| Rise Again Songbook Paroles et Accords Hal Leonard
(Words and Chords to Nearly 1200 Songs 9x12 Spiral Bound). Edited by Annie Patte...(+)
(Words and Chords to
Nearly 1200 Songs 9x12
Spiral Bound). Edited by
Annie Patterson and Peter
Blood. For Vocal. Vocal.
Softcover. 304 pages.
Published by Hal Leonard
$39.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Rise Again Songbook Hal Leonard
(Words and Chords to Nearly 1200 Songs Spiral-Bound). Edited by Annie Patterson ...(+)
(Words and Chords to
Nearly 1200 Songs
Spiral-Bound). Edited by
Annie Patterson and Peter
Blood. For Vocal. Vocal.
Softcover. 304 pages.
Published by Hal Leonard
$34.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Rise Up Singing
Paroles et Accords [Partition] Hal Leonard
The Group Singing Songbook. By Various. Vocal. Size 9.5x12 inches. 281 pages. Pu...(+)
The Group Singing
Songbook. By Various.
Vocal. Size 9.5x12
inches. 281 pages.
Published by Hal Leonard.
(1)$39.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Rise Up Singing Paroles et Accords [Partition] Hal Leonard
Arranged by Peter Blood, Annie Patterson. Vocal. Size 7.5x10.5 inches. 283 pages...(+)
Arranged by Peter Blood,
Annie Patterson. Vocal.
Size 7.5x10.5 inches. 283
pages. Published by Hal
Leonard.
(1)$34.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| The Hymn Fake Book - C Edition
Ligne De Mélodie, Paroles et Accords [Fake Book] - Facile Hal Leonard
For voice and C instrument. Format: fakebook (spiral bound). With vocal melody, ...(+)
For voice and C
instrument. Format:
fakebook (spiral bound).
With vocal melody,
lyrics, piano
accompaniment, chord
names and leadsheet
notation. Hymn. Series:
Hal Leonard Fake Books.
494 pages. 9x12 inches.
Published by Hal Leonard.
(3)$39.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Prophesies [Conducteur et Parties séparées] Theodore Presser Co.
Chamber Music Cello, Viola, Violin 1, Violin 2 SKU: PR.114419030 Score...(+)
Chamber Music Cello,
Viola, Violin 1, Violin 2
SKU: PR.114419030
Score and Parts.
Composed by Mohammed
Fairouz. Sws. Score and
parts. With Standard
notation. 68 pages.
Duration 25 minutes.
Theodore Presser Company
#114-41903. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.114419030). ISBN
9781491114124. UPC:
680160669851. 9 x 12
inches. A
fascination with
polycultural synergy
between diverse literary
textsdrives the
inspiration for much of
Mohammed Fairouz’s
prodigiouscreative
output, including
instrumental music as
well as vocal. Inhis
profound and extensive
essay preceding the
score, Fairouz shedslight
on how Edgar Allen
Poe’s “Israfel”
relates to the
prophetsand prophesies of
the Quran, Old Testament,
and New Testament.The
eight-movement quartet
may be heard as a
dramatic galleryof
portraits and of
story-telling,
flourishing in a
post-traditionallanguage
that is at once
vernacular and spiritual,
Middle Easternand
Western. The complete set
of score and parts is
included in
thispublication. (See
pages 2-3 of score for
clear distinction of
paragraphs,
etc.)Prophesies, by
Mohammed FairouzEdgar
Allen Poe’s rendition
of Israfel was the point
of departure for the
final movement of my
previous stringquartet
which is titled The Named
Angels. At the opening of
his poem, Poe evokes the
Quran:“And the angel
Israfel, whose
heartstrings are a lute,
and who has the sweetest
voice of all God’s
creatures.”This informs
the first lines of the
poem that, in turn, gave
me the title for the
final movement of The
Named
Angels,“Israfel’s
Spell”:In Heaven a
spirit doth dwell“Whose
heartstrings are a
lute”None sing so
wildly wellAs the angel
Israfel,And the giddy
stars (so legends
tell),Ceasing their
hymns, attend the spellOf
his voice, all mute.It is
the end of that poem,
however, that is the
starting point for the
current quartet,
Prophesies, which
concernsitself with
mortal prophets rather
than eternal Angelic
spirits.If I could
dwellWhere IsrafelHath
dwelt, and he where I,He
might not sing so wildly
wellA mortal melody,While
a bolder note than this
might swellFrom my lyre
within the sky.Islamic
thought has asked us to
look at the example of
the prophets. That’s
significant because of
the fact thatJoseph and
all the prophets were
human beings with the
flaws of human beings. No
prophet was perfect,
andIslamic tradition has
never asked its followers
to aspire to the example
of the Angels, the
perfected ones. Instead
weare given the gift of
our prophets. While The
Named Angels drew on the
motion and energy of
everlasting
spirits,Prophesies is a
depiction of the
movements within our own
mortal coil.This quartet
is a continuation of a
long tradition of Muslim
artists telling their
stories and singing their
songs.Many of these
renditions are, in fact,
figurative and (contrary
to popular belief) the
Quran contains no
“Islamicedict”
prohibiting figurative
renditions of the figures
described in the Old
Testament, New Testament,
or Quran.The majority of
artists, however, have
preferred eternal and
abstract forms such as
words and their
calligraphicrepresentatio
ns, poems (Yusuf and
Zuleikha or the
Conference of Birds come
immediately to mind),
architecture,and many
other non-figurative art
forms to the
representation of man.
These cold, ancient, and
everlasting shapesof
unending time flourished,
and the divine infinity
of representing geometric
forms gained favor over
the placementof the
explicit representation
of mankind and our own
likeness at the center of
the universes.Adding the
string quartet to these
forms which express the
recursive spheres of
heavens and earth
abstractly shouldexplain
why I have chosen to
render higher things
through the use of music
without the addition of
words or anyother
art-form. It is the
abstract art of pure
form, in which all is
form and all is content,
which compels me.
Thisquartet should be
seen as no more
programmatic than the
arches of the Great
Mosque at Cordoba.The
first movement, Yāqub
(Jacob), is slow, quiet
and prayerful. It evokes
the patient sorrow of a
slow choraledeveloping
over time as it coaxes
our pulse out of the
ticking of a clock-like
meter that defines our
day-to-day livesand into
a divine eternity.The
second, Saleh, imagines
the spirit of that
desert-prophet through
the use of a Liwa; the
dance-sequence that
hasbeen such a prevalent
form of expression in the
Arabian Peninsula for
much of our recorded
history.The third
movement is titled
Dawoōd, and it is
emblematic of the beloved
Prophet, King, and
Psalmist, David.Though it
has no lyrics, the
movement functions as a
dabkeh (an ancient dance
native to the Levant) and
also “sets”the
opening of Psalm 100
(Make a joyful noise unto
the Lord, all ye lands).
This line is never set to
music or sung inthe
quartet but is evoked
through the rhythmic
shape of the violin part
which imitates the
phonology and rhythmof my
speaking the opening line
in the Hebrew and
develops the contours of
that line incessantly
throughout
themovement.3The fourth
movement is an ode to
Yousef (Joseph) and
relates to the first
movement in tempo and
tone just as
Josephrelates to Jacob,
his father. Together, the
first and fourth
movements provide a sort
of Lamentation and
relief.Joseph had the
appearance of a noble
angel, but he was very
much a human being. And
the story of this
particularprophet had
tragic beginnings many
years before he found
himself in a position of
power in Egypt. Back in
his youth,still among the
Israelites, Joseph
experienced a series of
revelations through his
dreams that spoke of his
impendingcareer in
prophecy. He confided his
dreams to his father, the
Prophet Jacob, who told
his son of the greatness
thatawaited him in his
future only to have his
brothers throw him into a
well and leave him for
dead. Joseph
eventuallyfound his way
from Israel to Egypt and
rose out of slavery into
a position of power.
Meanwhile, famine engulfs
Israel.Forty years pass,
and back in the land of
Jacob and Rachel, of
Joseph’s brothers and
Abraham’s tribe, Israel
wasnot spared the effects
of the famine. They
sorely lacked Joseph’s
prophecy and his vision.
The Qur’an then tells
usthat Jacob, sensing
Joseph, sends the other
brothers to Egypt
instructing them to come
back with food and
grain.Arriving in Egypt,
they unwittingly appear
before Joseph. They
don’t recognize their
little brother who has
risen toa position of
might, dressed in his
Egyptian regalia. They
ask for the food and the
grain.After some
conversation, Joseph is
no longer able to contain
his emotion. Overcome, he
reveals himself to his
nowterrified brothers. He
embraces them. He asks
them eagerly, “How is
our father?” Joseph
gives them the gift of
thefood and the grain
that they came in search
of. He relieves them from
hunger and alleviates
their fear. He sendsthem
back with proof that he
is alive, and it is this
joyful proof from the
miraculous hands of a
prophet that bringsback
the ancient Jacob’s
vision after 40 years of
blindness.In this story,
I am struck by the fact
that Joseph may not have
made the decision to
forgive his brothers on
thespot, but that
something inside the
prophet’s soul found
forgiveness and peace for
the brothers who had so
gravelywronged him at
some point along his
journey. I would suspect
this point to have been
present at Joseph’s
inception,even before he
had ever been
wronged.This is proof, if
we needed it, that
Joseph’s angel-like
beauty was not only
physical and external,
but also internalas well:
Joseph possessed a
profound loveliness of
spirit that bound his
appearance and his soul.
In Joseph, formand soul
are one.Time is to
musicians what light is
to a painter. In this
way, the story of Joseph
also shows us that time
can affectour perception
of even the most tragic
wounds. In fact, the most
common Arabic word for
“human being” is
insaan,which shares its
roots with the word
insaa, “to forget.”
While our ability to
remember is essential to
how we learnabout
ourselves, our capacity
to “forgive and
forget” may also be one
of our great gifts as
human beings.The fifth
movement follows my ode
to Joseph with a
structural memory of
Mūsa (Moses). The
movement consistsentirely
of descending motifs
which I constructed as an
indication of Moses’
descending movement as he
emergedto his people from
the heights of Mt. Sinai.
The music is constructed
in five phrases which
function as a
formalreference to the
five books of Moses, the
Pentateuch. The movement
is placed as the fifth of
the quartet for the
samereason.While Joseph
is always evoked as
supremely beautiful in
the Books of Judaism,
Christianity, and Islam,
Suleiman(Solomon) is
described as surpassing
in his quicksilver
intelligence. This
movement is composed of a
seven-partriddle which
passes by in an instant
but can be caught by the
attentive listener. From
Solomon, we work our
wayback to Yishak (Isaac)
in a seventh movement
that evokes Isaac’s
literal meaning in Arabic
and Hebrew: laughter.The
eighth and final movement
of this quartet is named
for the Patriarch of the
entire Book: Ibrahim
(Abraham). Itrelates to
Isaac just as Joseph
relates to Jacob; they
are father and son. The
lines are prayerful and
contemplative;the form of
the music evolves from a
fugue joining together
many different forms of
prayer into a single
tapestry ofcounterpoint,
to the cyclical form of
this entire quartet which
is rendered through the
motion of pilgrims
circling theKaaba (cube)
in Mecca — a structure
which was built by
Abraham for Hagaar and
their son Ismail.These
are just some of the
figures that are
cherished by all three of
the Middle Eastern
monotheisms
(Judaism,Christianity,
and Islam) that the
Qur’an refers to
collectively as Ahl
Al-Kitab. This Arabic
phrase is most
commonlytranslated as
“The People of the
Book,” but here the
most common translation
is a flawed one: the
Arabic word“ahl”
means “family” and
not just “people.” A
better translation would
be “Family of the
Book.” Each of the
eightmovements of
Prophesies grows from a
single musical cell.This
quartet is a family
album.—Mohammed Fairouz
(2018. $45.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Spring in Dresden [Conducteur] Theodore Presser Co.
