| Double Troubles [Conducteur et Parties séparées] Forton Music
Fl/Cl/Sax.Pft - Advanced SKU: FT.FM685 Composed by Paul Saunders. These p...(+)
Fl/Cl/Sax.Pft - Advanced
SKU: FT.FM685
Composed by Paul
Saunders. These pieces
were composed as a direct
consequence of the
increase in College Level
students studying the art
of woodwind doubling.
They are of moderate to
advanced level and are
designed to be played
sitting down, with the
required instruments set
up on. Score and Parts.
Forton Music #FM685.
Published by Forton Music
(FT.FM685). ISBN
9790570485840.
English. These
pieces were composed as a
direct consequence of the
increase in College Level
students studying the art
of woodwind doubling.
They are of moderate to
advanced level and are
designed to be played
sitting down, with the
required instruments set
up on their stands in
exactly the same way as
if the player were in a
pit or studio. The
varying styles are
representative of the
demands that are made on
today’s woodwind
doubler and should prove
a valuable resource for
experienced players
wishing to improve their
skills. $29.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 4 to 6 weeks | | |
| The Ultimate Country Fake Book - 4th Edition
Fake Book [Fake Book] Hal Leonard
Fake Book (Includes melody line and chords). Size 9x12 inches. 568 pages. Publis...(+)
Fake Book (Includes
melody line and chords).
Size 9x12 inches. 568
pages. Published by Hal
Leonard.
(8)$55.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Focus [Complete Set] Orchestre à Cordes [Conducteur et Parties séparées] Jazz Lines Publications
By Stan Getz and Beaux Arts String Ensemble. By Eddie Sauter. Edited by Rob Dubo...(+)
By Stan Getz and Beaux
Arts String Ensemble. By
Eddie Sauter. Edited by
Rob Duboff, Jeffrey
Sultanof, Alex Chilowicz,
and Andrew Homzy.
Arranged by Eddie Sauter.
For string ensemble
(score and parts)
(Soloist (parts in
concert, B-flat, and
E-flat), Violin I (8
parts), Violin II (8
parts), Viola (5 Parts),
Cello (5 Parts) , Double
Bass (3 Parts), Harp,
Piano/Celeste, Percussion
(Snare Drum, Marimba,
Tambourine)). Advanced.
Score and parts.
Published by Jazz Lines
Publications
$399.98 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| The All-Jazz Real Book - C Edition Instruments en Do [Fake Book] Sher Music Company
By Various. Jazz. Fake Book. 550 pages. Published by Sher Music Company. CD Incl...(+)
By Various. Jazz. Fake
Book. 550 pages.
Published by Sher Music
Company. CD Included with
the book contains 37
melodies played by the
following artists:
Bob Sheppard - saxes and
flute
Steve Houghton - drums
Dave Carpenter - acoustic
bass
Paul van Wageningen -
drums
Marc van Wageningen -
electric bass
Larry Dunlap - piano and
synthesizer
Dave Mac Nab - guitar.
(3)$44.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Saxology -- Deep Phat Advance Music
5 Saxophones SATTBar SKU: AP.1-ADV7521 For SATTBar Saxophone Quintet(+)
5 Saxophones SATTBar
SKU: AP.1-ADV7521
For SATTBar Saxophone
Quintet. Composed by
Greg Yasinitsky. 5 or
More; Solo Small
Ensembles; Woodwind -
Saxophone Quintet.
Advance Music: Saxology.
Blues; Jazz. Score and
Part(s). Advance Music
#01-ADV7521. Published by
Advance Music
(AP.1-ADV7521). UPC:
805095075212.
English. Deep Phat,
by Greg Yasinitsky, is a
slow, soulful blues chart
featuring a funky 12/8
rhythmic feel, richly
scored tutti and soli
passages, imaginative
counterpoint, and a
short, improvised solo
for tenor saxophone.
Titles: Dirty, Low Down
Blues * Double-Time
Swing. Arranged for five
saxophones (SAATBar),
piano, guitar, double
bass, and percussion. $21.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Acadia [Conducteur] Theodore Presser Co.
Band Bass Clarinet, Bassoon 1, Bassoon 2, Clarinet, Clarinet 1, Clarinet 2, Clar...(+)
Band Bass Clarinet,
Bassoon 1, Bassoon 2,
Clarinet, Clarinet 1,
Clarinet 2, Clarinet 3,
Contrabass Clarinet,
Contrabassoon, Double
Bass, English Horn,
Euphonium, Flute 1, Flute
2, Horn 1, Horn 2, Horn
3, Horn 4, Oboe 1, Oboe
2, Percussion 1 and more.
