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| Gustave Vogt's Musical Album of Autographs Cor anglais, Piano Carl Fischer
Chamber Music English Horn, Oboe SKU: CF.WF229 15 Pieces for Oboe and ...(+)
Chamber Music English
Horn, Oboe SKU:
CF.WF229 15 Pieces
for Oboe and English
Horn. Composed by
Gustave Vogt. Edited by
Kristin Jean Leitterman.
Collection - Performance.
32+8 pages. Carl Fischer
Music #WF229. Published
by Carl Fischer Music
(CF.WF229). ISBN
9781491153789. UPC:
680160911288. Intro
duction Gustave Vogt's
Musical Paris Gustave
Vogt (1781-1870) was born
into the Age of
Enlightenment, at the
apex of the
Enlightenment's outreach.
During his lifetime he
would observe its effect
on the world. Over the
course of his life he
lived through many
changes in musical style.
When he was born,
composers such as Mozart
and Haydn were still
writing masterworks
revered today, and
eighty-nine years later,
as he departed the world,
the new realm of
Romanticism was beginning
to emerge with Mahler,
Richard Strauss and
Debussy, who were soon to
make their respective
marks on the musical
world. Vogt himself left
a huge mark on the
musical world, with
critics referring to him
as the grandfather of the
modern oboe and the
premier oboist of Europe.
Through his eighty-nine
years, Vogt would live
through what was perhaps
the most turbulent period
of French history. He
witnessed the French
Revolution of 1789,
followed by the many
newly established
governments, only to die
just months before the
establishment of the
Third Republic in 1870,
which would be the
longest lasting
government since the
beginning of the
revolution. He also
witnessed the
transformation of the
French musical world from
one in which opera
reigned supreme, to one
in which virtuosi,
chamber music, and
symphonic music ruled.
Additionally, he
experienced the
development of the oboe
right before his eyes.
When he began playing in
the late eighteenth
century, the standard
oboe had two keys (E and
Eb) and at the time of
his death in 1870, the
System Six Triebert oboe
(the instrument adopted
by Conservatoire
professor, Georges
Gillet, in 1882) was only
five years from being
developed. Vogt was born
March 18, 1781 in the
ancient town of
Strasbourg, part of the
Alsace region along the
German border. At the
time of his birth,
Strasbourg had been
annexed by Louis XIV, and
while heavily influenced
by Germanic culture, had
been loosely governed by
the French for a hundred
years. Although it is
unclear when Vogt began
studying the oboe and
when his family made its
move to the French
capital, the Vogts may
have fled Strasbourg in
1792 after much of the
city was destroyed during
the French Revolution. He
was without question
living in Paris by 1798,
as he enrolled on June 8
at the newly established
Conservatoire national de
Musique to study oboe
with the school's first
oboe professor,
Alexandre-Antoine
Sallantin (1775-1830).
Vogt's relationship with
the Conservatoire would
span over half a century,
moving seamlessly from
the role of student to
professor. In 1799, just
a year after enrolling,
he was awarded the
premier prix, becoming
the fourth oboist to
achieve this award. By
1802 he had been
appointed repetiteur,
which involved teaching
the younger students and
filling in for Sallantin
in exchange for a free
education. He maintained
this rank until 1809,
when he was promoted to
professor adjoint and
finally to professor
titulaire in 1816 when
Sallantin retired. This
was a position he held
for thirty-seven years,
retiring in 1853, making
him the longest serving
oboe professor in the
school's history. During
his tenure, he became the
most influential oboist
in France, teaching
eighty-nine students,
plus sixteen he taught
while he was professor
adjoint and professor
titulaire. Many of these
students went on to be
famous in their own
right, such as Henri Brod
(1799-1839), Apollon
Marie-Rose Barret
(1804-1879), Charles
Triebert (1810-1867),
Stanislas Verroust
(1814-1863), and Charles
Colin (1832-1881). His
influence stretches from
French to American oboe
playing in a direct line
from Charles Colin to
Georges Gillet
(1854-1920), and then to
Marcel Tabuteau
(1887-1966), the oboist
Americans lovingly
describe as the father of
American oboe playing.
Opera was an important
part of Vogt's life. His
first performing position
was with the
Theatre-Montansier while
he was still studying at
the Conservatoire.
Shortly after, he moved
to the Ambigu-Comique
and, in 1801 was
appointed as first oboist
with the Theatre-Italien
in Paris. He had been in
this position for only a
year, when he began
playing first oboe at the
Opera-Comique. He
remained there until
1814, when he succeeded
his teacher,
Alexandre-Antoine
Sallantin, as soloist
with the Paris Opera, the
top orchestra in Paris at
the time. He played with
the Paris Opera until
1834, all the while
bringing in his current
and past students to fill
out the section. In this
position, he began to
make a name for himself;
so much so that specific
performances were
immortalized in memoirs
and letters. One comes
from a young Hector
Berlioz (1803-1865) after
having just arrived in
Paris in 1822 and
attended the Paris
Opera's performance of
Mehul's Stratonice and
Persuis' ballet Nina. It
was in response to the
song Quand le bien-amie
reviendra that Berlioz
wrote: I find it
difficult to believe that
that song as sung by her
could ever have made as
true and touching an
effect as the combination
of Vogt's instrument...
Shortly after this,
Berlioz gave up studying
medicine and focused on
music. Vogt frequently
made solo and chamber
appearances throughout
Europe. His busiest
period of solo work was
during the 1820s. In 1825
and 1828 he went to
London to perform as a
soloist with the London
Philharmonic Society.
Vogt also traveled to
Northern France in 1826
for concerts, and then in
1830 traveled to Munich
and Stuttgart, visiting
his hometown of
Strasbourg on the way.
While on tour, Vogt
performed Luigi
Cherubini's (1760-1842)
Ave Maria, with soprano
Anna (Nanette) Schechner
(1806-1860), and a
Concertino, presumably
written by himself. As a
virtuoso performer in
pursuit of repertoire to
play, Vogt found himself
writing much of his own
music. His catalog
includes chamber music,
variation sets, vocal
music, concerted works,
religious music, wind
band arrangements, and
pedagogical material. He
most frequently performed
his variation sets, which
were largely based on
themes from popular
operas he had, presumably
played while he was at
the Opera. He made his
final tour in 1839,
traveling to Tours and
Bordeaux. During this
tour he appeared with the
singer Caroline Naldi,
Countess de Sparre, and
the violinist Joseph
Artot (1815-1845). This
ended his active career
as a soloist. His
performance was described
in the Revue et gazette
musicale de Paris as
having lost none of his
superiority over the
oboe.... It's always the
same grace, the same
sweetness. We made a trip
to Switzerland, just by
closing your eyes and
listening to Vogt's oboe.