Orchestra Bass Drum, Bassoon 1, Bassoon 2, Clarinet 1, Clarinet 2, Contrabass, F...(+)
Orchestra Bass Drum,
Bassoon 1, Bassoon 2,
Clarinet 1, Clarinet 2,
Contrabass, Flute 1,
Flute 2, Harp, Horn 1,
Horn 2, Horn 3, Horn 4,
Marimba, Oboe 1, Oboe 2,
Percussion 1, Percussion
2, Percussion 3, Snare
Drum, Suspended Cymbal,
Tam-tam, Trombone 1 and
more. SKU:
PR.11641963S Composed
by Chen Yi. Full score.
58 pages. Duration 20
minutes. Theodore Presser
Company #116-41963S.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.11641963S). UPC:
680160684472. The
violin concerto is
commissioned by Friends
of Dresden Music
Foundation for American
soloist Mira Wang and the
New York Philharmonic and
Staatskapelle Dresden as
an American commemoration
of the reconstruction of
the Dresden Frauenkirche,
60 years after its
destruction in World War
II by American and
British Forces. The world
premiere is given at the
Semperoper in Dresden,
Germany, on October 9, 10
& 11, 2005, conducted
by Ivan Fischer. Full of
excitement and inner
power, the musical image
is vivid, energetic,
sometimes lyrical and
sometimes dramatic. The
major angular thematic
material (a three note
motive) consists of big
leaps in interval (a
perfect fourth downward
and then a minor seventh
upward, first introduced
by the violin solo in
measures 27-29). Except
for the cadenzas which
stand at the middle
(Rehearsal E, measure
127) and the two ends of
the piece as a frame, the
virtuosic violin solo
line is always
accompanied by the ever
moving and growing
textures in the
background. The rests
between long and short
phrases symbolize the
space in Chinese
paintings. The Beijing
Opera reciting tune, and
the fingerings to produce
sliding tones in the
performance of the
Chinese fiddle erhu are
also borrowed in the
writing and the
performing of the western
instruments. The musical
imagination of the violin
concerto came from an
ancient Chinese poem with
the same title, written
by Du Fu (712-770) in
Tang Dynasty. Happy Rain
on a Spring Night by Du
Fu (712-770 in Tang
Dynasty) Happy rain comes
in time, When spring is
in its prime. With night
breeze it will fall, And
quietly moisten all.
Clouds darken wild roads,
Light brightens a little
boat. Saturated at dawn,
With flowers blooming the
town. (English
translation by Chen Yi
from the original poem in
Chinese) The following is
the poem in its original
Chinese form, and the
detailed introduction on
the structural plan of
the violin concerto
Spring in Dresden. It's
like the welcome rain on
a quiet spring night that
nurtures the budding
seeds, our new society is
pushing us forward to the
new future. The music
reflects the scenes and
the expression according
to the meaning of the
poem when it's being
unfolded line by line.
Although the tempo is set
63 quarter notes per
minute throughout (played
vividly, never slow
down), the tension is
being built up from the
quiet background in the
beginning, to the
sustained climax towards
the end. The musical
image in Rehearsal A and
B (measures 39-80)
represents the first four
lines of the poem. The
wind instruments response
to the rustling of fast
moving notes on muted
string triplets,
decorated by occasional
strokes produced by
metallic string sound and
high woodwind gestures.
The music in Rehearsal C
and D (measures 81-126)
represents the next two
lines of the poem. It's
so dark, a little light
in the boat is shimmering
on the lake... The
breathy sound and key
slaps on the flutes
create a mysterious
atmosphere, in a dialogue
with other instruments.
The cello glissandi
recite the poem in the
tone of Mandarin, echoed
by the string harmonics.
The music in Rehearsal F,
G and H (m 129-202) is a
toccata, starting in the
orchestra (led by the
marimba), which builds up
a big shape, to reach the
climax in m. 157
(Rehearsal G, the
location of the Golden
Section, according to the
length of the music
without cadenzas), and
keeps the vivid scene
towards the coda (from
Rehearsal I, m. 203),
which stands on the
energetic peak until the
clear cutoff on measure
239, followed by the
short, yet powerful solo
conclusion with the
lingering echo produced
by the high string
harmonics. On the top,
there is a recall of the
three note motive in the
sound of wonderland,
touched by the motor-on
vibraphone meaningfully.
The music is written for
2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2
clarinets (in Bb), 2
bassoons, 4 French horns
(in F), 2 trumpets (in
Bb), 3 trombones, tuba,
harp, 3 percussion
players (Perc. 1:
xylophone; Perc. 2:
suspended cymbal,
Japanese high woodblock,
snare drum, bass drum and
vibraphone; Perc. 3:
marimba and tam-tam),
solo violin, and strings.
Duration is about 20
minutes. The violin
concerto is commissioned
by Friends of Dresden
Music Foundation for
American soloist Mira
Wang and the New York
Philharmonic and
Staatskapelle Dresden as
an American commemoration
of the reconstruction of
the Dresden Frauenkirche,
60 years after its
destruction in World War
II by American and
British Forces. The world
premiere is given at the
Semperoper in Dresden,
Germany, on October 9, 10
& 11, 2005, conducted by
Ivan Fischer.Full of
excitement and inner
power, the musical image
is vivid, energetic,
sometimeslyrical and
sometimes dramatic. The
major angular thematic
material (a three
notemotive) consists of
big leaps in interval (a
perfect fourth downward
and then a minorseventh
upward, first introduced
by the violin solo in
measures 27-29). Except
for thecadenzas which
stand at the middle
(Rehearsal E, measure
127) and the two ends of
the piece as a frame, the
virtuosic violin solo
line is always
accompanied by the ever
moving and growing
textures in the
background. The rests
between long and short
phrases symbolize the
space in Chinese
paintings. The Beijing
Opera reciting tune, and
the fingerings to produce
sliding tones in the
performance of the
Chinese fiddle erhu are
also borrowed in the
writing and the
performing of the western
instruments.The musical
imagination of the violin
concerto came from an
ancient Chinese poem with
the same title, written
by Du Fu (712-770) in
Tang Dynasty.Happy Rain
on a Spring Nightby Du Fu
(712-770 in Tang
Dynasty)Happy rain comes
in time,When spring is in
its prime.With night
breeze it will fall,And
quietly moisten
all.Clouds darken wild
roads,Light brightens a
little boat.Saturated at
dawn,With flowers
blooming the
town.(English translation
by Chen Yi from the
original poem in
Chinese)The following is
the poem in its original
Chinese form, and the
detailed introduction
onthe structural plan of
the violin concerto
Spring in
Dresden.It’s like
the welcome rain on a
quiet spring night that
nurtures the budding
seeds, our newsociety is
pushing us forward to the
new future. The music
reflects the scenes and
theexpression according
to the meaning of the
poem when it’s
being unfolded line by
line.Although the tempo
is set 63 quarter notes
per minute throughout
(played vividly,
neverslow down), the
tension is being built up
from the quiet background
in the beginning, tothe
sustained climax towards
the end. The musical
image in Rehearsal A and
B (measures39-80)
represents the first four
lines of the poem. The
wind instruments response
to therustling of fast
moving notes on muted
string triplets,
decorated by occasional
strokesproduced by
metallic string sound and
high woodwind gestures.
The music in RehearsalC
and D (measures 81-126)
represents the next two
lines of the poem. It's
so dark, a littlelight in
the boat is shimmering on
the lake... The breathy
sound and key slaps on
theflutes create a
mysterious atmosphere, in
a dialogue with other
instruments. The
celloglissandi recite the
poem in the tone of
Mandarin, echoed by the
string harmonics.
Themusic in Rehearsal F,
G and H (m 129-202) is a
toccata, starting in the
orchestra (led bythe
marimba), which builds up
a big shape, to reach the
climax in m. 157
(Rehearsal G,the location
of the Golden Section,
according to the length
of the music
withoutcadenzas), and
keeps the vivid scene
towards the coda (from
Rehearsal I, m. 203),
whichstands on the
energetic peak until the
clear cutoff on measure
239, followed by the
short,yet powerful solo
conclusion with the
lingering echo produced
by the high
stringharmonics. On the
top, there is a recall of
the three note motive in
the sound ofwonderland,
touched by the motor-on
vibraphone
meaningfully.The music is
written for 2 flutes, 2
oboes, 2 clarinets (in
Bb), 2 bassoons, 4 French
horns (in F), 2 trumpets
(in Bb), 3 trombones,
tuba, harp, 3 percussion
players (Perc.
1:xylophone; Perc. 2:
suspended cymbal,
Japanese high woodblock,
snare drum, bass drum and
vibraphone; Perc. 3:
marimba and tam-tam),
solo violin, and
strings.Duration is about
20 minutes. $35.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Spring in Dresden Theodore Presser Co.
Orchestra Bass Drum, Bassoon 1, Bassoon 2, Clarinet 1, Clarinet 2, Contrabass, F...(+)
Orchestra Bass Drum,
Bassoon 1, Bassoon 2,
Clarinet 1, Clarinet 2,
Contrabass, Flute 1,
Flute 2, Harp, Horn 1,
Horn 2, Horn 3, Horn 4,
Marimba, Oboe 1, Oboe 2,
Percussion 1, Percussion
2, Percussion 3, Snare
Drum, Suspended Cymbal,
Tam-tam, Trombone 1 and
more. SKU:
PR.11641963SP
Composed by Chen Yi.
Part. 11 pages. Duration
20 minutes. Theodore
Presser Company
#116-41963SP. Published
by Theodore Presser
Company (PR.11641963SP).
UPC:
680160684496. The
violin concerto is
commissioned by Friends
of Dresden Music
Foundation for American
soloist Mira Wang and the
New York Philharmonic and
Staatskapelle Dresden as
an American commemoration
of the reconstruction of
the Dresden Frauenkirche,
60 years after its
destruction in World War
II by American and
British Forces. The world
premiere is given at the
Semperoper in Dresden,
Germany, on October 9, 10
& 11, 2005, conducted
by Ivan Fischer. Full of
excitement and inner
power, the musical image
is vivid, energetic,
sometimes lyrical and
sometimes dramatic. The
major angular thematic
material (a three note
motive) consists of big
leaps in interval (a
perfect fourth downward
and then a minor seventh
upward, first introduced
by the violin solo in
measures 27-29). Except
for the cadenzas which
stand at the middle
(Rehearsal E, measure
127) and the two ends of
the piece as a frame, the
virtuosic violin solo
line is always
accompanied by the ever
moving and growing
textures in the
background. The rests
between long and short
phrases symbolize the
space in Chinese
paintings. The Beijing
Opera reciting tune, and
the fingerings to produce
sliding tones in the
performance of the
Chinese fiddle erhu are
also borrowed in the
writing and the
performing of the western
instruments. The musical
imagination of the violin
concerto came from an
ancient Chinese poem with
the same title, written
by Du Fu (712-770) in
Tang Dynasty. Happy Rain
on a Spring Night by Du
Fu (712-770 in Tang
Dynasty) Happy rain comes
in time, When spring is
in its prime. With night
breeze it will fall, And
quietly moisten all.