SKU: PR.16500103F
Mvt. 3 from Symphony
No. 6 (Three Places in
the East). Composed
by Dan Welcher. Full
score. 60 pages. Theodore
Presser Company
#165-00103F. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.16500103F). ISBN
9781491131763. UPC:
680160680290. Ever
since the success of my
series of wind ensemble
works Places in the West,
I've been wanting to
write a companion piece
for national parks on the
other side of the north
American continent. The
earlier work, consisting
of GLACIER, THE
YELLOWSTONE FIRES,
ARCHES, and ZION, spanned
some twenty years of my
composing life, and since
the pieces called for
differing groups of
instruments, and were in
slightly different styles
from each other, I never
considered them to be
connected except in their
subject matter. In their
depiction of both the
scenery and the human
history within these
wondrous places, they had
a common goal: awaking
the listener to the
fragile beauty that is in
them; and calling
attention to the ever
more crucial need for
preservation and
protection of these wild
places, unique in all the
world. With this new
work, commissioned by a
consortium of college and
conservatory wind
ensembles led by the
University of Georgia, I
decided to build upon
that same model---but to
solidify the process. The
result, consisting of
three movements (each
named for a different
national park in the
eastern US), is a
bona-fide symphony. While
the three pieces could be
performed separately,
they share a musical
theme---and also a common
style and
instrumentation. It is a
true symphony, in that
the first movement is
long and expository, the
second is a rather
tightly structured
scherzo-with-trio, and
the finale is a true
culmination of the whole.
The first movement,
Everglades, was the
original inspiration for
the entire symphony.
Conceived over the course
of two trips to that
astonishing place (which
the native Americans
called River of Grass,
the subtitle of this
movement), this movement
not only conveys a sense
of the humid, lush, and
even frightening scenery
there---but also an
overview of the entire
settling-of- Florida
experience. It contains
not one, but two native
American chants, and also
presents a view of the
staggering influence of
modern man on this
fragile part of the
world. Beginning with a
slow unfolding marked
Heavy, humid, the music
soon presents a gentle,
lyrical theme in the solo
alto saxophone. This
theme, which goes through
three expansive phrases
with breaks in between,
will appear in all three
movements of the
symphony. After the mood
has been established, the
music opens up to a rich,
warm setting of a
Cherokee morning song,
with the simple happiness
that this part of Florida
must have had prior to
the nineteenth century.
This music, enveloping
and comforting, gradually
gives way to a more
frenetic, driven section
representative of the
intrusion of the white
man. Since Florida was
populated and developed
largely due to the
introduction of a train
system, there's a
suggestion of the
mechanized iron horse
driving straight into the
heartland. At that point,
the native Americans
become considerably less
gentle, and a second
chant seems to stand in
the way of the intruder;
a kind of warning song.
The second part of this
movement shows us the
great swampy center of
the peninsula, with its
wildlife both in and out
of the water. A new theme
appears, sad but noble,
suggesting that this land
is precious and must be
protected by all the
people who inhabit it. At
length, the morning song
reappears in all its
splendor, until the
sunset---with one last
iteration of the warning
song in the solo piccolo.
Functioning as a scherzo,
the second movement,
Great Smoky Mountains,
describes not just that
huge park itself, but one
brave soul's attempt to
climb a mountain there.
It begins with three
iterations of the
UR-theme (which began the
first movement as well),
but this time as up-tempo
brass fanfares in
octaves. Each time it
begins again, the theme
is a little slower and
less confident than the
previous time---almost as
though the hiker were
becoming aware of the
daunting mountain before
him. But then, a steady,
quick-pulsed ostinato
appears, in a constantly
shifting meter system of
2/4- 3/4 in alteration,
and the hike has begun.
Over this, a slower new
melody appears, as the
trek up the mountain
progresses. It's a big
mountain, and the ascent
seems to take quite
awhile, with little
breaks in the hiker's
stride, until at length
he simply must stop and
rest. An oboe solo, over
several free cadenza-like
measures, allows us (and
our friend the hiker) to
catch our breath, and
also to view in the
distance the rocky peak
before us. The goal is
somehow even more
daunting than at first,
being closer and thus
more frighteningly steep.
When we do push off
again, it's at a slower
pace, and with more
careful attention to our
footholds as we trek over
broken rocks. Tantalizing
little views of the
valley at every
switchback make our
determination even
stronger. Finally, we
burst through a stand of
pines and----we're at the
summit! The immensity of
the view is overwhelming,
and ultimately humbling.
A brief coda, while we
sit dazed on the rocks,
ends the movement in a
feeling of triumph. The
final movement, Acadia,
is also about a trip. In
the summer of 2014, I
took a sailing trip with
a dear friend from North
Haven, Maine, to the
southern coast of Mt.
