Piano - easy SKU: BT.DHP-1155652-401 Composed by Pa...(+)
Trumpet or Cornet and
Piano - easy
SKU:
BT.DHP-1155652-401
Composed by Pascal
Proust. De Haske Trumpet
Series. Book Only.
Composed 2015. 8 pages.
De Haske Publications
#DHP 1155652-401.
Published by De Haske
Publications
(BT.DHP-1155652-401).
ISBN 9789043147477.
English-German-French-Dut
ch.
The first grand
parade at Winter’s
end, led by the
trumpets...
The
composer Pascal Proust
has many years’
experience as a musician
and music teacher. His
output includes several
hundred compositions for
the most diverse
instrumentations. He
wrote Spring
Parade for trumpet
players at the level
ofapproximately one
year’s study and
paid special attention to
an easy-to-follow,
attractive musical style.
As a result, Spring
Parade is an ideal
performance or
competition work for
young
musicians.
De
eerste grote parade aan
het eind van de winter,
aangevoerd door de
trompetten...
De
componist Pascal Proust
kan bogen op een
jarenlange ervaring als
muzikant en muziekdocent.
Zijn oeuvre omvat
honderden composities
voor de meest diverse
instrumentaties. Hij
schreef Spring
Parade voor
trompettisten die
ongeveer een jaar
leshebben gehad, waarbij
hij speciaal aandacht
heeft besteed aan een
makkelijk te volgen,
aantrekkelijke
muziekstijl. Daardoor is
Spring Parade een
ideaal voordrachts- of
wedstrijdstuk voor jonge
muzikanten.
Die
erste große Parade am
Ende des Winters,
angeführt von den
Trompeten…
Der
Komponist Pascal Proust
kann aus seiner
langjährigen Erfahrung
als Musiker und
Musikpädagoge
schöpfen; sein Oeuvre
umfasst mehrere hundert
Kompositionen für
verschiedenste
Besetzungen. Er schrieb
Spring Parade
für Trompeter mit
ungefähreinem Jahr
Unterrichtserfahrung und
legte besonderes
Augenmerk auf einenleicht
verständlichen,
attraktiven musikalischen
Stil. Dadurch eignet sich
Spring Parade
ideal als Vortrags- und
Wettbewerbsstück
für junge
Musiker.
Premiè
re grande parade au
sortir de l’hiver,
jeunes trompettistes en
tête…
a due Trompette [Conducteur] Deutscher Verlag für Musik
Trumpet(s) solo SKU: BR.DV-32027 Trumpet Music of the 17th and 18th Ce...(+)
Trumpet(s) solo
SKU:
BR.DV-32027
Trumpet Music of the
17th and 18th
Centuries. Composed
by Kurt (Hrsg.) Janetzky.
Edited by Kurt Janetzky.
Solo instruments;
Softcover. Deutscher
Verlag. Z.T. mit Pauken
und B.c. Baroque period.
Score. 24 pages.
Deutscher Verlag fur
Musik #DV 32027.
Published by Deutscher
Verlag fur Musik
(BR.DV-32027).
ISBN
9790200425192. 9 x 12
inches.
Bicinia -
unaccompanied duos - have
been known to us from the
fifteenth century
onwards. So quite early
on it was customary tu
practise this type of
musical exercise, which
later, especially during
the Romantic period,
achieved great popularity
as the duo or duett.
Equal numbers of this
sort of instrumental duo
were composed for nearly
all wind and string
instruments. On the other
hand, only a small amount
of compositions for two
trumpets have come down
to us. In order to play
any music which
progresses beyond pure
fanfare on a natural
(valueless) trumpet, it
is necessary to make use
of the clarion register
(the top third of the
natural harmonic). And if
such a melody is to be
accompanied by a second
part, only the few
natural notes lying below
it are left, or else this
high register itself,
which calls for great
virtuosity on the part of
the trumpeter. As well as
this, we must remember
the fact that
trumpet-playing was only
allowed for the
trumpeters of a royal
court, army, staff, or
for the field-trumpeter
of a prince, plus a few
council, city, and church
musicians, who were bound
by strict guild and
corporation rules. Thus
in spite of the
preference for its
festive sound, the spread
and handing down of
trumpet music was almost
reduced to nothing under
these circumstances. As
well as this, pride of
place and profession
rivalry and envy amongst
musicians contributed in
large part. In England
the situation was
somewhat freer. Here
pretty little trumpet
duos originated,
including, amongst
others, those written by
Handel for his
master-trumpeter Valentin
Snow and the Royal
Sergeant-trumpeters of
the Shore family. An
especially happy
exception was the diocese
of Olmiitz. Here there
was a capable group of
musicians of the chapel
royal with the
brilliantly talented
group of trumpeters and
the field-trumpeter Pavel
Vajvanovsky, who also
composed himself. These
trumpeters in the service
of his prince-bishop
played many sacred and
secular pieces, all for
several instruments. It
was for them also that
Heinrich Ignaz Franz
Biber wrote the 12 double
trumpet sonatas we
present here. On the
other hand, the
representatives of the
authorities in Germany
ensured strict
observation of all edicts
and regulations. Even the
celebrated Bach-trumpeter
and towm-piper Gottfried
Reiche was never allowed
to be portrayed with a
proper trumpet due to the
priveleges of court and
field trumpeters. In
order to represent him as
one of the greatest
masters of his time and
art, however, the painter
placed an instrument
similar to a
corno-di-caccia in his
hand, together with a
sheet with a small piece
for virtuoso clarion.
When we try in spite of
these difficulties and
adverse circumstances to
gather a collection of
musically valuable and
characteristic examples
of popular pieces for two
trumpets from the
seventeenth and
eighteenth centuries, it
is in the first, place in
order to acquaint modern
trumpeters with something
of the wealth of music,
which can also be well
played on a modern
trumpet with valves. The
originally used trumpets
correspond to modern ones
in the keys of C and D,
but this does not mean
that many of the pieces
cannot be transposed to a
more comfortable
register. On top of this,
we have tried to give a
picture of the baroque
court and field
trumpeter, as well as of
the mysterious clarion
trumpeter, with the help
of musically popular
material. The origin of
most of the pieces used
is no longer clearly
discernable. In most
cases we possess second-
or third-hand copies
which have been handed
down, and show signs of
frequent use. A few cases
where modernization of
the second part obviously
did not take place until
the invention of stops,
have been re-shaped into
their supposed original
form. A series of further
dynamic details were
left, and marked as
optional suggestions in
brackets. Kurt
Janetzky