Vogt was also active
performing in Paris as a
chamber and orchestral
musician. He was one of
the founding members of
the Societe des Concerts
du Conservatoire, a group
established in 1828 by
violinist and conductor
Francois-Antoine Habeneck
(1781-1849). The group
featured faculty and
students performing
alongside each other and
works such as Beethoven
symphonies, which had
never been heard in
France. He also premiered
the groundbreaking
woodwind quintets of
Antonin Reicha
(1770-1836). After his
retirement from the Opera
in 1834 and from the
Societe des Concerts du
Conservatoire in 1842,
Vogt began to slow down.
His final known
performance was of
Cherubini's Ave Maria on
English horn with tenor
Alexis Dupont (1796-1874)
in 1843. He then began to
reflect on his life and
the people he had known.
When he reached his 60s,
he began gathering
entries for his Musical
Album of Autographs.
Autograph Albums Vogt's
Musical Album of
Autographs is part of a
larger practice of
keeping autograph albums,
also commonly known as
Stammbuch or Album
Amicorum (meaning book of
friendship or friendship
book), which date back to
the time of the
Reformation and the
University of Wittenberg.
It was during the
mid-sixteenth century
that students at the
University of Wittenberg
began passing around
bibles for their fellow
students and professors
to sign, leaving messages
to remember them by as
they moved on to the next
part of their lives. The
things people wrote were
mottos, quotes, and even
drawings of their family
coat of arms or some
other scene that meant
something to the owner.
These albums became the
way these young students
remembered their school
family once they had
moved on to another
school or town. It was
also common for the
entrants to comment on
other entries and for the
owner to amend entries
when they learned of
important life details
such as marriage or
death. As the practice
continued, bibles were
set aside for emblem
books, which was a
popular book genre that
featured allegorical
illustrations (emblems)
in a tripartite form:
image, motto, epigram.
The first emblem book
used for autographs was
published in 1531 by
Andrea Alciato
(1492-1550), a collection
of 212 Latin emblem
poems. In 1558, the first
book conceived for the
purpose of the album
amicorum was published by
Lyon de Tournes
(1504-1564) called the
Thesaurus Amicorum. These
books continued to
evolve, and spread to
wider circles away from
universities. Albums
could be found being kept
by noblemen, physicians,
lawyers, teachers,
painters, musicians, and
artisans. The albums
eventually became more
specialized, leading to
Musical Autograph Albums
(or Notestammbucher).
Before this
specialization, musicians
contributed in one form
or another, but our
knowledge of them in
these albums is mostly
limited to individual
people or events. Some
would simply sign their
name while others would
insert a fragment of
music, usually a canon
(titled fuga) with text
in Latin. Canons were
popular because they
displayed the
craftsmanship of the
composer in a limited
space. Composers
well-known today,
including J. S. Bach,
Telemann, Mozart,
Beethoven, Dowland, and
Brahms, all participated
in the practice, with
Beethoven being the first
to indicate an interest
in creating an album only
of music. This interest
came around 1815. In an
1845 letter from Johann
Friedrich Naue to
Heinrich Carl
Breidenstein, Naue
recalled an 1813 visit
with Beethoven, who
presented a book
suggesting Naue to
collect entries from
celebrated musicians as
he traveled. Shortly
after we find Louis Spohr
speaking about leaving on
his grand tour through
Europe in 1815 and of his
desire to carry an album
with entries from the
many artists he would
come across. He wrote in
his autobiography that
his most valuable
contribution came from
Beethoven in 1815.
Spohr's Notenstammbuch,
comprised only of musical
entries, is
groundbreaking because it
was coupled with a
concert tour, allowing
him to reach beyond the
Germanic world, where the
creation of these books
had been nearly
exclusive. Spohr brought
the practice of
Notenstammbucher to
France, and in turn
indirectly inspired Vogt
to create a book of his
own some fifteen years
later. Vogt's Musical
Album of Autographs
Vogt's Musical Album of
Autographs acts as a form
of a memoir, displaying
mementos of musicians who
held special meaning in
his life as well as
showing those with whom
he was enamored from the
younger generation. The
anonymous Pie Jesu
submitted to Vogt in 1831
marks the beginning of an
album that would span
nearly three decades by
the time the final entry,
an excerpt from Charles
Gounod's (1818-1893)
Faust, which premiered in
1859, was submitted.
Within this album we find
sixty-two entries from
musicians whom he must
have known very well
because they were
colleagues at the
Conservatoire, or
composers of opera whose
works he was performing
with the Paris Opera.
Other entries came from
performers with whom he
had performed and some
who were simply passing
through Paris, such as
Joseph Joachim
(1831-1907). Of the
sixty-three total
entries, some are
original, unpublished
works, while others came
from well-known existing
works. Nineteen of these
works are for solo piano,
sixteen utilize the oboe
or English horn, thirteen
feature the voice (in
many different
combinations, including
vocal solos with piano,
and small choral settings
up to one with double
choir), two feature
violin as a solo
instrument, and one even
features the now obscure
ophicleide. The
connections among the
sixty-two contributors to
Vogt's album are
virtually never-ending.
All were acquainted with
Vogt in some capacity,
from long-time
friendships to
relationships that were
created when Vogt
requested their entry.
Thus, while Vogt is the
person who is central to
each of these musicians,
the web can be greatly
expanded. In general, the
connections are centered
around the Conservatoire,
teacher lineages, the
Opera, and performing
circles. The
relationships between all
the contributors in the
album parallel the
current musical world, as
many of these kinds of
relationships still
exist, and permit us to
fantasize who might be
found in an album created
today by a musician of
the same standing. Also
important, is what sort
of entries the
contributors chose to
pen. The sixty-three
entries are varied, but
can be divided into
published and unpublished
works. Within the
published works, we find
opera excerpts, symphony
excerpts, mass excerpts,
and canons, while the
unpublished works include
music for solo piano,
oboe or English horn,
string instruments
(violin and cello), and
voice (voice with piano
and choral). The music
for oboe and English horn
works largely belong in
the unpublished works of
the album. These entries
were most likely written
to honor Vogt. Seven are
for oboe and piano and
were contributed by
Joseph Joachim, Pauline
Garcia Viardot
(1821-1910), Joseph
Artot, Anton Bohrer
(1783-1852), Georges
Onslow (1784-1853),
Desire Beaulieu
(1791-1863), and Narcisse
Girard (1797-1860). The
common thread between
these entries is the
simplicity of the melody
and structure. Many are
repetitive, especially
Beaulieu's entry, which
features a two-note
ostinato throughout the
work, which he even
included in his
signature. Two composers
contributed pieces for
English horn and piano,
and like the previous
oboe entries, are simple
and repetitive. These
were written by Michele
Carafa (1787-1872) and
Louis Clapisson
(1808-1866). There are
two other entries that
were unpublished works
and are chamber music.