Clouds darken wild roads,
Light brightens a little
boat. Saturated at dawn,
With flowers blooming the
town. (English
translation by Chen Yi
from the original poem in
Chinese) The following is
the poem in its original
Chinese form, and the
detailed introduction on
the structural plan of
the violin concerto
Spring in Dresden. It's
like the welcome rain on
a quiet spring night that
nurtures the budding
seeds, our new society is
pushing us forward to the
new future. The music
reflects the scenes and
the expression according
to the meaning of the
poem when it's being
unfolded line by line.
Although the tempo is set
63 quarter notes per
minute throughout (played
vividly, never slow
down), the tension is
being built up from the
quiet background in the
beginning, to the
sustained climax towards
the end. The musical
image in Rehearsal A and
B (measures 39-80)
represents the first four
lines of the poem. The
wind instruments response
to the rustling of fast
moving notes on muted
string triplets,
decorated by occasional
strokes produced by
metallic string sound and
high woodwind gestures.
The music in Rehearsal C
and D (measures 81-126)
represents the next two
lines of the poem. It's
so dark, a little light
in the boat is shimmering
on the lake... The
breathy sound and key
slaps on the flutes
create a mysterious
atmosphere, in a dialogue
with other instruments.
The cello glissandi
recite the poem in the
tone of Mandarin, echoed
by the string harmonics.
The music in Rehearsal F,
G and H (m 129-202) is a
toccata, starting in the
orchestra (led by the
marimba), which builds up
a big shape, to reach the
climax in m. 157
(Rehearsal G, the
location of the Golden
Section, according to the
length of the music
without cadenzas), and
keeps the vivid scene
towards the coda (from
Rehearsal I, m. 203),
which stands on the
energetic peak until the
clear cutoff on measure
239, followed by the
short, yet powerful solo
conclusion with the
lingering echo produced
by the high string
harmonics. On the top,
there is a recall of the
three note motive in the
sound of wonderland,
touched by the motor-on
vibraphone meaningfully.
The music is written for
2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2
clarinets (in Bb), 2
bassoons, 4 French horns
(in F), 2 trumpets (in
Bb), 3 trombones, tuba,
harp, 3 percussion
players (Perc. 1:
xylophone; Perc. 2:
suspended cymbal,
Japanese high woodblock,
snare drum, bass drum and
vibraphone; Perc. 3:
marimba and tam-tam),
solo violin, and strings.
Duration is about 20
minutes. The violin
concerto is commissioned
by Friends of Dresden
Music Foundation for
American soloist Mira
Wang and the New York
Philharmonic and
Staatskapelle Dresden as
an American commemoration
of the reconstruction of
the Dresden Frauenkirche,
60 years after its
destruction in World War
II by American and
British Forces. The world
premiere is given at the
Semperoper in Dresden,
Germany, on October 9, 10
& 11, 2005, conducted by
Ivan Fischer.Full of
excitement and inner
power, the musical image
is vivid, energetic,
sometimeslyrical and
sometimes dramatic. The
major angular thematic
material (a three
notemotive) consists of
big leaps in interval (a
perfect fourth downward
and then a minorseventh
upward, first introduced
by the violin solo in
measures 27-29). Except
for thecadenzas which
stand at the middle
(Rehearsal E, measure
127) and the two ends of
the piece as a frame, the
virtuosic violin solo
line is always
accompanied by the ever
moving and growing
textures in the
background. The rests
between long and short
phrases symbolize the
space in Chinese
paintings. The Beijing
Opera reciting tune, and
the fingerings to produce
sliding tones in the
performance of the
Chinese fiddle erhu are
also borrowed in the
writing and the
performing of the western
instruments.The musical
imagination of the violin
concerto came from an
ancient Chinese poem with
the same title, written
by Du Fu (712-770) in
Tang Dynasty.Happy Rain
on a Spring Nightby Du Fu
(712-770 in Tang
Dynasty)Happy rain comes
in time,When spring is in
its prime.With night
breeze it will fall,And
quietly moisten
all.Clouds darken wild
roads,Light brightens a
little boat.Saturated at
dawn,With flowers
blooming the
town.(English translation
by Chen Yi from the
original poem in
Chinese)The following is
the poem in its original
Chinese form, and the
detailed introduction
onthe structural plan of
the violin concerto
Spring in
Dresden.It’s like
the welcome rain on a
quiet spring night that
nurtures the budding
seeds, our newsociety is
pushing us forward to the
new future. The music
reflects the scenes and
theexpression according
to the meaning of the
poem when it’s
being unfolded line by
line.Although the tempo
is set 63 quarter notes
per minute throughout
(played vividly,
neverslow down), the
tension is being built up
from the quiet background
in the beginning, tothe
sustained climax towards
the end. The musical
image in Rehearsal A and
B (measures39-80)
represents the first four
lines of the poem. The
wind instruments response
to therustling of fast
moving notes on muted
string triplets,
decorated by occasional
strokesproduced by
metallic string sound and
high woodwind gestures.
The music in RehearsalC
and D (measures 81-126)
represents the next two
lines of the poem. It's
so dark, a littlelight in
the boat is shimmering on
the lake... The breathy
sound and key slaps on
theflutes create a
mysterious atmosphere, in
a dialogue with other
instruments. The
celloglissandi recite the
poem in the tone of
Mandarin, echoed by the
string harmonics.
Themusic in Rehearsal F,
G and H (m 129-202) is a
toccata, starting in the
orchestra (led bythe
marimba), which builds up
a big shape, to reach the
climax in m. 157
(Rehearsal G,the location
of the Golden Section,
according to the length
of the music
withoutcadenzas), and
keeps the vivid scene
towards the coda (from
Rehearsal I, m. 203),
whichstands on the
energetic peak until the
clear cutoff on measure
239, followed by the
short,yet powerful solo
conclusion with the
lingering echo produced
by the high
stringharmonics. On the
top, there is a recall of
the three note motive in
the sound ofwonderland,
touched by the motor-on
vibraphone
meaningfully.The music is
written for 2 flutes, 2
oboes, 2 clarinets (in
Bb), 2 bassoons, 4 French
horns (in F), 2 trumpets
(in Bb), 3 trombones,
tuba, harp, 3 percussion
players (Perc.
1:xylophone; Perc. 2:
suspended cymbal,
Japanese high woodblock,
snare drum, bass drum and
vibraphone; Perc. 3:
marimba and tam-tam),
solo violin, and
strings.Duration is about
20 minutes. $25.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Spring in Dresden Theodore Presser Co.
Orchestra Bass Drum, Bassoon 1, Bassoon 2, Clarinet 1, Clarinet 2, Contrabass, F...(+)
Orchestra Bass Drum,
Bassoon 1, Bassoon 2,
Clarinet 1, Clarinet 2,
Contrabass, Flute 1,
Flute 2, Harp, Horn 1,
Horn 2, Horn 3, Horn 4,
Marimba, Oboe 1, Oboe 2,
Percussion 1, Percussion
2, Percussion 3, Snare
Drum, Suspended Cymbal,
Tam-tam, Trombone 1 and
more. SKU:
PR.11641963L Composed
by Chen Yi. Large Score.
58 pages. Duration 20
minutes. Theodore Presser
Company #116-41963L.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.11641963L). UPC:
680160684489. The
violin concerto is
commissioned by Friends
of Dresden Music
Foundation for American
soloist Mira Wang and the
New York Philharmonic and
Staatskapelle Dresden as
an American commemoration
of the reconstruction of
the Dresden Frauenkirche,
60 years after its
destruction in World War
II by American and
British Forces. The world
premiere is given at the
Semperoper in Dresden,
Germany, on October 9, 10
& 11, 2005, conducted
by Ivan Fischer. Full of
excitement and inner
power, the musical image
is vivid, energetic,
sometimes lyrical and
sometimes dramatic. The
major angular thematic
material (a three note
motive) consists of big
leaps in interval (a
perfect fourth downward
and then a minor seventh
upward, first introduced
by the violin solo in
measures 27-29). Except
for the cadenzas which
stand at the middle
(Rehearsal E, measure
127) and the two ends of
the piece as a frame, the
virtuosic violin solo
line is always
accompanied by the ever
moving and growing
textures in the
background. The rests
between long and short
phrases symbolize the
space in Chinese
paintings. The Beijing
Opera reciting tune, and
the fingerings to produce
sliding tones in the
performance of the
Chinese fiddle erhu are
also borrowed in the
writing and the
performing of the western
instruments. The musical
imagination of the violin
concerto came from an
ancient Chinese poem with
the same title, written
by Du Fu (712-770) in
Tang Dynasty. Happy Rain
on a Spring Night by Du
Fu (712-770 in Tang
Dynasty) Happy rain comes
in time, When spring is
in its prime. With night
breeze it will fall, And
quietly moisten all.
Clouds darken wild roads,
Light brightens a little
boat. Saturated at dawn,
With flowers blooming the
town. (English
translation by Chen Yi
from the original poem in
Chinese) The following is
the poem in its original
Chinese form, and the
detailed introduction on
the structural plan of
the violin concerto
Spring in Dresden. It's
like the welcome rain on
a quiet spring night that
nurtures the budding
seeds, our new society is
pushing us forward to the
new future. The music
reflects the scenes and
the expression according
to the meaning of the
poem when it's being
unfolded line by line.
Although the tempo is set
63 quarter notes per
minute throughout (played
vividly, never slow
down), the tension is
being built up from the
quiet background in the
beginning, to the
sustained climax towards
the end. The musical
image in Rehearsal A and
B (measures 39-80)
represents the first four
lines of the poem. The
wind instruments response
to the rustling of fast
moving notes on muted
string triplets,
decorated by occasional
strokes produced by
metallic string sound and
high woodwind gestures.
The music in Rehearsal C
and D (measures 81-126)
represents the next two
lines of the poem. It's
so dark, a little light
in the boat is shimmering
on the lake... The
breathy sound and key
slaps on the flutes
create a mysterious
atmosphere, in a dialogue
with other instruments.
The cello glissandi
recite the poem in the
tone of Mandarin, echoed
by the string harmonics.
The music in Rehearsal F,
G and H (m 129-202) is a
toccata, starting in the
orchestra (led by the
marimba), which builds up
a big shape, to reach the
climax in m. 157
(Rehearsal G, the
location of the Golden
Section, according to the
length of the music
without cadenzas), and
keeps the vivid scene
towards the coda (from
Rehearsal I, m. 203),
which stands on the
energetic peak until the
clear cutoff on measure
239, followed by the
short, yet powerful solo
conclusion with the
lingering echo produced
by the high string
harmonics. On the top,
there is a recall of the
three note motive in the
sound of wonderland,
touched by the motor-on
vibraphone meaningfully.
The music is written for
2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2
clarinets (in Bb), 2
bassoons, 4 French horns
(in F), 2 trumpets (in
Bb), 3 trombones, tuba,
harp, 3 percussion
players (Perc. 1:
xylophone; Perc. 2:
suspended cymbal,
Japanese high woodblock,
snare drum, bass drum and
vibraphone; Perc. 3:
marimba and tam-tam),
solo violin, and strings.