Desert Island in Acadia
National Park. The
experience left me both
exuberant and exhausted,
with an appreciation for
the ocean that I hadn't
had previously. The
approach to Acadia
National Park by water,
too, was thrilling: like
the difference between
climbing a mountain on
foot with riding up on a
ski-lift, I felt I'd
earned the right to be
there. The music for this
movement is entirely
based on the opening
UR-theme. There's a sense
of the water and the
mysterious, quiet deep
from the very beginning,
with seagulls and bell
buoys setting the scene.
As we leave the harbor,
the theme (in a canon
between solo euphonium
and tuba) almost seems as
if large subaquatic
animals are observing our
departure. There are
three themes (call them
A, B and C) in this
seafaring journey---but
they are all based on the
UR theme, in its original
form with octaves
displaced, in an
upside-down form, and in
a backwards version as
well. (The ocean, while
appearing to be
unchanging, is always
changing.) We move out
into the main channel
(A), passing several
islands (B), until we
reach the long draw that
parallels the coastline
called Eggemoggin Reach,
and a sudden burst of new
speed (C). Things
suddenly stop, as if the
wind had died, and we
have a vision: is that
really Mt. Desert Island
we can see off the port
bow, vaguely in the
distance? A chorale of
saxophones seems to
suggest that. We push off
anew as the chorale ends,
and go through all three
themes again---but in
different
instrumentations, and
different keys. At the
final tack-turn, there it
is, for real: Mt. Desert
Island, big as life.
We've made it. As we pull
into the harbor, where
we'll secure the boat for
the night, there's a
feeling of achievement.
Our whale and dolphin
friends return, and we
end our journey with
gratitude and
celebration. I am
profoundly grateful to
Jaclyn Hartenberger,
Professor of Conducting
at the University of
Georgia, for leading the
consortium which provided
the commissioning of this
work. $39.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Great Smoky Mountains [Conducteur] Theodore Presser Co.
Band Bass Clarinet, Bassoon 1, Bassoon 2, Clarinet, Clarinet 1, Clarinet 2, Clar...(+)
Band Bass Clarinet,
Bassoon 1, Bassoon 2,
Clarinet, Clarinet 1,
Clarinet 2, Clarinet 3,
Contrabass Clarinet,
Contrabassoon, Double
Bass, English Horn,
Euphonium, Flute 1, Flute
2, Horn 1, Horn 2, Horn
3, Horn 4, Oboe 1, Oboe
2, Percussion 1 and more.
SKU: PR.16500102F
Mvt. 2 from Symphony
No. 6 (Three Places in
the East). Composed
by Dan Welcher. Full
score. 52 pages. Theodore
Presser Company
#165-00102F. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.16500102F). ISBN
9781491131749. UPC:
680160680276. Ever
since the success of my
series of wind ensemble
works Places in the West,
I've been wanting to
write a companion piece
for national parks on the
other side of the north
American continent. The
earlier work, consisting
of GLACIER, THE
YELLOWSTONE FIRES,
ARCHES, and ZION, spanned
some twenty years of my
composing life, and since
the pieces called for
differing groups of
instruments, and were in
slightly different styles
from each other, I never
considered them to be
connected except in their
subject matter. In their
depiction of both the
scenery and the human
history within these
wondrous places, they had
a common goal: awaking
the listener to the
fragile beauty that is in
them; and calling
attention to the ever
more crucial need for
preservation and
protection of these wild
places, unique in all the
world. With this new
work, commissioned by a
consortium of college and
conservatory wind
ensembles led by the
University of Georgia, I
decided to build upon
that same model---but to
solidify the process. The
result, consisting of
three movements (each
named for a different
national park in the
eastern US), is a
bona-fide symphony. While
the three pieces could be
performed separately,
they share a musical
theme---and also a common
style and
instrumentation. It is a
true symphony, in that
the first movement is
long and expository, the
second is a rather
tightly structured
scherzo-with-trio, and
the finale is a true
culmination of the whole.
The first movement,
Everglades, was the
original inspiration for
the entire symphony.
Conceived over the course
of two trips to that
astonishing place (which
the native Americans
called River of Grass,
the subtitle of this
movement), this movement
not only conveys a sense
of the humid, lush, and
even frightening scenery
there---but also an
overview of the entire
settling-of- Florida
experience. It contains
not one, but two native
American chants, and also
presents a view of the
staggering influence of
modern man on this
fragile part of the
world. Beginning with a
slow unfolding marked
Heavy, humid, the music
soon presents a gentle,
lyrical theme in the solo
alto saxophone. This
theme, which goes through
three expansive phrases
with breaks in between,
will appear in all three
movements of the
symphony. After the mood
has been established, the
music opens up to a rich,
warm setting of a
Cherokee morning song,
with the simple happiness
that this part of Florida
must have had prior to
the nineteenth century.