One is an oboe trio by
Jacques Halevy
(1799-1862) and the other
is for oboe and strings
(string trio) by J. B.
Cramer (1771-1858). There
are five published works
in the album for oboe and
English horn. There are
three from operas and the
other two from symphonic
works. Ambroise Thomas
(1811-1896) contributed
an excerpt from the
Entr'acte of his opera La
Guerillero, and was
likely chosen because the
oboe was featured at this
moment. Hippolyte Chelard
(1789-1861) also chose to
honor Vogt by writing for
English horn. His entry,
for English horn and
piano, is taken from his
biggest success, Macbeth.
The English horn part was
actually taken from Lady
Macbeth's solo in the
sleepwalking scene.
Vogt's own entry also
falls into this category,
as he entered an excerpt
from Donizetti's Maria di
Rohan. The excerpt he
chose is a duet between
soprano and English horn.
There are two entries
featuring oboe that are
excerpted from symphonic
repertoire. One is a
familiar oboe melody from
Beethoven's Pastoral
Symphony entered by his
first biographer, Anton
Schindler (1796-1864).
The other is an excerpt
from Berlioz's choral
symphony, Romeo et
Juliette. He entered an
oboe solo from the Grand
Fete section of the
piece. Pedagogical
benefit All of these
works are lovely, and fit
within the album
wonderfully, but these
works also are great oboe
and English horn music
for young students. The
common thread between
these entries is the
simplicity of the melody
and structure. Many are
repetitive, especially
Beaulieu's entry, which
features a two-note
ostinato throughout the
work in the piano. This
repetitive structure is
beneficial for young
students for searching
for a short solo to
present at a studio
recital, or simply to
learn. They also work
many technical issues a
young player may
encounter, such as
mastering the rolling
finger to uncover and
recover the half hole.
This is true of Bealieu's
Pensee as well as
Onslow's Andantino.
Berlioz's entry from
Romeo et Juliette
features very long
phrases, which helps with
endurance and helps keep
the air spinning through
the oboe. Some of the
pieces also use various
levels of ornamentation,
from trills to grace
notes, and short
cadenzas. This allows the
student to learn
appropriate ways to
phrase with these added
notes. The chamber music
is a valuable way to
start younger students
with chamber music,
especially the short
quartet by Cramer for
oboe and string trio. All
of these pieces will not
tax the student to learn
a work that is more
advanced, as well as give
them a full piece that
they can work on from
beginning to end in a
couple weeks, instead of
months. Editorial Policy
The works found in this
edition are based on the
manuscript housed at the
Morgan Library in New
York City (call number
Cary 348, V886. A3). When
possible, published
scores were consulted and
compared to clarify pitch
and text. The general
difficulties in creating
an edition of these works
stem from entries that
appear to be hastily
written, and thus omit
complete articulations
and dynamic indications
for all passages and
parts. The manuscript has
been modernized into a
performance edition. The
score order from the
manuscript has been
retained. If an entry
also exists in a
published work, and this
was not indicated on the
manuscript, appropriate
titles and subtitles have
been added tacitly. For
entries that were
untitled, the beginning
tempo marking or
expressive directive has
been added as its title
tacitly. Part names have
been changed from the
original language to
English. If no part name
was present, it was added
tacitly. All scores are
transposing where
applicable. Measure
numbers have been added
at the beginning of every
system. Written
directives have been
retained in the original
language and are placed
relative to where they
appear in the manuscript.
Tempo markings from the
manuscript have been
retained, even if they
were abbreviated, i.e.,
Andte. The barlines,
braces, brackets, and
clefs are modernized. The
beaming and stem
direction has been
modernized. Key
signatures have been
modernized as some of the
flats/sharps do not
appear on the correct
lines or spaces. Time
signatures have been
modernized. In a few
cases, when a time
signature was missing in
the manuscript, it has
been added tacitly.
Triplet and rhythmic
groupings have been
modernized. Slurs, ties,
and articulations
(staccato and accent)
have been modernized.
Slurs, ties, and
articulations have been
added to parallel
passages tacitly.
Courtesy accidentals
found in the manuscript
have been removed, unless
it appeared to be helpful
to the performer. Dynamic
indications from the
manuscript have been
retained, except where
noted. --Kristin
Leitterman. Introducti
onGustave Vogt’s
Musical ParisGustave Vogt
(1781–1870) was
born into the “Age
of Enlightenment,â€
at the apex of the
Enlightenment’s
outreach. During his
lifetime he would observe
its effect on the world.
Over the course of his
life he lived through
many changes in musical
style. When he was born,
composers such as Mozart
and Haydn were still
writing masterworks
revered today, and
eighty-nine years later,
as he departed the world,
the new realm of
Romanticism was beginning
to emerge with Mahler,
Richard Strauss and
Debussy, who were soon to
make their respective
marks on the musical
world. Vogt himself left
a huge mark on the
musical world, with
critics referring to him
as the “grandfather
of the modern oboeâ€
and the “premier
oboist of
Europe.â€Through his
eighty-nine years, Vogt
would live through what
was perhaps the most
turbulent period of
French history. He
witnessed the French
Revolution of 1789,
followed by the many
newly established
governments, only to die
just months before the
establishment of the
Third Republic in 1870,
which would be the
longest lasting
government since the
beginning of the
revolution. He also
witnessed the
transformation of the
French musical world from
one in which opera
reigned supreme, to one
in which virtuosi,
chamber music, and
symphonic music ruled.
Additionally, he
experienced the
development of the oboe
right before his eyes.
When he began playing in
the late eighteenth
century, the standard
oboe had two keys (E and
Eb) and at the time of
his death in 1870, the
“System Sixâ€
Triébert oboe (the
instrument adopted by
Conservatoire professor,
Georges Gillet, in 1882)
was only five years from
being developed.Vogt was
born March 18, 1781 in
the ancient town of
Strasbourg, part of the
Alsace region along the
German border. At the
time of his birth,
Strasbourg had been
annexed by Louis XIV, and
while heavily influenced
by Germanic culture, had
been loosely governed by
the French for a hundred
years. Although it is
unclear when Vogt began
studying the oboe and
when his family made its
move to the French
capital, the Vogts may
have fled Strasbourg in
1792 after much of the
city was destroyed during
the French Revolution. He
was without question
living in Paris by 1798,
as he enrolled on June 8
at the newly established
Conservatoire national de
Musique to study oboe
with the school’s
first oboe professor,
Alexandre-Antoine
Sallantin
(1775–1830).Vogtâ
€™s relationship with
the Conservatoire would
span over half a century,
moving seamlessly from
the role of student to
professor. In 1799, just
a year after enrolling,
he was awarded the
premier prix, becoming
the fourth oboist to
achieve this award. By
1802 he had been
appointed
répétiteur, which
involved teaching the
younger students and
filling in for Sallantin
in exchange for a free
education. He maintained
this rank until 1809,
when he was promoted to
professor adjoint and
finally to professor
titulaire in 1816 when
Sallantin retired. This
was a position he held
for thirty-seven years,
retiring in 1853, making
him the longest serving
oboe professor in the
school’s history.