Duration is about 20
minutes. The violin
concerto is commissioned
by Friends of Dresden
Music Foundation for
American soloist Mira
Wang and the New York
Philharmonic and
Staatskapelle Dresden as
an American commemoration
of the reconstruction of
the Dresden Frauenkirche,
60 years after its
destruction in World War
II by American and
British Forces. The world
premiere is given at the
Semperoper in Dresden,
Germany, on October 9, 10
& 11, 2005, conducted by
Ivan Fischer.Full of
excitement and inner
power, the musical image
is vivid, energetic,
sometimeslyrical and
sometimes dramatic. The
major angular thematic
material (a three
notemotive) consists of
big leaps in interval (a
perfect fourth downward
and then a minorseventh
upward, first introduced
by the violin solo in
measures 27-29). Except
for thecadenzas which
stand at the middle
(Rehearsal E, measure
127) and the two ends of
the piece as a frame, the
virtuosic violin solo
line is always
accompanied by the ever
moving and growing
textures in the
background. The rests
between long and short
phrases symbolize the
space in Chinese
paintings. The Beijing
Opera reciting tune, and
the fingerings to produce
sliding tones in the
performance of the
Chinese fiddle erhu are
also borrowed in the
writing and the
performing of the western
instruments.The musical
imagination of the violin
concerto came from an
ancient Chinese poem with
the same title, written
by Du Fu (712-770) in
Tang Dynasty.Happy Rain
on a Spring Nightby Du Fu
(712-770 in Tang
Dynasty)Happy rain comes
in time,When spring is in
its prime.With night
breeze it will fall,And
quietly moisten
all.Clouds darken wild
roads,Light brightens a
little boat.Saturated at
dawn,With flowers
blooming the
town.(English translation
by Chen Yi from the
original poem in
Chinese)The following is
the poem in its original
Chinese form, and the
detailed introduction
onthe structural plan of
the violin concerto
Spring in
Dresden.It’s like
the welcome rain on a
quiet spring night that
nurtures the budding
seeds, our newsociety is
pushing us forward to the
new future. The music
reflects the scenes and
theexpression according
to the meaning of the
poem when it’s
being unfolded line by
line.Although the tempo
is set 63 quarter notes
per minute throughout
(played vividly,
neverslow down), the
tension is being built up
from the quiet background
in the beginning, tothe
sustained climax towards
the end. The musical
image in Rehearsal A and
B (measures39-80)
represents the first four
lines of the poem. The
wind instruments response
to therustling of fast
moving notes on muted
string triplets,
decorated by occasional
strokesproduced by
metallic string sound and
high woodwind gestures.
The music in RehearsalC
and D (measures 81-126)
represents the next two
lines of the poem. It's
so dark, a littlelight in
the boat is shimmering on
the lake... The breathy
sound and key slaps on
theflutes create a
mysterious atmosphere, in
a dialogue with other
instruments. The
celloglissandi recite the
poem in the tone of
Mandarin, echoed by the
string harmonics.
Themusic in Rehearsal F,
G and H (m 129-202) is a
toccata, starting in the
orchestra (led bythe
marimba), which builds up
a big shape, to reach the
climax in m. 157
(Rehearsal G,the location
of the Golden Section,
according to the length
of the music
withoutcadenzas), and
keeps the vivid scene
towards the coda (from
Rehearsal I, m. 203),
whichstands on the
energetic peak until the
clear cutoff on measure
239, followed by the
short,yet powerful solo
conclusion with the
lingering echo produced
by the high
stringharmonics. On the
top, there is a recall of
the three note motive in
the sound ofwonderland,
touched by the motor-on
vibraphone
meaningfully.The music is
written for 2 flutes, 2
oboes, 2 clarinets (in
Bb), 2 bassoons, 4 French
horns (in F), 2 trumpets
(in Bb), 3 trombones,
tuba, harp, 3 percussion
players (Perc.
1:xylophone; Perc. 2:
suspended cymbal,
Japanese high woodblock,
snare drum, bass drum and
vibraphone; Perc. 3:
marimba and tam-tam),
solo violin, and
strings.Duration is about
20 minutes. $55.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Requiem Orchestre [Conducteur d'étude / Miniature] Schott
Soprano, tenor, Knabensoprano, flugelhorn, mixed choir and chamber orchestra (St...(+)
Soprano, tenor,
Knabensoprano,
flugelhorn, mixed choir
and chamber orchestra
(Study Score) SKU:
HL.49018099 Boy
Soprano, Soprano, Tenor,
Flugelhorn, Mixed Chorus,
and Chamber Orchestra
Study Score. Composed
by Harald Weiss. This
edition: Paperback/Soft
Cover. Sheet music. Study
Score. Classical.
Softcover. Composed
2008/2009. 188 pages.
Duration 100'. Schott
Music #ED20619. Published
by Schott Music
(HL.49018099). ISBN
9790001158428. UPC:
884088567347.
8.25x11.75x0.457 inches.
Latin - German. On
letting go(Concerning the
selection of the texts)
In the selection of the
texts, I have allowed
myself to be motivated
and inspired by the
concept of 'letting go'.
This appears to me to be
one of the essential
aspects of dying, but
also of life itself. We
humans cling far too
strongly to successful
achievements, whether
they have to do with
material or ideal values,
or relationships of all
kinds. We cannot and do
not want to let go,
almost as if our life
depended on it. As we
will have to practise the
art of letting go at the
latest during our hour of
death, perhaps we could
already make a start on
this while we are still
alive. Tagore describes
this farewell with very
simple but strikingly
vivid imagery: 'I will
return the key of my
door'. I have set this
text for tenor solo. Here
I imagine, and have
correspondingly noted in
a certain passage of the
score, that the
protagonist finds himself
as though 'in an ocean'
of voices in which he is
however not drowning, but
immersing himself in
complete relaxation. The
phenomenon of letting go
is described even more
simply and tersely in
Psalm 90, verse 12: 'So
teach us to number our
days, that we may apply
our hearts unto wisdom'.
This cannot be expressed
more plainly.I have begun
the requiem with a solo
boy's voice singing the
beginning of this psalm
on a single note, the
note A. This in effect
says it all. The work
comes full circle at the
culmination with a repeat
of the psalm which
subsequently leads into a
resplendent 'lux
aeterna'. The
intermediate texts of the
Requiem which highlight
the phenomenon of letting
go in the widest spectrum
of colours originate on
the one hand from the
Latin liturgy of the
Messa da Requiem (In
Paradisum, Libera me,
Requiem aeternam, Mors
stupebit) and on the
other hand from poems by
Joseph von Eichendorff,
Hermann Hesse,
Rabindranath Tagore and
Rainer Maria Rilke.All
texts have a distinctive
positive element in
common and view death as
being an organic process
within the great system
of the universe, for
example when Hermann
Hesse writes: 'Entreiss
dich, Seele, nun der
Zeit, entreiss dich
deinen Sorgen und mache
dich zum Flug bereit in
den ersehnten Morgen'
['Tear yourself way , o
soul, from time, tear
yourself away from your
sorrows and prepare
yourself to fly away into
the long-awaited
morning'] and later: 'Und
die Seele unbewacht will
in freien Flugen
schweben, um im
Zauberkreis der Nacht
tief und tausendfach zu
leben' ['And the
unfettered soul strives
to soar in free flight to
live in the magic sphere
of the night, deep and
thousandfold']. Or Joseph
von Eichendorff whose
text evokes a distant
song in his lines: 'Und
meine Seele spannte weit
ihre Flugel aus. Flog
durch die stillen Lande,
als floge sie nach Haus'
['And my soul spread its
wings wide. Flew through
the still country as if
homeward bound.']Here a
strong romantically
tinged occidental
resonance can be detected
which is however also
accompanied by a
universal spirit going
far beyond all cultures
and religions. In the
beginning was the sound
Long before any sort of
word or meaningful phrase
was uttered by vocal
chords, sounds,
vibrations and tones
already existed. This
brings us back to the
music. Both during my
years of study and at
subsequent periods, I had
been an active
participant in the world
of contemporary music,
both as percussionist and
also as conductor and
composer. My early scores
had a somewhat
adventurous appearance,
filled with an abundance
of small black dots: no
rhythm could be too
complicated, no register
too extreme and no
harmony too dissonant. I
devoted myself intensely
to the handling of
different parameters
which in serial music
coexist in total
equality: I also studied
aleatory principles and
so-called minimal music.I
subsequently emigrated
and took up residence in
Spain from where I
embarked on numerous
travels over the years to
India, Africa and South
America. I spent repeated
periods during this time
as a resident in
non-European countries.
This meant that the
currents of contemporary
music swept past me
vaguely and at a great
distance. What I instead
absorbed during this
period were other
completely new cultures
in which I attempted to
immerse myself as
intensively as possible.I
learned foreign languages
and came into contact
with musicians of all
classes and styles who
had a different cultural
heritage than my own: I
was intoxicated with the
diversity of artistic
potential.Nevertheless,
the further I distanced
myself from my own
Western musical heritage,
the more this returned
insistently in my
consciousness.The scene
can be imagined of
sitting somewhere in the
middle of the Brazilian
jungle surrounded by the
wailing of Indians and
out of the blue being
provided with the
opportunity to hear
Beethoven's late string
quartets: this can be a
heart-wrenching
experience, akin to an
identity crisis. This
type of experience can
also be described as
cathartic. Whatever the
circumstances, my
'renewed' occupation with
the 'old' country would
not permit me to return
to the point at which I
as an audacious young
student had maltreated
the musical parameters of
so-called contemporary
music. A completely
different approach would
be necessary: an
extremely careful
approach, inching my way
gradually back into the
Western world: an
approach which would
welcome tradition back
into the fold, attempt to
unfurl the petals and
gently infuse this
tradition with a breath
of contemporary
life.Although I am aware
that I will not unleash a
revolution or scandal
with this approach, I am
nevertheless confident
as, with the musical
vocabulary of this
Requiem, I am travelling
in an orbit in which no
ballast or complex
structures will be
transported or intimated:
on the contrary, I have
attempted to form the
message of the texts in
music with the naivety of
a 'homecomer'. Harald
WeissColonia de San
PedroMarch 2009. $93.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Happy Rain on A Spring Night - Score [Conducteur] Theodore Presser Co.
Chamber Music Clarinet, Flute, Piano, Violin, Violoncello SKU: PR.11441271S(+)
Chamber Music Clarinet,
Flute, Piano, Violin,
Violoncello SKU:
PR.11441271S For
Flute, Clarinet, violin,
Cello, and Piano.
Composed by Chen Yi. Poem
by Du Fu (712-770 in Tang
Dynasty). Premiered at
Merkin Hall in New York.
Contemporary. Full score.
With Standard notation.
Composed 2004. 45 pages.
Duration 12 minutes.
Theodore Presser Company
#114-41271S. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.11441271S). UPC:
680160587094. 8.5 x 11
inches. Poem by Du Fu
(712-770 in Tang
Dynasty). It's like
the welcome rain on a
quiet spring night that
nurtures the budding
seeds, our new society is
pushing us forward to the
new future. This music
reflects the scenes and
the expression according
to the meaning of the
poem when it's being
unfolded line by line.
Although the tempo is set
60-70 quarter notes per
minute throughout (played
vividly, never slow
down), the tension is
being built up from the
quiet background in the
beginning, to the
sustained climax towards
the end. The musical
image in Rehersal A and B
(measures 1 - 41)
represents the first four
lines of the poem. The
woodwind instruments
response to the rustling
of fast moving notes on
muted string triplets,
decorated by occasional
strokes produced by
metallic string sound and
high piano gestures. The
music in Rehersal C and D
(measures 42-87)
represents the next two
lines of the poem. It's
so dark, a little light
in the boat is shimmering
on the lake... The
breathy key slaps on the
flute creates a
mysterious atmosphere, in
a dialogue with other
instruments. The cello
glissandi recite the poem
in the tone of Mandarin,
echoed by the string
harmonics. The music in
Rehersal E, F, G (m 88 -
161) is a toccata,
starting with the piano,
which builds up a big
shape, to reach the
climax in m. 116, and
keeps the vivid scene
towards the coda
(Rehersal H, m. 162 - the
end), which stands on the
energetic peak at the end
of the
piece. Commissioned by
the Music From Copland
House ensemble, supported
by a grant from the
NYSCA’s
Composer’s
Commissions program in
2002, my mixed ensemble
piece Happy Rain on a
Spring Night is written
for all five instruments
in the ensemble: flute,
clarinet, violin, cello
and piano, and premiered
on Oct. 18, 2004, at
Merkin Hall in New York.