This music, enveloping
and comforting, gradually
gives way to a more
frenetic, driven section
representative of the
intrusion of the white
man. Since Florida was
populated and developed
largely due to the
introduction of a train
system, there's a
suggestion of the
mechanized iron horse
driving straight into the
heartland. At that point,
the native Americans
become considerably less
gentle, and a second
chant seems to stand in
the way of the intruder;
a kind of warning song.
The second part of this
movement shows us the
great swampy center of
the peninsula, with its
wildlife both in and out
of the water. A new theme
appears, sad but noble,
suggesting that this land
is precious and must be
protected by all the
people who inhabit it. At
length, the morning song
reappears in all its
splendor, until the
sunset---with one last
iteration of the warning
song in the solo piccolo.
Functioning as a scherzo,
the second movement,
Great Smoky Mountains,
describes not just that
huge park itself, but one
brave soul's attempt to
climb a mountain there.
It begins with three
iterations of the
UR-theme (which began the
first movement as well),
but this time as up-tempo
brass fanfares in
octaves. Each time it
begins again, the theme
is a little slower and
less confident than the
previous time---almost as
though the hiker were
becoming aware of the
daunting mountain before
him. But then, a steady,
quick-pulsed ostinato
appears, in a constantly
shifting meter system of
2/4- 3/4 in alteration,
and the hike has begun.
Over this, a slower new
melody appears, as the
trek up the mountain
progresses. It's a big
mountain, and the ascent
seems to take quite
awhile, with little
breaks in the hiker's
stride, until at length
he simply must stop and
rest. An oboe solo, over
several free cadenza-like
measures, allows us (and
our friend the hiker) to
catch our breath, and
also to view in the
distance the rocky peak
before us. The goal is
somehow even more
daunting than at first,
being closer and thus
more frighteningly steep.
When we do push off
again, it's at a slower
pace, and with more
careful attention to our
footholds as we trek over
broken rocks. Tantalizing
little views of the
valley at every
switchback make our
determination even
stronger. Finally, we
burst through a stand of
pines and----we're at the
summit! The immensity of
the view is overwhelming,
and ultimately humbling.
A brief coda, while we
sit dazed on the rocks,
ends the movement in a
feeling of triumph. The
final movement, Acadia,
is also about a trip. In
the summer of 2014, I
took a sailing trip with
a dear friend from North
Haven, Maine, to the
southern coast of Mt.
Desert Island in Acadia
National Park. The
experience left me both
exuberant and exhausted,
with an appreciation for
the ocean that I hadn't
had previously. The
approach to Acadia
National Park by water,
too, was thrilling: like
the difference between
climbing a mountain on
foot with riding up on a
ski-lift, I felt I'd
earned the right to be
there. The music for this
movement is entirely
based on the opening
UR-theme. There's a sense
of the water and the
mysterious, quiet deep
from the very beginning,
with seagulls and bell
buoys setting the scene.
As we leave the harbor,
the theme (in a canon
between solo euphonium
and tuba) almost seems as
if large subaquatic
animals are observing our
departure. There are
three themes (call them
A, B and C) in this
seafaring journey---but
they are all based on the
UR theme, in its original
form with octaves
displaced, in an
upside-down form, and in
a backwards version as
well. (The ocean, while
appearing to be
unchanging, is always
changing.) We move out
into the main channel
(A), passing several
islands (B), until we
reach the long draw that
parallels the coastline
called Eggemoggin Reach,
and a sudden burst of new
speed (C). Things
suddenly stop, as if the
wind had died, and we
have a vision: is that
really Mt. Desert Island
we can see off the port
bow, vaguely in the
distance? A chorale of
saxophones seems to
suggest that. We push off
anew as the chorale ends,
and go through all three
themes again---but in
different
instrumentations, and
different keys. At the
final tack-turn, there it
is, for real: Mt. Desert
Island, big as life.
We've made it. As we pull
into the harbor, where
we'll secure the boat for
the night, there's a
feeling of achievement.
Our whale and dolphin
friends return, and we
end our journey with
gratitude and
celebration. I am
profoundly grateful to
Jaclyn Hartenberger,
Professor of Conducting
at the University of
Georgia, for leading the
consortium which provided
the commissioning of this
work. $36.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Everglades (River of Grass) [Conducteur] Theodore Presser Co.
Band Bass Clarinet, Bassoon 1, Bassoon 2, Clarinet, Clarinet 1, Clarinet 2, Clar...(+)
Band Bass Clarinet,
Bassoon 1, Bassoon 2,
Clarinet, Clarinet 1,
Clarinet 2, Clarinet 3,
Contrabass Clarinet,
Contrabassoon, Double
Bass, English Horn,
Euphonium, Flute 1, Flute
2, Horn 1, Horn 2, Horn
3, Horn 4, Oboe 1, Oboe
2, Percussion 1 and more.