During his tenure, he
became the most
influential oboist in
France, teaching
eighty-nine students,
plus sixteen he taught
while he was professor
adjoint and professor
titulaire. Many of these
students went on to be
famous in their own
right, such as Henri Brod
(1799–1839),
Apollon Marie-Rose Barret
(1804–1879),
Charles Triebert
(1810–1867),
Stanislas Verroust
(1814–1863), and
Charles Colin
(1832–1881). His
influence stretches from
French to American oboe
playing in a direct line
from Charles Colin to
Georges Gillet
(1854–1920), and
then to Marcel Tabuteau
(1887–1966), the
oboist Americans lovingly
describe as the
“father of American
oboe playing.â€Opera
was an important part of
Vogt’s life. His
first performing position
was with the
Théâtre-Montansier
while he was still
studying at the
Conservatoire. Shortly
after, he moved to the
Ambigu-Comique and, in
1801 was appointed as
first oboist with the
Théâtre-Italien in
Paris. He had been in
this position for only a
year, when he began
playing first oboe at the
Opéra-Comique. He
remained there until
1814, when he succeeded
his teacher,
Alexandre-Antoine
Sallantin, as soloist
with the Paris Opéra,
the top orchestra in
Paris at the time. He
played with the Paris
Opéra until 1834, all
the while bringing in his
current and past students
to fill out the section.
In this position, he
began to make a name for
himself; so much so that
specific performances
were immortalized in
memoirs and letters. One
comes from a young Hector
Berlioz
(1803–1865) after
having just arrived in
Paris in 1822 and
attended the Paris
Opéra’s
performance of
Mehul’s Stratonice
and Persuis’
ballet Nina. It was in
response to the song
Quand le bien-amié
reviendra that Berlioz
wrote: “I find it
difficult to believe that
that song as sung by her
could ever have made as
true and touching an
effect as the combination
of Vogt’s
instrument…â€
Shortly after this,
Berlioz gave up studying
medicine and focused on
music.Vogt frequently
made solo and chamber
appearances throughout
Europe. His busiest
period of solo work was
during the 1820s. In 1825
and 1828 he went to
London to perform as a
soloist with the London
Philharmonic Society.
Vogt also traveled to
Northern France in 1826
for concerts, and then in
1830 traveled to Munich
and Stuttgart, visiting
his hometown of
Strasbourg on the way.
While on tour, Vogt
performed Luigi
Cherubini’s
(1760–1842) Ave
Maria, with soprano Anna
(Nanette) Schechner
(1806–1860), and a
Concertino, presumably
written by himself. As a
virtuoso performer in
pursuit of repertoire to
play, Vogt found himself
writing much of his own
music. His catalog
includes chamber music,
variation sets, vocal
music, concerted works,
religious music, wind
band arrangements, and
pedagogical material. He
most frequently performed
his variation sets, which
were largely based on
themes from popular
operas he had, presumably
played while he was at
the Opéra.He made his
final tour in 1839,
traveling to Tours and
Bordeaux. During this
tour he appeared with the
singer Caroline Naldi,
Countess de Sparre, and
the violinist Joseph
Artôt
(1815–1845). This
ended his active career
as a soloist. His
performance was described
in the Revue et gazette
musicale de Paris as
having “lost none
of his superiority over
the oboe….
It’s always the
same grace, the same
sweetness. We made a trip
to Switzerland, just by
closing your eyes and
listening to
Vogt’s
oboe.â€Vogt was also
active performing in
Paris as a chamber and
orchestral musician. He
was one of the founding
members of the
Société des
Concerts du
Conservatoire, a group
established in 1828 by
violinist and conductor
François-Antoine
Habeneck
(1781–1849). The
group featured faculty
and students performing
alongside each other and
works such as Beethoven
symphonies, which had
never been heard in
France. He also premiered
the groundbreaking
woodwind quintets of
Antonin Reicha
(1770–1836).After
his retirement from the
Opéra in 1834 and from
the Société des
Concerts du Conservatoire
in 1842, Vogt began to
slow down. His final
known performance was of
Cherubini’s Ave
Maria on English horn
with tenor Alexis Dupont
(1796–1874) in
1843. He then began to
reflect on his life and
the people he had known.
When he reached his 60s,
he began gathering
entries for his Musical
Album of
Autographs.Autograph
AlbumsVogt’s
Musical Album of
Autographs is part of a
larger practice of
keeping autograph albums,
also commonly known as
Stammbuch or Album
Amicorum (meaning book of
friendship or friendship
book), which date back to
the time of the
Reformation and the
University of Wittenberg.
It was during the
mid-sixteenth century
that students at the
University of Wittenberg
began passing around
bibles for their fellow
students and professors
to sign, leaving messages
to remember them by as
they moved on to the next
part of their lives. The
things people wrote were
mottos, quotes, and even
drawings of their family
coat of arms or some
other scene that meant
something to the owner.
These albums became the
way these young students
remembered their school
family once they had
moved on to another
school or town. It was
also common for the
entrants to comment on
other entries and for the
owner to amend entries
when they learned of
important life details
such as marriage or
death.As the practice
continued, bibles were
set aside for emblem
books, which was a
popular book genre that
featured allegorical
illustrations (emblems)
in a tripartite form:
image, motto, epigram.
The first emblem book
used for autographs was
published in 1531 by
Andrea Alciato
(1492–1550), a
collection of 212 Latin
emblem poems. In 1558,
the first book conceived
for the purpose of the
album amicorum was
published by Lyon de
Tournes
(1504–1564) called
the Thesaurus Amicorum.
These books continued to
evolve, and spread to
wider circles away from
universities. Albums
could be found being kept
by noblemen, physicians,
lawyers, teachers,
painters, musicians, and
artisans.The albums
eventually became more
specialized, leading to
Musical Autograph Albums
(or Notestammbücher).