 The musical
imagination came from an
ancient Chinese poem with
the same title, written
by Du Fu (712-770) in the
Tang Dynasty. Happy
Rain on a Spring Nightby
Du Fu (712-770 in the
Tang Dynasty)Â Happy
rain comes in time,When
spring is in its
prime.With night breeze
it will fall,And quietly
moisten all.Clouds darken
wild roads,Light
brightens a little
boat.Saturated at
dawn,With flowers
blooming the
town. (English
translation by Chen Yi
from the original poem in
Chinese) It’s
like the welcome rain on
a quiet spring night that
nurtures the budding
seeds; our new society is
pushing us forward to the
new future. Â The music
reflects the scenes and
the expression according
to the meaning of the
poem when it’s
being unfolded line by
line. Â Although the
tempo is set 60-70
quarter notes per minute
throughout (played
vividly, never slowing
down), the tension is
being built up from the
quiet background in the
beginning, to the
sustained climax towards
the end. The musical
image in Rehearsal A and
B (measures 1-41)
represents the first four
lines of the poem.
 The woodwind
instruments respond to
the rustling of fast
moving notes on muted
string triplets,
decorated by occasional
strokes produced by
metallic string sound and
high piano gestures.
 The music in
Rehearsal C and D
(measures 42-87)
represents the next two
lines of the poem.
 It’s so dark,
a little light in the
boat is shimmering on the
lake... Â The breathy
key slaps on the flute
create a mysterious
atmosphere, in a dialogue
with other instruments.
 The cello glissandi
recite the poem in the
tone of Mandarin, echoed
by the string harmonics.
 The music in
Rehearsal E, F and G (m
88-161) is a toccata,
starting with the piano,
which builds up a big
shape, to reach the
climax in m. 116, and
keeps the vivid scene
towards the coda
(Rehearsal H, m.
162-192), which stands on
the energetic peak at the
end of the
piece. According to
the principle of the
Golden Section, I have
constructed the piece
with two large parts (m.
1-115 and m. 116-192).
 The GS falls onto the
beginning of the climax
section of the piece,
which is exciting and
loud. Â All
subdivisions of the
structures coincide with
the numbers of
proportions based on the
GS principle. Â The
music has textures
changed according to the
proportional arrangement
throughout the
piece. First Part (m.
1-115, total 115
measures), including two
sectionsSection I (m.
1-69, total 69 measures),
including two
divisionsFirst Division
(m. 1-41, total 41
measures), including two
subdivisions:Subdivision
I (m. 1-25, total 25
measures)Rehearsal A,
violin triplets + cello
metalic sound in small
intervals, followed by
woodwinds.Subdivision II
(m. 26-41, total 16
measures)Rehearsal B,
cello triplets + violin
metallic sound in small
intervals, overlapped by
woodwinds.Second Division
(m. 42-69, total 28
measures)Rehearsal C,
breathy key slaps on
flute, in dark.Section II
(m. 70-115, total 46
measures), including two
divisionsFirst Division
(m. 70-87, total 18
measures)Rehearsal D,
soft cello reciting,
followed by string
harmonics & woodwind
“echoâ€
passages.Second Division
(m. 88-115, total 28
measures)Rehearsal E,
starts to buildup the
excitement, with piano
toccata in the beginning.
When it reachesthe
patterns on the top of
the keyboard, the lowest
passages on piano and
cello punch in, andreview
the pitch material with
small intervals.Second
Part (m.116-192, total 77
measures), including two
sectionsSection I (m.
116-161, total 46
measures), including two
divisionsFirst Division
(m. 116-133, total 18
measures)Rehearsal F, the
excitement reaches the
climax, GS located. All
instruments join
in.Second Division (m.
134-161, total 28
measures)Rehearsal G,
combination of E and F,
continue to
buildup.Section II (m.
162-192, total 31
measures)Rehearsal H,
coda, keep the excitement
on the peak. $34.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Animal Kingdom Ensemble de cuivres [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Facile Gobelin Music Publications
Brass Band - Grade 2 SKU: BT.GOB-000729-030 Composed by William Vean. Set...(+)
Brass Band - Grade 2
SKU:
BT.GOB-000729-030
Composed by William Vean.
Set (Score & Parts). 104
pages. Gobelin Music
Publications #GOB
000729-030. Published by
Gobelin Music
Publications
(BT.GOB-000729-030).
In this
composition William Vean
takes you on a journey
through the fascinating
and exciting world of
animals. Apart from it
being a composition
filled with special
effects, Animal Kingdom
contains many educational
elements, such as playing
inswing (triplets
feeling), chromatics,
flutter tonguing, gypsy
tuning, varying keys,
and, of course, dynamics
and articulation. The
melodic lines occur in
all four voices, as well
as in all percussion
parts, providing each
musician with
theopportunity to play a
solo or to accompany.
Highly recommended for
your youth band!
William Vean is an
educational composer. He
knows how to musically
shape the special
elements from our daily
lives. His music is
therefore veryexpressive,
containing creative
solutions to possible
problems. Special ways of
playing make his music
particularly interesting
for the winds, but the
percussion section is
also featured in his
special effects.
The world of the
animalsalways plays on
ones imagination. In
Animal Kingdom, William
Vean has portrayed a
number of animals in a
special manner:
Kevin Kangaroo - The
jumping character of this
animal can be heard in
different voices. The
swing style
alsoemphasizes the
characteristic movements
of the kangaroo. Playing
in swing style can be
practised by using
scales.
Eddy
Elephant - For some of
his smaller fellow fauna
friends this can be quite
an ordeal, but for Eduard
(Eddy for friendsand
intimates) it is his
daily walk.
Baldrick Bat - Baldrick
the Bat is a mysterious
character. This can be
heard in the fast moving
valves and keys,
accompanied by special
effects in the percussion
section.
Curtis
Camel - Curtisthe Camel
trudges across the
desert, feeling bored.
The idea that the horizon
will never change does
not affect him anymore.
He has accepted his fate.
The distinctive tones
from the gypsy scale
provide the suitable
oriental sounds.
BettyButterfly -
Butterfly Betty
elegantly, and without
worries, flutters from
flower to flower in the
garden. Her motto: Carpe
Diem (Seize the Day).
Betty is a one-day
butterfly.
Marvin
Monkey - A swing monkey
stirs up the feelings.
Evenmembers of the
orchestra will look like
real monkeys. How about
your audience?
Each part has its own
difficulties and
challenges. Important
in the first part is
playing in swing
(triplets feeling). This
can be practised
usingscales. In the
second part ensemble
playing and balance are
important. In
Baldrick additional
information on the
effects that have to be
played might be useful.
New sounds are, of
course, welcome.
Curtis the Camel
introduces thegypsy
scale. Additional
explanation of the use of
the scale might be
useful. Key changes are
interesting in this part.
A slight accent on the
first beat of the bar
will add to the charm of
this part. Marvin the
Monkey brings back the
swingrhythm that was
introduced in the first
part, alternated by a
straight part with
attention to chromatics
and articulation.
A story teller will
definitely be an asset
when performing this
composition.
Willi
am Vean neemt u mee in de
fascinerende en
verrassende wereld van
het dierenrijk.
Naast leuke speelmuziek
vol ''special effects'',
is deze compositie zeer
educatief van opzet.
Als interessant
inhoudelijke zaken
komenonder andere aan de
orde - het in swing
spelen (triolen feeling),
chromatiek, flatterzunge,
zigeunertoonsoort,
afwisselende maatsoorten
en natuurlijk dynamiek en
articulatie. Tevens
lopen de melodielijnen
zowel door alle 4
destemmen als alle
percussie partijen, zodat
iedere muzikant de
gelegenheid krijgt om te
soleren dan wel te
begeleiden. Een
aanrader voor uw
jeugdorkest!
De
dierenwereld spreekt
muzikaal gezien altijd
tot de
verbeelding.William Vean
heeft op bijzondere wijze
een aantal dieren
neergezet. De
componist weet op een
bijzondere wijze
elementen uit het
dagelijkse leven muzikaal
vorm te geven. Zijn
muziek is daarom erg
beeldend, de problemen
aanwijsbaarmaar de
oplossingen zijn
creatief. Voor
blazers bijzonder
interessant door de
bijzondere speelmanieren
maar het slagwerk is ook
bedeeld met een aantal
'special effects'.
Kevin Kangaroo -
Het springerige
karakterwordt door
verschillende stemmen
neergezet. De swingende
speelstijl benadrukt de
karakteristieke
bewegingen van de
kangoeroe. Let op de
specifieke swingstijl.
Heel goed te oefenen met
toonladders.
Eddy
Elephant - Voor
sommigekleinere
faunagenoten elke keer
weer een beproeving maar
voor Eduard (Eddy voor
vrienden en intimi) is
dit zijn dagelijkse
wandelingetje. Giro
224544 t.b.v. de geleden
schade.
Baldrick
Bat - De vleermuis
Baldrick is eenmysterieus
type. Dat mysterieuze
aspect wordt auditief
weergegeven door het snel
indrukken van ventielen
en kleppen, ondersteund
door
slagwerkeffecten.
Curtis Camel - De kameel
Curtis hobbelt verveeld
door de woestijn. $98.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Animal Kingdom [Conducteur] - Facile Gobelin Music Publications
Concert Band/Harmonie/Fanfare Band - Grade 2 SKU: BT.GOB-000647-215 Compo...(+)
Concert
Band/Harmonie/Fanfare
Band - Grade 2 SKU:
BT.GOB-000647-215
Composed by William Vean.
Score Only. 24 pages.
Gobelin Music
Publications #GOB
000647-215. Published by
Gobelin Music
Publications
(BT.GOB-000647-215).
In this
composition William Vean
takes you on a journey
through the fascinating
and exciting world of
animals. Apart from it
being a composition
filled with special
effects, Animal Kingdom
contains many educational
elements, such as playing
inswing (triplets
feeling), chromatics,
flutter tonguing, gypsy
tuning, varying keys,
and, of course, dynamics
and articulation. The
melodic lines occur in
all four voices, as well
as in all percussion
parts, providing each
musician with
theopportunity to play a
solo or to accompany.
Highly recommended for
your youth band!
William Vean is an
educational composer. He
knows how to musically
shape the special
elements from our daily
lives. His music is
therefore veryexpressive,
containing creative
solutions to possible
problems. Special ways of
playing make his music
particularly interesting
for the winds, but the
percussion section is
also featured in his
special effects.
The world of the
animalsalways plays on
ones imagination. In
Animal Kingdom, William
Vean has portrayed a
number of animals in a
special manner:
Kevin Kangaroo - The
jumping character of this
animal can be heard in
different voices. The
swing style
alsoemphasizes the
characteristic movements
of the kangaroo. Playing
in swing style can be
practised by using
scales.
Eddy
Elephant - For some of
his smaller fellow fauna
friends this can be quite
an ordeal, but for Eduard
(Eddy for friendsand
intimates) it is his
daily walk.
Baldrick Bat - Baldrick
the Bat is a mysterious
character. This can be
heard in the fast moving
valves and keys,
accompanied by special
effects in the percussion
section.
Curtis
Camel - Curtisthe Camel
trudges across the
desert, feeling bored.