SKU: PR.16500101F
Mvt. 1 from Symphony
No. 6 (Three Places in
the East). Composed
by Dan Welcher. Full
score. 52 pages. Theodore
Presser Company
#165-00101F. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.16500101F). ISBN
9781491131725. UPC:
680160680252. Ever
since the success of my
series of wind ensemble
works Places in the West,
I've been wanting to
write a companion piece
for national parks on the
other side of the north
American continent. The
earlier work, consisting
of GLACIER, THE
YELLOWSTONE FIRES,
ARCHES, and ZION, spanned
some twenty years of my
composing life, and since
the pieces called for
differing groups of
instruments, and were in
slightly different styles
from each other, I never
considered them to be
connected except in their
subject matter. In their
depiction of both the
scenery and the human
history within these
wondrous places, they had
a common goal: awaking
the listener to the
fragile beauty that is in
them; and calling
attention to the ever
more crucial need for
preservation and
protection of these wild
places, unique in all the
world. With this new
work, commissioned by a
consortium of college and
conservatory wind
ensembles led by the
University of Georgia, I
decided to build upon
that same model---but to
solidify the process. The
result, consisting of
three movements (each
named for a different
national park in the
eastern US), is a
bona-fide symphony. While
the three pieces could be
performed separately,
they share a musical
theme---and also a common
style and
instrumentation. It is a
true symphony, in that
the first movement is
long and expository, the
second is a rather
tightly structured
scherzo-with-trio, and
the finale is a true
culmination of the whole.
The first movement,
Everglades, was the
original inspiration for
the entire symphony.
Conceived over the course
of two trips to that
astonishing place (which
the native Americans
called River of Grass,
the subtitle of this
movement), this movement
not only conveys a sense
of the humid, lush, and
even frightening scenery
there---but also an
overview of the entire
settling-of- Florida
experience. It contains
not one, but two native
American chants, and also
presents a view of the
staggering influence of
modern man on this
fragile part of the
world. Beginning with a
slow unfolding marked
Heavy, humid, the music
soon presents a gentle,
lyrical theme in the solo
alto saxophone. This
theme, which goes through
three expansive phrases
with breaks in between,
will appear in all three
movements of the
symphony. After the mood
has been established, the
music opens up to a rich,
warm setting of a
Cherokee morning song,
with the simple happiness
that this part of Florida
must have had prior to
the nineteenth century.
This music, enveloping
and comforting, gradually
gives way to a more
frenetic, driven section
representative of the
intrusion of the white
man. Since Florida was
populated and developed
largely due to the
introduction of a train
system, there's a
suggestion of the
mechanized iron horse
driving straight into the
heartland. At that point,
the native Americans
become considerably less
gentle, and a second
chant seems to stand in
the way of the intruder;
a kind of warning song.
The second part of this
movement shows us the
great swampy center of
the peninsula, with its
wildlife both in and out
of the water. A new theme
appears, sad but noble,
suggesting that this land
is precious and must be
protected by all the
people who inhabit it. At
length, the morning song
reappears in all its
splendor, until the
sunset---with one last
iteration of the warning
song in the solo piccolo.
Functioning as a scherzo,
the second movement,
Great Smoky Mountains,
describes not just that
huge park itself, but one
brave soul's attempt to
climb a mountain there.
It begins with three
iterations of the
UR-theme (which began the
first movement as well),
but this time as up-tempo
brass fanfares in
octaves. Each time it
begins again, the theme
is a little slower and
less confident than the
previous time---almost as
though the hiker were
becoming aware of the
daunting mountain before
him. But then, a steady,
quick-pulsed ostinato
appears, in a constantly
shifting meter system of
2/4- 3/4 in alteration,
and the hike has begun.
Over this, a slower new
melody appears, as the
trek up the mountain
progresses. It's a big
mountain, and the ascent
seems to take quite
awhile, with little
breaks in the hiker's
stride, until at length
he simply must stop and
rest. An oboe solo, over
several free cadenza-like
measures, allows us (and
our friend the hiker) to
catch our breath, and
also to view in the
distance the rocky peak
before us. The goal is
somehow even more
daunting than at first,
being closer and thus
more frighteningly steep.
When we do push off
again, it's at a slower
pace, and with more
careful attention to our
footholds as we trek over
broken rocks. Tantalizing
little views of the
valley at every
switchback make our
determination even
stronger. Finally, we
burst through a stand of
pines and----we're at the
summit! The immensity of
the view is overwhelming,
and ultimately humbling.