Before this
specialization, musicians
contributed in one form
or another, but our
knowledge of them in
these albums is mostly
limited to individual
people or events. Some
would simply sign their
name while others would
insert a fragment of
music, usually a canon
(titled fuga) with text
in Latin. Canons were
popular because they
displayed the
craftsmanship of the
composer in a limited
space. Composers
well-known today,
including J. S. Bach,
Telemann, Mozart,
Beethoven, Dowland, and
Brahms, all participated
in the practice, with
Beethoven being the first
to indicate an interest
in creating an album only
of music.This interest
came around 1815. In an
1845 letter from Johann
Friedrich Naue to
Heinrich Carl
Breidenstein, Naue
recalled an 1813 visit
with Beethoven, who
presented a book
suggesting Naue to
collect entries from
celebrated musicians as
he traveled. Shortly
after we find Louis Spohr
speaking about leaving on
his “grand
tour†through
Europe in 1815 and of his
desire to carry an album
with entries from the
many artists he would
come across. He wrote in
his autobiography that
his “most valuable
contribution†came
from Beethoven in 1815.
Spohr’s
Notenstammbuch, comprised
only of musical entries,
is groundbreaking because
it was coupled with a
concert tour, allowing
him to reach beyond the
Germanic world, where the
creation of these books
had been nearly
exclusive. Spohr brought
the practice of
Notenstammbücher to
France, and in turn
indirectly inspired Vogt
to create a book of his
own some fifteen years
later.Vogt’s
Musical Album of
AutographsVogt’s
Musical Album of
Autographs acts as a form
of a memoir, displaying
mementos of musicians who
held special meaning in
his life as well as
showing those with whom
he was enamored from the
younger generation. The
anonymous Pie Jesu
submitted to Vogt in 1831
marks the beginning of an
album that would span
nearly three decades by
the time the final entry,
an excerpt from Charles
Gounod’s
(1818–1893) Faust,
which premiered in 1859,
was submitted.Within this
album ... $16.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Cellowise Quintasia. 3 Quintets for Cello Ensemble de Violoncelles Clifton Edition
Cello quintet - Grade 6-8 SKU: ST.C360 Composed by J Remy. String music. ...(+)
Cello quintet - Grade 6-8
SKU: ST.C360
Composed by J Remy.
String music. Study
score. Clifton Edition
#C360. Published by
Clifton Edition
(ST.C360). ISBN
9790570813605. Gavo
tte en Rondeau from
Violin Partita No.3 (BWV
1006).
Paper,
daylight and candles were
often in short supply
during Bachâ??s very
busy lifetime but simply
to view the autograph
score in his hand of the
Sonatas and Partitas for
solo violin is to be
bound into a spell by the
beauty, skill and
extempore furiosity of
the script. The cycle has
been described as a
miracle of implied
harmony and rich harmonic
textures, â??its
freshness and maturity,
its depth, its beauty,
its response to all
moodsâ? informing a
work of humanity and
genius unparalleled in
all the literature for
solo violin.
The
present arrangement of
the Gavotte en Rondeau
from Partita No. 3
(BWV1006) is based on
Rachmaninoffâ??s
intricate harmonisation
for piano. â??Ruht
Wohlâ?? from the St.
John Passion (BWV 245).
In the final Chorus from
the St. John Passion,
Bach imbues the popular
dance-forms of the
Sarabande and Minuet with
a spiritual theme of
atonement and
reconciliation. The three
ritornelli stand like
pillars in a palindromic
structure whose unbroken
melodic line and flowing
counterpoint represent a
â??timeless
continuanceâ??. The
original scoring is light
and transparent, and
transfers appropriately
to a choir of cellos
without the loss of any
counterpoint. Prelude Op.
25 No 3 by Rachmaninoff.
Throughout his career as
a composer and virtuoso
pianist, this Prelude was
one of Rachmaninoffâ??s
favourite pieces and he
dedicated it to his
teacher Alexander Siloti.
A powerful structure is
built up from a small
rhythmic motif,
reminiscent of
Tchaikovskyâ??s
representations of fate
or Shostakovichâ??s of
looming state power. This
is contrasted with a
lyrical middle section
and a final phrase marked
leggiero in which the
music flies off into the
air like a bird. $15.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 4 to 6 weeks | | |
| Intermediate Music for Two, Volume 1 [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Intermédiaire Last Resort Music Publishing
Arranged by Daniel Kelley. For Flute (or Oboe or Violin) and Cello (or Bassoon)....(+)
Arranged by Daniel
Kelley. For Flute (or
Oboe or Violin) and Cello
(or Bassoon). Duets.
Intermediate Music for
Two. Classical. Level:
Intermediate. Score with
2 parts. Published by
Last Resort Music
Publishing.
$22.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Easy Classical Themes Instrumental Solos for Strings (Violin) Violon [Partition + CD] - Débutant Alfred Publishing
Violin. Arranged by Various. Play-Along; Solo; String Series. Instrumental Sol...(+)
Violin. Arranged by
Various.
Play-Along; Solo; String
Series. Instrumental
Solos
Series. Masterwork
Arrangement. Book; CD. 40
pages. Alfred Music #00-
47065. Published by
Alfred
Music
$12.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Easy Classical Themes Instrumental Solos for Strings (Cello) Violoncelle [Partition + CD] - Débutant Alfred Publishing
Cello. Arranged by Various. Play-Along; Solo; String Series. Instrumental Solo...(+)
Cello. Arranged by
Various.
Play-Along; Solo; String
Series. Instrumental
Solos
Series. Masterwork
Arrangement. Book; CD. 40
pages. Alfred Music #00-
47071. Published by
Alfred
Music
$12.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Play Bach (Violin) Violon [Partition + CD] De Haske Publications
8 Famous Works for Violin. By Johann Sebastian Bach. De Haske Play-Along Book. P...(+)
8 Famous Works for
Violin. By Johann
Sebastian Bach. De Haske
Play-Along Book. Play
Along. BOOK W/CD. Size
9x12 inches. 16 pages.
Published by DeHaske
Publications.
$22.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Streicher Kleeblatt - Schülerband Holzschuh Musikverlag
Violin, viola and cello SKU: M7.VHR-3902 (Violine, Viola, Cello). ...(+)
Violin, viola and cello
SKU: M7.VHR-3902
(Violine, Viola,
Cello). Composed by
Simone Drebenstedt. Sheet
music. Student's edition.
172 pages. Holzschuh
Musikverlag #VHR 3902.
Published by Holzschuh
Musikverlag
(M7.VHR-3902). ISBN
9783940069801. Das
neue Schulwerk verbindet
Lieder und Aufgaben in
sehr übersichtlicher
Form. Viele Liedbeispiele
und Liedbegleitungen mit
Texten zum Singen
erleichtern den
Schülern den Zugang
zur Musik. Alle Seiten
dieses Unterrichtswerkes
sind gleich aufgebaut.