The idea that the horizon
will never change does
not affect him anymore.
He has accepted his fate.
The distinctive tones
from the gypsy scale
provide the suitable
oriental sounds.
BettyButterfly -
Butterfly Betty
elegantly, and without
worries, flutters from
flower to flower in the
garden. Her motto: Carpe
Diem (Seize the Day).
Betty is a one-day
butterfly.
Marvin
Monkey - A swing monkey
stirs up the feelings.
Evenmembers of the
orchestra will look like
real monkeys. How about
your audience?
Each part has its own
difficulties and
challenges. Important
in the first part is
playing in swing
(triplets feeling). This
can be practised
usingscales. In the
second part ensemble
playing and balance are
important. In
Baldrick additional
information on the
effects that have to be
played might be useful.
New sounds are, of
course, welcome.
Curtis the Camel
introduces thegypsy
scale. Additional
explanation of the use of
the scale might be
useful. Key changes are
interesting in this part.
A slight accent on the
first beat of the bar
will add to the charm of
this part. Marvin the
Monkey brings back the
swingrhythm that was
introduced in the first
part, alternated by a
straight part with
attention to chromatics
and articulation.
A story teller will
definitely be an asset
when performing this
composition.
Willi
am Vean neemt u mee in de
fascinerende en
verrassende wereld van
het dierenrijk.
Naast leuke speelmuziek
vol ''special effects'',
is deze compositie zeer
educatief van opzet.
Als interessant
inhoudelijke zaken
komenonder andere aan de
orde - het in swing
spelen (triolen feeling),
chromatiek, flatterzunge,
zigeunertoonsoort,
afwisselende maatsoorten
en natuurlijk dynamiek en
articulatie. Tevens
lopen de melodielijnen
zowel door alle 4
destemmen als alle
percussie partijen, zodat
iedere muzikant de
gelegenheid krijgt om te
soleren dan wel te
begeleiden. Een
aanrader voor uw
jeugdorkest!
De
dierenwereld spreekt
muzikaal gezien altijd
tot de
verbeelding.William Vean
heeft op bijzondere wijze
een aantal dieren
neergezet. De
componist weet op een
bijzondere wijze
elementen uit het
dagelijkse leven muzikaal
vorm te geven. Zijn
muziek is daarom erg
beeldend, de problemen
aanwijsbaarmaar de
oplossingen zijn
creatief. Voor
blazers bijzonder
interessant door de
bijzondere speelmanieren
maar het slagwerk is ook
bedeeld met een aantal
'special effects'.
Kevin Kangaroo -
Het springerige
karakterwordt door
verschillende stemmen
neergezet. De swingende
speelstijl benadrukt de
karakteristieke
bewegingen van de
kangoeroe. Let op de
specifieke swingstijl.
Heel goed te oefenen met
toonladders.
Eddy
Elephant - Voor
sommigekleinere
faunagenoten elke keer
weer een beproeving maar
voor Eduard (Eddy voor
vrienden en intimi) is
dit zijn dagelijkse
wandelingetje. Giro
224544 t.b.v. de geleden
schade.
Baldrick
Bat - De vleermuis
Baldrick is eenmysterieus
type. Dat mysterieuze
aspect wordt auditief
weergegeven door het snel
indrukken van ventielen
en kleppen, ondersteund
door
slagwerkeffecten.
Curtis Camel - De kameel
Curtis hobbelt verveeld
door de woestijn. $25.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Animal Kingdom [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Facile Gobelin Music Publications
Concert Band/Harmonie/Fanfare Band - Grade 2 SKU: BT.GOB-000647-015 Compo...(+)
Concert
Band/Harmonie/Fanfare
Band - Grade 2 SKU:
BT.GOB-000647-015
Composed by William Vean.
Set (Score & Parts). 244
pages. Gobelin Music
Publications #GOB
000647-015. Published by
Gobelin Music
Publications
(BT.GOB-000647-015).
In this
composition William Vean
takes you on a journey
through the fascinating
and exciting world of
animals. Apart from it
being a composition
filled with special
effects, Animal Kingdom
contains many educational
elements, such as playing
inswing (triplets
feeling), chromatics,
flutter tonguing, gypsy
tuning, varying keys,
and, of course, dynamics
and articulation. The
melodic lines occur in
all four voices, as well
as in all percussion
parts, providing each
musician with
theopportunity to play a
solo or to accompany.
Highly recommended for
your youth band!
William Vean is an
educational composer. He
knows how to musically
shape the special
elements from our daily
lives. His music is
therefore veryexpressive,
containing creative
solutions to possible
problems. Special ways of
playing make his music
particularly interesting
for the winds, but the
percussion section is
also featured in his
special effects.
The world of the
animalsalways plays on
ones imagination. In
Animal Kingdom, William
Vean has portrayed a
number of animals in a
special manner:
Kevin Kangaroo - The
jumping character of this
animal can be heard in
different voices. The
swing style
alsoemphasizes the
characteristic movements
of the kangaroo. Playing
in swing style can be
practised by using
scales.
Eddy
Elephant - For some of
his smaller fellow fauna
friends this can be quite
an ordeal, but for Eduard
(Eddy for friendsand
intimates) it is his
daily walk.
Baldrick Bat - Baldrick
the Bat is a mysterious
character. This can be
heard in the fast moving
valves and keys,
accompanied by special
effects in the percussion
section.
Curtis
Camel - Curtisthe Camel
trudges across the
desert, feeling bored.
The idea that the horizon
will never change does
not affect him anymore.
He has accepted his fate.
The distinctive tones
from the gypsy scale
provide the suitable
oriental sounds.
BettyButterfly -
Butterfly Betty
elegantly, and without
worries, flutters from
flower to flower in the
garden. Her motto: Carpe
Diem (Seize the Day).
Betty is a one-day
butterfly.
Marvin
Monkey - A swing monkey
stirs up the feelings.
Evenmembers of the
orchestra will look like
real monkeys. How about
your audience?
Each part has its own
difficulties and
challenges. Important
in the first part is
playing in swing
(triplets feeling). This
can be practised
usingscales. In the
second part ensemble
playing and balance are
important. In
Baldrick additional
information on the
effects that have to be
played might be useful.
New sounds are, of
course, welcome.
Curtis the Camel
introduces thegypsy
scale. Additional
explanation of the use of
the scale might be
useful. Key changes are
interesting in this part.
A slight accent on the
first beat of the bar
will add to the charm of
this part. Marvin the
Monkey brings back the
swingrhythm that was
introduced in the first
part, alternated by a
straight part with
attention to chromatics
and articulation.
A story teller will
definitely be an asset
when performing this
composition.
Willi
am Vean neemt u mee in de
fascinerende en
verrassende wereld van
het dierenrijk.
Naast leuke speelmuziek
vol ''special effects'',
is deze compositie zeer
educatief van opzet.
Als interessant
inhoudelijke zaken
komenonder andere aan de
orde - het in swing
spelen (triolen feeling),
chromatiek, flatterzunge,
zigeunertoonsoort,
afwisselende maatsoorten
en natuurlijk dynamiek en
articulatie. Tevens
lopen de melodielijnen
zowel door alle 4
destemmen als alle
percussie partijen, zodat
iedere muzikant de
gelegenheid krijgt om te
soleren dan wel te
begeleiden. Een
aanrader voor uw
jeugdorkest!
De
dierenwereld spreekt
muzikaal gezien altijd
tot de
verbeelding.William Vean
heeft op bijzondere wijze
een aantal dieren
neergezet. De
componist weet op een
bijzondere wijze
elementen uit het
dagelijkse leven muzikaal
vorm te geven. Zijn
muziek is daarom erg
beeldend, de problemen
aanwijsbaarmaar de
oplossingen zijn
creatief. Voor
blazers bijzonder
interessant door de
bijzondere speelmanieren
maar het slagwerk is ook
bedeeld met een aantal
'special effects'.
Kevin Kangaroo -
Het springerige
karakterwordt door
verschillende stemmen
neergezet. De swingende
speelstijl benadrukt de
karakteristieke
bewegingen van de
kangoeroe. Let op de
specifieke swingstijl.
Heel goed te oefenen met
toonladders.
Eddy
Elephant - Voor
sommigekleinere
faunagenoten elke keer
weer een beproeving maar
voor Eduard (Eddy voor
vrienden en intimi) is
dit zijn dagelijkse
wandelingetje. Giro
224544 t.b.v. de geleden
schade.
Baldrick
Bat - De vleermuis
Baldrick is eenmysterieus
type. Dat mysterieuze
aspect wordt auditief
weergegeven door het snel
indrukken van ventielen
en kleppen, ondersteund
door
slagwerkeffecten.
Curtis Camel - De kameel
Curtis hobbelt verveeld
door de woestijn. $110.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Animal Kingdom Ensemble de cuivres [Conducteur] - Facile Gobelin Music Publications
Brass Band - Grade 2 SKU: BT.GOB-000729-130 Composed by William Vean. Sco...(+)
Brass Band - Grade 2
SKU:
BT.GOB-000729-130
Composed by William Vean.
Score Only. 24 pages.
Gobelin Music
Publications #GOB
000729-130. Published by
Gobelin Music
Publications
(BT.GOB-000729-130).
In this
composition William Vean
takes you on a journey
through the fascinating
and exciting world of
animals. Apart from it
being a composition
filled with special
effects, Animal Kingdom
contains many educational
elements, such as playing
inswing (triplets
feeling), chromatics,
flutter tonguing, gypsy
tuning, varying keys,
and, of course, dynamics
and articulation. The
melodic lines occur in
all four voices, as well
as in all percussion
parts, providing each
musician with
theopportunity to play a
solo or to accompany.
Highly recommended for
your youth band!
William Vean is an
educational composer. He
knows how to musically
shape the special
elements from our daily
lives. His music is
therefore veryexpressive,
containing creative
solutions to possible
problems. Special ways of
playing make his music
particularly interesting
for the winds, but the
percussion section is
also featured in his
special effects.
The world of the
animalsalways plays on
ones imagination. In
Animal Kingdom, William
Vean has portrayed a
number of animals in a
special manner:
Kevin Kangaroo - The
jumping character of this
animal can be heard in
different voices. The
swing style
alsoemphasizes the
characteristic movements
of the kangaroo. Playing
in swing style can be
practised by using
scales.
Eddy
Elephant - For some of
his smaller fellow fauna
friends this can be quite
an ordeal, but for Eduard
(Eddy for friendsand
intimates) it is his
daily walk.
Baldrick Bat - Baldrick
the Bat is a mysterious
character. This can be
heard in the fast moving
valves and keys,
accompanied by special
effects in the percussion
section.
Curtis
Camel - Curtisthe Camel
trudges across the
desert, feeling bored.
The idea that the horizon
will never change does
not affect him anymore.
He has accepted his fate.
The distinctive tones
from the gypsy scale
provide the suitable
oriental sounds.
BettyButterfly -
Butterfly Betty
elegantly, and without
worries, flutters from
flower to flower in the
garden. Her motto: Carpe
Diem (Seize the Day).
Betty is a one-day
butterfly.
Marvin
Monkey - A swing monkey
stirs up the feelings.
Evenmembers of the
orchestra will look like
real monkeys. How about
your audience?
Each part has its own
difficulties and
challenges. Important
in the first part is
playing in swing
(triplets feeling). This
can be practised
usingscales. In the
second part ensemble
playing and balance are
important. In
Baldrick additional
information on the
effects that have to be
played might be useful.
New sounds are, of
course, welcome.
Curtis the Camel
introduces thegypsy
scale. Additional
explanation of the use of
the scale might be
useful. Key changes are
interesting in this part.