A brief coda, while we
sit dazed on the rocks,
ends the movement in a
feeling of triumph. The
final movement, Acadia,
is also about a trip. In
the summer of 2014, I
took a sailing trip with
a dear friend from North
Haven, Maine, to the
southern coast of Mt.
Desert Island in Acadia
National Park. The
experience left me both
exuberant and exhausted,
with an appreciation for
the ocean that I hadn't
had previously. The
approach to Acadia
National Park by water,
too, was thrilling: like
the difference between
climbing a mountain on
foot with riding up on a
ski-lift, I felt I'd
earned the right to be
there. The music for this
movement is entirely
based on the opening
UR-theme. There's a sense
of the water and the
mysterious, quiet deep
from the very beginning,
with seagulls and bell
buoys setting the scene.
As we leave the harbor,
the theme (in a canon
between solo euphonium
and tuba) almost seems as
if large subaquatic
animals are observing our
departure. There are
three themes (call them
A, B and C) in this
seafaring journey---but
they are all based on the
UR theme, in its original
form with octaves
displaced, in an
upside-down form, and in
a backwards version as
well. (The ocean, while
appearing to be
unchanging, is always
changing.) We move out
into the main channel
(A), passing several
islands (B), until we
reach the long draw that
parallels the coastline
called Eggemoggin Reach,
and a sudden burst of new
speed (C). Things
suddenly stop, as if the
wind had died, and we
have a vision: is that
really Mt. Desert Island
we can see off the port
bow, vaguely in the
distance? A chorale of
saxophones seems to
suggest that. We push off
anew as the chorale ends,
and go through all three
themes again---but in
different
instrumentations, and
different keys. At the
final tack-turn, there it
is, for real: Mt. Desert
Island, big as life.
We've made it. As we pull
into the harbor, where
we'll secure the boat for
the night, there's a
feeling of achievement.
Our whale and dolphin
friends return, and we
end our journey with
gratitude and
celebration. I am
profoundly grateful to
Jaclyn Hartenberger,
Professor of Conducting
at the University of
Georgia, for leading the
consortium which provided
the commissioning of this
work. $36.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Pipe Dreams (Full Score) - Facile Kendor Music Inc.
Jazz Ensemble saxes have opt. flute doubles - Grade 3 SKU: KN.52705S Comp...(+)
Jazz Ensemble saxes have
opt. flute doubles -
Grade 3 SKU:
KN.52705S Composed by
John LaBarbera. Kendor
Archive Editions. Kendor
Music Inc #52705S.
Published by Kendor Music
Inc (KN.52705S).
Recorded in
1971 by Buddy Rich on the
album A Different
Drummer, this beautiful,
even-8ths ballad features
cameo written solos for
trumpet, alto sax, and
trombonelead alto takes
the only improvised solo
in the chart. When the
main solo work ends, the
ensemble builds into a
strong, dramatic climax
before quieting down for
a soft solo trumpet
flourish and gentle
finish. Duration
3:50. $7.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Pipe Dreams Ensemble Jazz [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Facile Kendor Music Inc.
Jazz Ensemble saxes have opt. flute doubles - Grade 3 SKU: KN.52705 Compo...(+)
Jazz Ensemble saxes have
opt. flute doubles -
Grade 3 SKU:
KN.52705 Composed by
John LaBarbera. Kendor
Jazz Archive Series.
Ballad. Score and set of
parts. Duration 3
minutes, 50 seconds.
Kendor Music Inc #52705.
Published by Kendor Music
Inc (KN.52705).
Recorded in
1971 by Buddy Rich on the
album A Different
Drummer, this beautiful,
even-8ths ballad features
cameo written solos for
trumpet, alto sax, and
trombone; lead alto takes
the only improvised solo
in the chart. When the
main solo work ends, the
ensemble builds into a
strong, dramatic climax
before quieting down for
a soft solo trumpet
flourish and gentle
finish. Duration
3:50. $95.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| That Old Black Magic - Intermédiaire Hal Leonard
Jazz Ensemble (Score & Parts) - Grade 5 SKU: HL.7013650 Composed by Harol...(+)
Jazz Ensemble (Score &
Parts) - Grade 5 SKU:
HL.7013650 Composed
by Harold Arlen and
Johnny Mercer. Arranged
by Mike Tomaro.
Professional
Editions-Jazz Ens. Jazz.
Softcover. Published by
Hal Leonard (HL.7013650).
UPC: 840126921298.
9.0x12.0x0.258
inches. This
well-known standard from
the 1940s never sounded
quite like this!