Das übersichtliche
Layout erleichtert
Lehrern und Schülern
die Orientierung. Der
Umfang des Materials ist
auf zwei Unterrichtsjahre
ausgerichtet. $26.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 4 to 6 weeks | | |
| String Quartet No. 4 "chaconne" - Score And Parts Quatuor à cordes: 2 violons, alto, violoncelle Schott
String quartet SKU: HL.49045639 Chaconne. Composed by Fred Lerdahl...(+)
String quartet SKU:
HL.49045639
Chaconne. Composed
by Fred Lerdahl. This
edition: Saddle
stitching. Sheet music.
String Ensemble.
Softcover. Composed 2016.
108 pages. Duration 990
seconds. Schott Music #ED
30174. Published by
Schott Music
(HL.49045639). ISBN
9781540004796. UPC:
888680710774.
9.5x12.0x0.37
inches. Chaconne
(2016), for string
quartet, was commissioned
by the Daedalus Quartet
to celebrate its 15th
anniversary. The
commission was supported
by New Music USA, made
possible by annual
program support and/or
endowment gifts from
Pennsylvania Council on
the Arts, Helen F.
Whitaker Fund, and Aaron
Copland Fund for Music.My
music has a substantial
history with Daedalus. I
composed the Third String
Quartet (2008) for them,
and subsequently they
performed my three string
quartets on several
occasions and recorded
them brilliantly on
Bridge Records (Bridge
9352: Music of Fred
Lerdahl, vol. 3).
Chaconne is in one
movement lasting 19
minutes. It is
effectively my fourth
string quartet. Quartets
1-3 form a unified cycle
lasting 70 minutes. When
I finished the cycle, I
thought I would never
write again for the
medium; yet I could not
resist the opportunity of
working again with
Daedalus. The issue was
how to compose another
string quartet unrelated
to the earlier cycle. The
solution came from my
solo cello piece There
and Back Again (2010),
which was based on a
four-bar variation
pattern from a
17th-century chaconne.
Unlike the asymmetrical
phrases and expanding
variations of much of my
music, the chaconne form
requires symmetrical
phrases and strictly
periodic variations. I
wished to work again with
these symmetries but on a
larger scale. Chaconne
also differs in character
and expression from the
three-quartet cycle. The
cycle is inward and
intense, a kind of
psychological excavation.
Chaconne is, for the most
part, transparent and
playful. Many of its
textures emerge from
little canons, not
completely unlike the
rounds that children
sing. Any composer who
writes in chaconne form
(one thinks above all of
the last movement of
Bach's D minor violin
partita and the finale of
Brahms's Fourth Symphony)
is confronted with the
challenge of how to
create a larger form out
of a constantly repeating
pattern.My Chaconne grows
from paired
antecedent-consequent
phrases, each variation
lasting eight bars. The
50 variations group into
three large rotations,
forming three arcs of
tension and relaxation,
with subtle parallel
connections across the
rotations.
Notwithstanding my
attraction to chaconne
form, I purposefully
disguised its symmetries
and periodicities in
order to build an overall
dramatic shape. Fred
Lerdahl. $118.50 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Music for Two, Volume 1 - Flute/Oboe/Violin and Cello/Bassoon Flûte, Violoncelle [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Intermédiaire/avancé Last Resort Music Publishing
Arranged by Daniel Kelley. For Flute (or Oboe or Violin) and Cello (or Bassoon)....(+)
Arranged by Daniel
Kelley. For Flute (or
Oboe or Violin) and Cello
(or Bassoon). Duets.
Music for Two. Wedding,
Classical. Level:
Intermediate/Advanced.
Score with 2 parts.
Published by Last Resort
Music Publishing.
(4)$22.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Palm Court Trios - Book Two Piano Trio: piano, violon, violoncelle Boosey and Hawkes
Popular Classical and Light Music for Violin, Cello and Piano. By Peter Wilson. ...(+)
Popular Classical and
Light Music for Violin,
Cello and Piano. By Peter
Wilson. (Set). Boosey
and Hawkes Chamber Music.
Size 9x12 inches. 52
pages. Published by
Boosey and Hawkes.
$65.00 - Voir plus => Acheter | | |
| J.S. Bach - 50 Solos for Classical Guitar Guitare notes et tablatures Guitare classique [Partition + Accès audio] Cherry Lane
Composed by Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750). Guitar. Classical. Softcover Audi...(+)
Composed by Johann
Sebastian Bach
(1685-1750). Guitar.
Classical. Softcover
Audio Online. With guitar
tablature. 88 pages.
Published by Cherry Lane
Music
(3)$17.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Streicher Kleeblatt - Lehrerband Holzschuh Musikverlag
Violin, viola, cello and double bass SKU: M7.VHR-3901 Composed by Simone ...(+)
Violin, viola, cello and
double bass SKU:
M7.VHR-3901 Composed
by Simone Drebenstedt.
Sheet music. Teacher's
edition. 176 pages.
Holzschuh Musikverlag
#VHR 3901. Published by
Holzschuh Musikverlag
(M7.VHR-3901). ISBN
9783940069795. Das
neue Schulwerk verbindet
Lieder und Aufgaben in
sehr übersichtlicher
Form. Viele Liedbeispiele
und Liedbegleitungen mit
Texten zum Singen
erleichtern den
Schülern den Zugang
zur Musik. Alle Seiten
dieses Unterrichtswerkes
sind gleich aufgebaut.
Das übersichtliche
Layout erleichtert
Lehrern und Schülern
die Orientierung. Der
Umfang des Materials ist
auf zwei Unterrichtsjahre
ausgerichtet. $40.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 4 to 6 weeks | | |
| Baroque Music For Manuals, Volume II Orgue Concordia Publishing House
By Wolff. For organ. General, sacred. Published by Concordia Publishing House. <...(+)
By Wolff. For organ.
General, sacred.
Published by Concordia
Publishing House.
Level: Moderately
Easy.
$12.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Classical Highlights Quatuor à cordes: 2 violons, alto, violoncelle [Conducteur et Parties séparées] Schott
Arranged for String Quartet, Double Bass Ad Lib (Score and Parts). Edited by...(+)
Arranged for String
Quartet,
Double Bass Ad Lib (Score
and
Parts). Edited by Kate
Mitchell. Arranged by
Wolfgang Birtel. String
Ensemble. Softcover. 180
pages. Schott Music
#ED22351.