A slight accent on the
first beat of the bar
will add to the charm of
this part. Marvin the
Monkey brings back the
swingrhythm that was
introduced in the first
part, alternated by a
straight part with
attention to chromatics
and articulation.
A story teller will
definitely be an asset
when performing this
composition.
Willi
am Vean neemt u mee in de
fascinerende en
verrassende wereld van
het dierenrijk.
Naast leuke speelmuziek
vol ''special effects'',
is deze compositie zeer
educatief van opzet.
Als interessant
inhoudelijke zaken
komenonder andere aan de
orde - het in swing
spelen (triolen feeling),
chromatiek, flatterzunge,
zigeunertoonsoort,
afwisselende maatsoorten
en natuurlijk dynamiek en
articulatie. Tevens
lopen de melodielijnen
zowel door alle 4
destemmen als alle
percussie partijen, zodat
iedere muzikant de
gelegenheid krijgt om te
soleren dan wel te
begeleiden. Een
aanrader voor uw
jeugdorkest!
De
dierenwereld spreekt
muzikaal gezien altijd
tot de
verbeelding.William Vean
heeft op bijzondere wijze
een aantal dieren
neergezet. De
componist weet op een
bijzondere wijze
elementen uit het
dagelijkse leven muzikaal
vorm te geven. Zijn
muziek is daarom erg
beeldend, de problemen
aanwijsbaarmaar de
oplossingen zijn
creatief. Voor
blazers bijzonder
interessant door de
bijzondere speelmanieren
maar het slagwerk is ook
bedeeld met een aantal
'special effects'.
Kevin Kangaroo -
Het springerige
karakterwordt door
verschillende stemmen
neergezet. De swingende
speelstijl benadrukt de
karakteristieke
bewegingen van de
kangoeroe. Let op de
specifieke swingstijl.
Heel goed te oefenen met
toonladders.
Eddy
Elephant - Voor
sommigekleinere
faunagenoten elke keer
weer een beproeving maar
voor Eduard (Eddy voor
vrienden en intimi) is
dit zijn dagelijkse
wandelingetje. Giro
224544 t.b.v. de geleden
schade.
Baldrick
Bat - De vleermuis
Baldrick is eenmysterieus
type. Dat mysterieuze
aspect wordt auditief
weergegeven door het snel
indrukken van ventielen
en kleppen, ondersteund
door
slagwerkeffecten.
Curtis Camel - De kameel
Curtis hobbelt verveeld
door de woestijn. $25.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| The Great American Songbook - The Singers Hal Leonard
Electronic Keyboard; Organ; Piano/Keyboard SKU: HL.281046 E-Z Play Tod...(+)
Electronic Keyboard;
Organ; Piano/Keyboard
SKU: HL.281046
E-Z Play Today Volume
284. Composed by
Various. E-Z Play Today.
Standards. Softcover. 250
pages. Published by Hal
Leonard (HL.281046).
ISBN 9781540033253.
UPC: 888680785352.
9.0x12.0x0.603
inches. This
songbook provides a
treasury of 100 classics
by our most beloved
vocalists in our
trademark E-Z Play(r)
Today notation. Includes:
All the Way (Etta James)
* Count Your Blessings
Instead of Sheep
(Rosemary Clooney) *
Everybody Loves Somebody
(Dean Martin) * Fever
(Peggy Lee) * Heart and
Soul (Mel Torme) * How
High the Moon (Ella
Fitzgerald) * I Left My
Heart in San Francisco
(Tony Bennett) * People
(Barbra Streisand) *
Route 66 (Nat King Cole)
* Sentimental Journey
(Doris Day) * Swinging on
a Star (Bing Crosby) *
That's Entertainment
(Judy Garland) * What a
Wonderful World (Louis
Armstrong) * Young at
Heart (Frank Sinatra) *
and many more.
About Hal
Leonard E-Z Play
Today For
organs, pianos, and
electronic keyboards. E-Z
Play Today is the
shortest distance between
beginning music and
playing fun. Now there
are more than 300 reasons
why you should play E-Z
Play Today. * World's
largest series of music
folios * Full-size books
- large 9 x 12 format
features easy-to-read,
easy-to-play music *
Accurate arrangements...
simple enough for the
beginner, but accurate
chords and melody lines
are maintained *
Eye-catching, full-color
covers * Lyrics... most
arrangements include
words and music * Most
up-to-date registrations
- books in the series
contain a general
registration guide, as
well as individual song
rhythm suggestions *
Guitar Chord Chart - all
songs in the series can
also be played on
guitar. $19.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Early Jazz Dances, Songs, Instrumentals for Fingerstyle Guitar Guitare [Partition + Accès audio] - Intermédiaire Mel Bay
Guitar - Intermediate SKU: MB.31060M Perfect binding. Jazz. Book and onli...(+)
Guitar - Intermediate
SKU: MB.31060M
Perfect binding. Jazz.
Book and online audio.
180 pages. Mel Bay
Publications, Inc
#31060M. Published by Mel
Bay Publications, Inc
(MB.31060M). ISBN
9781513468051. 8.75x11.75
inches. As aspiring
fingerpicking guitarists
started expanding their
horizons from folk,
blues, and ragtime in the
1970s, it was only
logical to look towards
early jazz tunes as a
vast source for new
possibilities. For one
thing, they could follow
the same evolutionary
path from ragtime to jazz
that had been taken by
pianists such as Jelly
Roll Morton and Harlem
stride players like James
P. Johnson and Fats
Waller. These musicians
all composed in a variety
of styles, but their most
ambitious piano solos
expanded on the classic
ragtime format developed
by the likes of Scott
Joplin, James Scott, and
Joseph Lamb, using
several strains that
usually changed keys at
least once. Morton, the
self-proclaimed inventor
of jazz, would record
versions of tunes like
King Porter
Stomp and The
Original Jelly Roll
Blues that are
similar to straight
ragtime performances, and
others where there is
lots of room left for
embellishment and jazz
improvisation.
The present
collection is a bonanza
for guitarists who want
to tackle advanced
arrangements along the
lines of ragtime but
featuring jazz age
harmonies from the
playing of Jelly Roll
Morton, Louis Armstrong,
Bix Beiderbecke, WC
Handy, the Original
Dixieland Jazz Band and
other early jazz legends.
The 32 arrangements
included are by a wide
assortment of guitarists
including Ernie Hawkins,
Pat Donohue, Lasse
Johansson, Duck Baker,
Ton Van Bergeyk, Sandy
Shalk, Steve McWilliam,
and Dorian Henry.
Titles
include: Oh, You
Beautiful Doll,
I’ve Got The
Blues, High Society, St.
Louis Blues, Davenport
Blues, Poor Butterfly,
Dixie Jass Band One-Step,
Memphis Blues, Big Foot
Ham, Grandpa’s
Spells, The Original
Jelly Roll Blues,
Midnight Mama, Milenberg
Joys, Fizz Water, Back
Home in Indiana, Sweet
Georgia Brown, Red Wing
(An Indian Intermezzo),
There’ll Be Some
Changes Made, Way Down
Yonder In New Orleans,
Charleston, Where The
Morning Glories Grow,
Limehouse Blues, Susie
(of the Islands), I Need
Some Pettin’,
Weather Bird, Cornet Chop
Suey, Kansas City Stomps,
King Porter Stomp,
Jubilee Stomp, Take It
Easy, If I Had You,
Moonlight
Serenade $24.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| The Latin Real Book - Eb Edition Instruments en Mib [Fake Book] Sher Music Company
By Various. Arranged by Chuck Sher. For E§ Instruments, Melody/Lyrics/Chords....(+)
By Various. Arranged by
Chuck Sher. For E§
Instruments,
Melody/Lyrics/Chords.
Latin and Latin Jazz.
Difficulty: easy-medium
to medium. Fakebook
(spiral bound). Melody
and chord names. 572
pages. Published by Sher
Music Company
$40.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Jingle Bell Beach - Choral Book Word Music
Easy SKU: WD.080689586170 Composed by Daniel Semsen. Choral, cantatas. Ch...(+)
Easy SKU:
WD.080689586170
Composed by Daniel
Semsen. Choral, cantatas.
Christmas. Book. Word
Music #080689586170.
Published by Word Music
(WD.080689586170).
UPC:
080689586170. From
the award-winning team of
Christy and Daniel Semsen
comes JINGLE BELL
BEACH, a remarkably
fun and fresh new
Christmas musical for
kids!
Once again
it's that time of year,
when aspiring young vocal
groups from all around
the country make their
way to JINGLE BELL
BEACH for the famous
Jingle Sing
competition. Hosts Sandy
and Sonny Pepperminter
welcome the final
contestants for this
year's competition: the
Snowflakes, the Starfish,
and the Electrons!
When a storm
ruins the contestants'
plans for getting home in
time for Christmas,
things heat up to tidal
wave proportions! The
result? The announcement
of a rare Reindeer
Rumble...a spontaneous,
on-the-spot song
competition to determine
the winner of this year's
event. In their eagerness
to win the contest, it
becomes clear that one of
the contestants is
struggling with his
understanding of the
meaning of Christmas. As
the others share the
story of Jesus, the
spirit of competition
quickly transforms into
the wonderful spirit of
Christmas! We are
reminded that Christmas
is about Emmanuel - God
with us - and the Good
News that Jesus came to
be our Savior.
Fun Kit Includes:
- Beach Cinch
Bag
- Listening
CD
- Sunglasses
- Inflatable Beach
Ball
- Inflatable
Microphone
- Jingle Bell Beach
Sandal Key Chain
-Watch the
Fun Kit Preview Video via
the Video Tab
Casting:
- 10 lead and
medium/small roles (8-36
lines)
- 2 tiny
toles (1-2 lines)
- 19 singing solos
opportunities (not tied
to lead roles)
- 2 biblical speaking
opportunities
-All characters have
been written to be played
by either boy or girl
actors. $12.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Still Life with Melon & Sand (from Summer Suite) Orchestre à Cordes [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Intermédiaire Imagine Music
Composed by Greg Bartholomew. For "trumpet, timpani & string orches...(+)
Composed by Greg
Bartholomew.
For "trumpet,
timpani & string
orchestra". Pathways
Series.
Level 4. Score and set of
parts. Duration "3
minutes, 40
seconds". Published
by Imagine
Music
$40.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 4 to 6 weeks | | |
| Beginning Piano for Adults Piano seul [Partition + CD] - Débutant Alfred Publishing
(The Grown-Up Approach to Playing Piano). By Karl Mueller. For Piano. Book; CD; ...(+)
(The Grown-Up Approach to
Playing Piano). By Karl
Mueller. For Piano. Book;
CD; Method/Instruction;
Piano Method. For Adults.
Beginner. 96 pages.
Published by Alfred Music
Publishing
$19.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Sonata for Solo Violin Violon Merion Music
Chamber Music Violin SKU: PR.144407530 Composed by Lauren Bernofsky. 12 p...(+)
Chamber Music Violin
SKU: PR.144407530
Composed by Lauren
Bernofsky. 12 pages.
Duration 10 minutes, 30
seconds. Merion Music
#144-40753. Published by
Merion Music
(PR.144407530). ISBN
9781491136614. UPC:
680160687992. A
violinist herself, Lauren
Bernofsky has described
SONATA FOR SOLO VIOLIN as
drawn from
autobiographical
inspiration, including
gestures from Bachâ??s
beloved Partita in E
Major. Bernofsky opens
with a Preludio movement
whose references to Bach
may be disguised, but
they are surely lurking.