Featuring a slow,
simmering shuffle funk
style, the rhythm section
lays down the groove with
the trombone section
playing the tune. Solo
space is provided for
tenor sax and trumpet
before the roar of the
full ensemble is
unleashed in a
double-time swing shout
chorus. This chart is a
powerhouse! $60.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| The All-Jazz Real Book - Eb Edition Instruments en Mib [Fake Book] Sher Music Company
| | |
| The All-Jazz Real Book - Bb Edition Instruments en Sib [Partition + CD] Sher Music Company
| | |
| New York, New York Orchestre [Conducteur et Parties séparées] Jazz Lines Publications
Recorded by Frank Sinatra. Edited by Rob DuBoff, Jeffrey Sultanof, and Dy...(+)
Recorded by Frank
Sinatra. Edited by
Rob DuBoff, Jeffrey
Sultanof, and Dylan
Canterbury. Arranged by
Don Costa. Jazz, Swing.
Score and parts.
Published by Jazz Lines
Publications
(JL.JLP-9510).
$65.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Bolero Breitkopf & Härtel
Double bass (3(picc).3(ob.d'am.cor angl.).3(Eb-clar.B-clar). S-Sax,T-Sax(S-Sax)....(+)
Double bass
(3(picc).3(ob.d'am.cor
angl.).3(Eb-clar.B-clar).
S-Sax,T-Sax(S-Sax).3(dble
bsn) - 4.4.3.1 -
timp.perc(4) - hp - cel -
str) SKU:
BR.OB-5299-27
Urtext. Composed
by Maurice Ravel. Edited
by Jean-Francois Monnard.
This edition: double bass
part. Orchestra; stapled.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library).
Jean-Francois
Monnard's new Urtext
edition is the first to
be based on a
musicologically
well-founded source
comparison. Ravel's first
sketch of the score as
well as his final
handwritten score were
laid down as the
principal sources.
Dances/marches; Early
modern. Part. 4 pages.
Duration 16'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #OB 5299-27.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.OB-5299-27). ISBN
9790004339336. 10 x 12.5
inches. Jean-Franco
is Monnard's new Urtext
edition is the first to
be based on a
musicologically
well-founded source
comparison. Ravel's first
sketch of the score as
well as his final
handwritten score were
laid down as the
principal
sources.Jean-Francois
Monnard's new Urtext
edition is the first to
be based on a
musicologically
well-founded source
comparison. Ravel's first
sketch of the score as
well as his final
handwritten score were
laid down as the
principal sources. In his
preface, Monnard examines
Ravel's sound aesthetics
against the background of
concert reception and
historical recordings.
Moreover, he also
provides insights into
Ravel's ideas concerning
the tempo: ,,I must say
that the Bolero is rarely
conducted the way I think
it should. Mengelberg
speeds up and slows down
excessively. Toscanini
takes it twice as fast as
it should be and broadens
the tempo at the close,
which is indicated
nowhere. No: the Bolero
should be played in one
single tempo from the
beginning to the end, in
the plaintive and
monotonous style of
Spanish-Arabian melodies.
The performance material
to Ravel's Bolero can now
also be purchased in its
entirety for the first
time.
Jean-Francoi
s Monnard's new Urtext
edition is the first to
be based on a
musicologically
well-founded source
comparison. Ravel's first
sketch of the score as
well as his final
handwritten score were
laid down as the
principal sources. $7.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 4 weeks | | |
| My Sweetheart Went Down With the Maine Orchestre d'harmonie [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Facile C.L. Barnhouse
Grade 3 SKU: CL.013-0173-00 Composed by Morgan. Arranged by Barnhouse. Ba...(+)
Grade 3 SKU:
CL.013-0173-00
Composed by Morgan.
Arranged by Barnhouse.
Band. Score and set of
parts. Composed 1898.
C.L. Barnhouse
#013-0173-00. Published
by C.L. Barnhouse
(CL.013-0173-00).
Note: This is a
reprint from a vintage
publication of 1898. No
conductor score is
published for this work.
The Solo Cornet part
serves as a conductor
guide. Due to the era of
this work, saxophone and
double-reed parts are not
published. Parts for Eb
Horns are included; no F
Horn parts are published
for this work. If a C
Piccolo/C Flute part was
not published originally,
one has been subsequently
added by our editorial
staff. $50.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Compassion from Invictus: A Passion Soli, choeur mixte et accompagnement [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Facile MorningStar Music Publishers
Soprano voice solo, SATB choir, and piano (E-flat Soprano saxophone, 2 Horns in ...(+)
Soprano voice solo, SATB
choir, and piano (E-flat
Soprano saxophone, 2
Horns in F, Piano, Organ
(or digital keyboard),
Double String Quartet,
Double Bass) - Early
Intermediate SKU:
MN.56-0108 Composed
by Howard Goodall. Lent,
Holy Week, Triduum/Three
Days, Tenebrae, 21st
Century. Score &
instrument parts.