Published by Schott Music
$46.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Orchestral Suite (Overture) D major BWV 1068 Orchestre [Conducteur] Barenreiter
By Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750). Edited by Heinrich Besseler; Hans Gruss. F...(+)
By Johann Sebastian Bach
(1685-1750). Edited by
Heinrich Besseler; Hans
Gruss. For orchestra (3
trumpets/timpani/2
oboes/2
violins/viola/basso
continuo (cello/double
bass/harpsichord)). This
edition: Stapled, Urtext
edition. Score. Text
Language: German/English.
BWV 1068. 50 pages.
Duration 24'. Published
by Baerenreiter Verlag
$25.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Mnemosyne Quatuor à cordes: 2 violons, alto, violoncelle Breitkopf & Härtel
String Quartet (fem vce - str quar - electronics (tape) and projection of lyrics...(+)
String Quartet (fem vce -
str quar - electronics
(tape) and projection of
lyrics ad lib.) SKU:
BR.KM-2483-07
Holderlin lesen
IV. Composed by Hans
Zender. Chamber music;
stapled.
Kammermusik-Bibliothek
(Chamber Music Library).
Music post-1945; New
music (post-2000). Study
Score. Composed 2000. 56
pages. Duration 40'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #KM
2483-07. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.KM-2483-07). ISBN
9790004502587. 9 x 12
inches. Friedrich
HolderlinMnemosyne Ein
Zeichen sind wir,
deutungslos,Schmerzlos
sind wir und haben
fastDie Sprache in der
Fremde verloren.Wenn
namlich uber MenschenEin
Streit ist an dem Himmel
und gewaltigDie Monde
gehn, so redetDas Meer
auch und Strome mussenDen
Pfad sich suchen.
ZweifellosIst aber Einer,
derKann taglich es
andern. Kaum bedarf
erGesetz. Und es tonet
das Blatt und Eichbaume
wehn dann nebenDen
Firnen. Denn nicht
vermogenDie Himmlischen
alles. Namlich es
reichenDie Sterblichen eh
an den Abgrund. Also
wendet es sich, das
Echo,Mit diesen. Lang
istDie Zeit, es ereignet
sich aberDas Wahre. Wie
aber Liebes?
SonnenscheinAm Boden
sehen wir und trockenen
StaubUnd heimatlich die
Schatten der Walder und
es bluhetAn Dachern der
Rauch, bei alter KroneDer
Turme, friedsam; gut sind
namlich,Hat gegenredend
die SeeleEin Himmlisches
verwundet, die
Tageszeichen.Denn Schnee,
wie MaienblumenDas
Edelmutige, woEs seie,
bedeutend, glanzet aufDer
grunen WieseDer Alpen,
halftig, da, vom Kreuze
redend, dasGesetzt ist
unterwegs
einmalGestorbenen, auf
hoher StrassEin
Wandersmann geht
zornigFern ahnend mitDem
andern, aber was ist
dies?Am Feigenbaum ist
meinAchilles mir
gestorben,Und Ajax
liegtAn den Grotten der
See,An Bachen, benachbart
dem Skamandros.An
Schlafen Sausen einst,
nachDer unbewegten
Salamis steterGewohnheit,
in der Fremd, ist
grossAjax
gestorben,Patroklos aber
in des Koniges Harnisch.
Und es starbenNoch andere
viel. Am Kitharon aber
lagEleuthera, der
Mnemosyne Stadt. Der
auch, alsAblegte den
Mantel Gott, das
Abendliche nachher
losteDie Locken.
Himmlische namlich
sindUnwillig, wenn einer
nicht die Seele schonend
sichZusammengenommen,
aber er muss doch;
demGleich fehlet die
TrauerIn meinen Holderlin
lesen-Stucken ging es mir
darum, Wege zu finden,
die gewaltigen
Sprachstrukturen
Holderlins so in die
zeitliche Form der Musik
zu integrieren, dass sie
Funktionen der
musikalischen Form
ubernehmen, ohne in ihrer
Eigenkraft (sowohl
akustisch wie auch im
Sinne expressiver
,,Deutung) im geringsten
geschmalert zu werden.
Das hiess zunachst:
Sprechen, nicht singen! -
Aber das wurde nur
bedeuten, dass es nicht
um die Musikalisierung
von Text geht; ebenso
wichtig ist es, dass es
auch nicht um
melodramatisch
,,erzahlende Musik geht.
Sondern: Zwei autonome
Kunste durchdringen sich
auf diaphane Weise, ohne
sich zu uberformen oder
auszuloschen; es handelt
sich um einen Dialog,
nicht um eine
Vereinnahmung durch
Hierarchisierung.Sind wir
uns selbst zu einem
,,Zeichen...deutungslos
geworden, wie es
Holderlins Anfangszeilen
sagen, so erscheinen auch
die Zeichen, die wir
selber setzen, sich immer
mehr einer Deutbarkeit zu
entziehen. Mein Stuck,
das den vollstandigen
Text von Holderlins
Mnemosyne integriert,
stellt auf seine Weise
die Frage nach dem
,,Zeichen. ,,Was ist
dies? Klang? Wort?
Schrift? Wie sind die
Grenzen, die Ubergange,
die gegenseitigen
Beeinflussungen der
einzelnen
Zeichenregionen? Was
liegt ihnen zugrunde?
Worte und musikalische
Zeichen bewegen sich im
Medium der Zeit;
Schriftzeichen erscheinen
zunachst als
Verraumlichung, aber man
muss daran erinnern, dass
der Vorgang des
Schreibens - wie er in
der ostasiatischen
Kalligraphie zu hochster
Kunst entwickelt wurde -
auch zeitlichen Charakter
hat. Mnemosyne - die
Kraft des Sich-Erinnerns
- schafft die Zeichen,
indem sie Gestalten durch
Wiederholung fixiert und
so aus dem endlosen Fluss
der wahrgenommenen
Vorgange herauslost. Die
so entstehende
artikulierte Zeit schafft
wiederum durch das
Wechselspiel von
fixierten und sich
bewegenden Gestalten das
Bewusstsein fur
differenzierte
Formablaufe. Der
Formverlauf meines
Stuckes zeichnet solche
genetischen Prozesse
nach. Der Horer wird
schnell merken, dass die
Wortzeichen oft einer
zuerst erscheinenden
musikalischen Klangwelt
entspringen (ich stimme
Walter Benjamin zu, wenn
er sagt, dass die Sprache
in ihrer grundlegenden
Schicht expressiven - und
nicht darstellenden -
Charakter hat). Die
Schrift auf der Leinwand
folgt zunachst den
sprachlichen Aktionen der
Stimme, erhalt dann aber
auch eigene Teile der
Form zugeteilt, in der
sie sich als autonomes
Zeichen darstellt. In der
durch die drei Strophen
Holderlins
notwendigerweise
dreiteiligen Gesamtform
gibt es immer wieder
Abschnitte, in denen
entweder das musikalische
Geschehen oder die
Sprachzeichen des
Gedichtes oder das
Sich-Schreiben der
Schrift im Vordergrund
stehen; der Komponist
versteht sich also hier
auch als ,,Zusammensetzer
der in unserer
Wahrnehmung so
verschieden besetzten
Zeiten des Schreibens,
Sprechens und
Musikhorens. Es bilden
sich im Verlauf des
40-minutigen Stuckes auch
Grenzfalle, wie ,,stumme
Musik oder total
musikalisierte - ihrer
Verstehbarkeit beraubte -
Textrezitation. Auch das
Singen von Text - in
meinen bisherigen
Holderlinstucken strikt
vermieden - wird als
ausserste Moglichkeit
gegen Ende des formalen
Prozesses zugelassen. An
einigen Stellen zeigt die
Musik sozusagen direkt
auf sich selbst. Es sind
Formzustande, die ich in
meinem ,,Shir Hashirim
als ,,Koan bezeichnet
habe: ,,endlose
Wiederholungen einer
zeichenhaften
Konstellation, bei jeder
Wiederholung minimal
verandert - so wie ein
Kalligraph sein
Schriftzeichen bei jedem
Malvorgang unwillkurlich
verandert und neu
schafft. Steht im ersten
Teil der Grossform der
Aspekt des Abstrakten,
des Unsinnlichen im
Vordergrund, so wird im
zweiten Teil
Bildhaftigkeit als
Eigenschaft nicht nur der
Sprache, sondern auch der
Musik betont: die
Landschaft, halb schnee -
halb blutenbedeckt, die
der Wanderer ,,zornig
durchstreift. Am Ende
dieses Teils wird das
Schriftbild selber zur
Landschaft, die der
Leser/Horer durchwandert.
Er wird im dritten Teil
durch einen
Verwandlungsprozess zu
den ekstatischen
Ursprungen des
holderlinschen Dichtens
gefuhrt, und damit zur
explizit musikalischen
Ebene: Die Totenklage um
Hektor und Ajax wird zum
,,dithyrambischen Tanz,
wie es Holderlins
Schlusszeile entwirft:
,,... darum fehlet die
Trauer. Es bleibt noch
nachzutragen, dass ich
den in der Stuttgarter
Ausgabe der Werke
Holderlins in drei
Versionen abgedruckten
Text in einer
Mischversion verwendet
habe: die erste Strophe
aus der 2. Fassung, die
zweite mit Abweichungen
und Widerspruchen aus
allen drei Fassungen, und
die dritte Strophe aus
der 3. Fassung. (Hans
Zender) CD:Salome Kammer
(voice), Klangforum Wien,
cond. Hans ZenderKairos
0012522KAIBibliography:Al
lwardt, Ingrid:
Nach-Lese. Holderlins
Gesang im Resonanzraum
der Musik Hans Zenders,
in: Hans Zender.
Vielstimmig in sich,
hrsg. von Werner
Grunzweig, Jorn Peter
Hiekel und Anouk Jeschke
(= Archive zur Musik des
20. und 21. Jahrhunderts,
Band 12), Hofheim: Wolke
2008, pp. 43-60.Fuhrmann,
Wolfgang: Zender lesen.
Die Frage nach dem
Zeichen in ,,Mnemosyne,
in: ,,Ein Zeichen sind
wir, deutungslos.
Holderlin lesen, Ikkyu
Sojun horen, Musik
denken, hrsg. von
Violetta L. Waibel,
Gottingen: Wallstein
2020, S. 194-211Pragungen
im Pluralismus. Hans
Zender im Gesprach mit
Jorn Peter Hiekel, in:
Orientierungen. Wege im
Pluralismus der
Gegenwartsmusik, hrsg.
von Jorn Peter Hiekel (=
Veroffentlichungen des
Instituts fur Neue Musik
und Musikerziehung
Darmstadt, Band 47),
Mainz u. a.: Schott 2007,
pp. 130-137.Mosch,
Ulrich: Ultrachromatik
und Mikrotonalitat. Hans
Zenders Grundlegung einer
neuen Harmonik, in: Hans
Zender. Vielstimmig in
sich, hrsg. von Werner
Grunzweig, Jorn Peter
Hiekel und Anouk Jeschke
(= Archive zur Musik des
20. und 21. Jahrhunderts,
Band 12), Hofheim: Wolke
2008, pp. 61-76.Schmidt,
Dorte: Erfahrung und
Erinnerung.
Kompositorisches Material
zwischen Klang und
Bedeutung in der
Kammermusik des spaten
20. Jahrhunderts, in:
Mnemosyne. Zeit und
Gedachtnis in der
europaischen Musik des
ausgehenden 20.
Jahrhunderts, hrsg. von
Dorothea Redepenning und
Joachim Steinheuer,
Saarbrucken: Pfau 2006,
pp. 41-58.Zenck, Martin:
Holderlin lesen seiner
Stimme zuhoren.
Holderlin-Lekturen von
Klaus Michael Gruber,
Hans Zender und Bruno
Ganz, in: Neue
Zeitschrift fur Musik 172
(2011), Heft 6, pp.
25-29.Zender, Hans: Zu
meinem Zyklus Holderlin
lesen, in: Mnemosyne.
Zeit und Gedachtnis in
der europaischen Musik
des ausgehenden 20.
Jahrhunderts, hrsg. von
Dorothea Redepenning und
Joachim Steinheuer,
Saarbrucken: Pfau 2006,
pp. 26-40.
World
premiere: Witten
(Wittener Tage fur neue
Kammermusik), May 4,
2001. $65.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 4 weeks | | |
| A Baroque Sampler for Octave Mandolin Mandoline - Facile Mel Bay
Composed by John Goodin. Saddle-stitched. Book. 40 pages. Mel Bay Publicatio...(+)
Composed by John Goodin.
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| Wedding Album for String Quartet, Book 3 Quatuor à cordes: 2 violons, alto, violoncelle LudwigMasters Publications
Two Violins, Viola and Violoncello SKU: AP.36-M240591 Composed by William...(+)
Two Violins, Viola and
Violoncello SKU:
AP.36-M240591
Composed by William
Ryden. Performance Music
Ensemble; String Quartet.
Ludwig Masters. Score and
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English. An
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Wedding March
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March (Mozart) 3.
Air in F (Handel)
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Graze (Bach) 5.
Adagio (Mozart) 6.
Greensleeves
7.Panis Angelicus
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