Duration 6 minutes, 19
seconds. MorningStar
Music Publishers
#56-0108. Published by
MorningStar Music
Publishers (MN.56-0108).
UPC: 688670221255.
English, Latin. Psalms
142; Jeremiah 3:48, 52,
56. Invictus: A
Passion addresses one of
the world’s most
powerful stories through
the lens of the modern
world. The texts, written
or inspired by women,
describe not only human
suffering and persecution
but also the human
capacity for love and
humility in the face of
tyranny. Composer Howard
Goodall is uniquely
suited to bring these
texts to life with music
of emotional clarity and
sweeping force. This
excerpt is scored for
soprano solo, SATB choir
and piano. This fourth
movement of the larger
work is inspired by the
extraordinary story of
Irena Sendler née
Krzyżanowska, a Polish
nurse and head of
Żegota, the Polish
Council to Aid Jews in
the Second World War,
whose personal
interventions saved the
lives of approximately
2,500 Jewish children in
the Warsaw Ghetto,
smuggling them to safety,
acts of humanitarian
bravery that eventually
caused her arrest and
torture by the Gestapo.
She is honoured as
Righteous Amongst the
Nations at Yad Vashem,
Jerusalem. The Latin
texts of this movement
are taken from the Book
of Lamentations
(“My eye hath run
down with streams of
water, for the
destruction of the
daughter of my people. My
enemies have chased me
and caught me like a
bird, without
cause…â€) and
from Psalm 142, the Old
Testament being the
meeting-point of
Sendler’s
Catholicism and the
Jewish tradition of those
whose lives she saved.
Duration 6:19. $3.35 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Hang Time Ensemble Jazz [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Intermédiaire Kendor Music Inc.
Jazz Ensemble alto & tenor saxes double on flute, trumpets double on flugelhorn ...(+)
Jazz Ensemble alto &
tenor saxes double on
flute, trumpets double on
flugelhorn - Grade 3.5
SKU: KN.52375
Composed by Jeff Jarvis.
Kendor Jazz Archive
Series. Medium Swing.
Score and set of parts.
Duration 3 minutes, 40
seconds. Kendor Music Inc
#52375. Published by
Kendor Music Inc
(KN.52375). In
this solo feature for
flugelhorn, solid swing
figures, a medium tempo,
and idiomatic writing for
all sections come
together with excellent
results. A confident
full-band chorus
culminates in a strong,
dramatic closing that'll
bring the house down.
Rhythm section parts are
partially notated with
chords cued. Duration
3:40. $95.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Hang Time (Full Score) - Intermédiaire Kendor Music Inc.
Jazz Ensemble alto & tenor saxes double on flute, trumpets double on flugelhorn ...(+)
Jazz Ensemble alto &
tenor saxes double on
flute, trumpets double on
flugelhorn - Grade 3.5
SKU: KN.52375S
Composed by Jeff Jarvis.
Kendor Archive Editions.
Kendor Music Inc #52375S.
Published by Kendor Music
Inc (KN.52375S).
In this solo
feature for flugelhorn,
solid swing figures, a
medium tempo, and
idiomatic writing for all
sections come together
with excellent results. A
confident full-band
chorus culminates in a
strong, dramatic closing
that'll bring the house
down. Rhythm section
parts are partially
notated with chords cued.
Duration 3:40. $7.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Jazz Ensemble Vol. 1 [Conducteur] Universal Edition
Mixed Ensembles Alto Saxophone, Bass Guitar, Bassoon, Cello, Clarinet, Double Ba...(+)
Mixed Ensembles Alto
Saxophone, Bass Guitar,
Bassoon, Cello, Clarinet,
Double Bass, Eb Horn,
Euphonium, Flute, French
Horn, Guitar, Oboe, Tenor
Saxophone, Trombone,
Trumpet, Tuba, Violin
SKU: PR.UE037105
Down by the Riverside
Joshua fough the Battle
of Jericho Dry Bones for
flexible ensemble
arranged by James
Rae. Arranged by
James Rae. Score. With
Standard notation. 33
pages. Universal Edition
#UE037105. Published by
Universal Edition
(PR.UE037105). ISBN
9783702474188. UPC:
803452071297. James
Rae offers fully flexible
jazz arrangements of
three well-known tunes:
Down by the Riverside,
Joshua Fought the Battle
of Jericho, and Dry
Bones. The parts cover a
range of abilities and
all parts are available
as download from UE.
While solos are written
out, Rae also includes
chord symbols for
improvisation. Jazz
Ensemble, Volume 1 is
designed to be useful for
general music classes,
and would serve dedicated
amateur groups, as
well. $24.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
1 |