The second movement is
lusciously contrapuntal
with the idiomatic
finesse of a violinist
composing for her own
instrument, while
musically journaling the
emotional pain of living
through 2020. The third
and final movement is
aptly marked
â??white-hot,â? and
the music certainly
is. My SONATA FOR SOLO
VIOLIN was commissioned
by violinist Megan Healy
as part of The Maud
Powell Project, which
celebrated the 100th
anniversary of the
ratification of the 19th
Amendment. The project
included the creation of
five new works for solo
violin inspired by and
dedicated to the memory
of pioneering American
violinist Maud Powell
(1867-1920). Healy
premiered the sonata on
May 8, 2021 at PianoForte
Studios in Chicago.Among
the works Powell most
frequently performed in
her recitals was the
â??Preludioâ?
movement from Bachâ??s E
major Partita, and I
decided to refer to that
music in my own first
movement, also titled
â??Preludio.â? The
beginning subtly reflects
Bachâ??s opening
three-note motive,
wherein the music dips
down a semitone and then
comes back up. This
melodic material returns
throughout the movement
in various forms. I also
refer to Bachâ??s
sixteenth-note dominated
texture, and the gesture
in the third measure,
which outlines a perfect
fifth and then fills it
in with notes that
alternate between a scale
and a pedal tone. The
corresponding passage in
my piece occurs in the
same place, measure 3.
Apart from these
references to Bach, my
sonata is much more
modern sounding,
especially in its
chromatic character.I was
still thinking of
Bachâ??s solo violin
writing while composing
the second movement,
particularly the
polyphonic nature of the
slow movements, where the
melodic interest moves
around between the
voices. Emotionally, I
wanted my movement to
reflect the acute sadness
I had been experiencing
over the political and
social situation in the
United States as I wrote
the piece. I realized
that this is a
historically noteworthy
time in U.S. history,
marked not only by
political unrest, but
also by a challenge to
the very values that I
consider essential to
what makes a person
fundamentally human. I
wanted to create a record
of that pain in my
music.The final movement
is marked
â??White-hot.â? It is
imbued with a relentless,
passionate intensity.
Wanting again to reflect
aspects of our own time,
I included glissandi that
refer to rock music,
specifically the
â??fall-offsâ? I
frequently hear played by
electric guitarists. I
borrowed from another
(completely different)
musical tradition as
well, one that is
near-and-dear to my
heart: Klezmer. Klezmer
(Eastern European Jewish
folk music) is
characterized in part by
scales colored by
augmented seconds, and is
often performed by solo
instrumentalists who
improvise embellishments
like quick grace notes.
The second, more lyrical
theme in this movement is
my nod to Klezmer
style.While this piece is
an homage to Maud Powell,
I also think of it as my
own musical
autobiography, as it
combines some of my
favorite aspects of
music, and is played on
my own instrument. $12.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Eden: Out of Time and Out of Space Theodore Presser Co.
Chamber Music Clarinet, Flute, Guitar, Horn, Viola, Violin, Violoncello SKU: ...(+)
Chamber Music Clarinet,
Flute, Guitar, Horn,
Viola, Violin,
Violoncello SKU:
PR.114420410
Chamber Concerto for
Guitar and Ensemble.
Composed by George
Rochberg. Set of Score
and Parts.
30+10+8+10+12+10+10+10
pages. Duration 20
minutes. Theodore Presser
Company #114-42041.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.114420410). UPC:
680160687015. In
one of the dedicatory
poems to his verse play
The Shadowy Waters
(1906), William Butler
Yeats asks: Is Eden far
away...? Do our woods and
winds and verponds cover
more quiet woods, More
shining winds, more
star-glimmering ponds? Is
Eden out of time and out
of space? How do you
answer such questions? We
have only the vague
elusive promptings of our
own mysterious, troubled
hearts to tell us that
the Eden we long for is
there, somewhere beyond
the physical world which
frames our existence, in
another realm of
different dimensions. And
- what is most painful to
admit - that it is closed
to us in the form in
which we live and
breathe, even if at times
we do have
intimations..., Yeats is
telling us that this
paradise, this Eden we
yearn for is here -
present even if
invisible, palpable even
if intangible. In his
Second Symphony, Mahler
meets an angel who tells
him he can't get into
heaven, he's locked out.
The news is shattering.
What follows is an
inconsolable sorrowing,
the same sorrowing that
comes when we wake to the
realization that we too
are locked out of Eden.
Eden is the heaven of our
longing and desire for
release from pain and
suffering. Eden is the
image in our restive
minds that reflects the
reconciled, resolved,
quiescent state of soul
we hunger for. But Eden
eludes -because it is not
a place. It is a state of
soul which answers none
of the illusory,
hampering conditions that
shape and bind us to the
real world of our bodies,
our appetites, our
passions, and our
beliefs. I have turned
Yeats' question Is Eden
out of time and out of
space? into its own
answering. However near
we may sense its presence
at times, Eden remains
unreachable, ungraspable,
unknowable, unthinkable.
It forever eludes us. I
wrote this music the way
I did to shut out -with
quietness and
otherworldliness - the
clamor and clang of the
raucous Garish Day, to
turn away its tumult and
noise, to negate its
stridency and chaos.
Perhaps in the cleansing
stillness and blessing of
this emptied-out state of
soul, Eden, through still
hidden, may not be so far
way; though still
unreachable, may be close
enough almost to
touch. In one of the
dedicatory poems to his
verse play “The
Shadowy Watersâ€
(1906), William Butler
Yeats asks:“Is Eden
far away…?Do our
woods and windsand
verponds cover morequiet
woods,More shining
winds,more
star-glimmeringponds?Is
Eden out of timeand out
of space?â€How do
you answer such
questions? We have only
the vague elusive
promptings of our own
mysterious, troubled
hearts to tell us that
the Eden we long for is
there, somewhere beyond
the physical world which
frames our existence, in
another realm of
different dimensions. And
– what is most
painful to admit –
that it is closed to us
in the form in which we
live and breathe, even if
at times we do have
intimations…, Yeats
is telling us that this
paradise, this Eden we
yearn for is here
– present even if
invisible, palpable even
if intangible.In his
Second Symphony, Mahler
meets an angel who tells
him he can’t get
into heaven, he’s
locked out. The news is
shattering. What follows
is an inconsolable
sorrowing, the same
sorrowing that comes when
we wake to the
realization that we too
are locked out of
Eden.Eden is the heaven
of our longing and desire
for release from pain and
suffering. Eden is the
image in our restive
minds that reflects the
reconciled, resolved,
quiescent state of soul
we hunger for. But Eden
eludes –because it
is not a place. It is a
state of soul which
answers none of the
illusory, hampering
conditions that shape and
bind us to the real world
of our bodies, our
appetites, our passions,
and our beliefs.I have
turned Yeats’
question “Is Eden
out of time and out of
space?†into its
own answering. However
near we may sense its
presence at times, Eden
remains unreachable,
ungraspable, unknowable,
unthinkable. It forever
eludes us.I wrote this
music the way I did to
shut out –with
quietness and
otherworldliness –
the clamor and clang of
the raucous “Garish
Day,†to turn away
its tumult and noise, to
negate its stridency and
chaos. Perhaps in the
cleansing stillness and
blessing of this
emptied-out state of
soul, Eden, through still
hidden, may not be so far
way; though still
unreachable, may be close
enough almost to
touch. $50.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Eden: Out of Time and Out of Space Theodore Presser Co.
Chamber Music Clarinet, Flute, Guitar, Horn, Viola, Violin, Violoncello SKU: ...(+)
Chamber Music Clarinet,
Flute, Guitar, Horn,
Viola, Violin,
Violoncello SKU:
PR.11442041L
Chamber Concerto for
Guitar and Ensemble.
Composed by George
Rochberg. Large Score. 30
pages. Duration 20
minutes. Theodore Presser
Company #114-42041L.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.11442041L). UPC:
680160687039. In
one of the dedicatory
poems to his verse play
The Shadowy Waters
(1906), William Butler
Yeats asks: Is Eden far
away...? Do our woods and
winds and verponds cover
more quiet woods, More
shining winds, more
star-glimmering ponds? Is
Eden out of time and out
of space? How do you
answer such questions? We
have only the vague
elusive promptings of our
own mysterious, troubled
hearts to tell us that
the Eden we long for is
there, somewhere beyond
the physical world which
frames our existence, in
another realm of
different dimensions. And
- what is most painful to
admit - that it is closed
to us in the form in
which we live and
breathe, even if at times
we do have
intimations..., Yeats is
telling us that this
paradise, this Eden we
yearn for is here -
present even if
invisible, palpable even
if intangible. In his
Second Symphony, Mahler
meets an angel who tells
him he can't get into
heaven, he's locked out.
The news is shattering.
What follows is an
inconsolable sorrowing,
the same sorrowing that
comes when we wake to the
realization that we too
are locked out of Eden.
Eden is the heaven of our
longing and desire for
release from pain and
suffering. Eden is the
image in our restive
minds that reflects the
reconciled, resolved,
quiescent state of soul
we hunger for. But Eden
eludes -because it is not
a place. It is a state of
soul which answers none
of the illusory,
hampering conditions that
shape and bind us to the
real world of our bodies,
our appetites, our
passions, and our
beliefs. I have turned
Yeats' question Is Eden
out of time and out of
space? into its own
answering. However near
we may sense its presence
at times, Eden remains
unreachable, ungraspable,
unknowable, unthinkable.
It forever eludes us. I
wrote this music the way
I did to shut out -with
quietness and
otherworldliness - the
clamor and clang of the
raucous Garish Day, to
turn away its tumult and
noise, to negate its
stridency and chaos.
Perhaps in the cleansing
stillness and blessing of
this emptied-out state of
soul, Eden, through still
hidden, may not be so far
way; though still
unreachable, may be close
enough almost to
touch. In one of the
dedicatory poems to his
verse play “The
Shadowy Watersâ€
(1906), William Butler
Yeats asks:“Is Eden
far away…?Do our
woods and windsand
verponds cover morequiet
woods,More shining
winds,more
star-glimmeringponds?Is
Eden out of timeand out
of space?â€How do
you answer such
questions? We have only
the vague elusive
promptings of our own
mysterious, troubled
hearts to tell us that
the Eden we long for is
there, somewhere beyond
the physical world which
frames our existence, in
another realm of
different dimensions. And
– what is most
painful to admit –
that it is closed to us
in the form in which we
live and breathe, even if
at times we do have
intimations…, Yeats
is telling us that this
paradise, this Eden we
yearn for is here
– present even if
invisible, palpable even
if intangible.In his
Second Symphony, Mahler
meets an angel who tells
him he can’t get
into heaven, he’s
locked out. The news is
shattering. What follows
is an inconsolable
sorrowing, the same
sorrowing that comes when
we wake to the
realization that we too
are locked out of
Eden.Eden is the heaven
of our longing and desire
for release from pain and
suffering. Eden is the
image in our restive
minds that reflects the
reconciled, resolved,
quiescent state of soul
we hunger for. But Eden
eludes –because it
is not a place. It is a
state of soul which
answers none of the
illusory, hampering
conditions that shape and
bind us to the real world
of our bodies, our
appetites, our passions,
and our beliefs.I have
turned Yeats’
question “Is Eden
out of time and out of
space?†into its
own answering. However
near we may sense its
presence at times, Eden
remains unreachable,
ungraspable, unknowable,
unthinkable. It forever
eludes us.I wrote this
music the way I did to
shut out –with
quietness and
otherworldliness –
the clamor and clang of
the raucous “Garish
Day,†to turn away
its tumult and noise, to
negate its stridency and
chaos. Perhaps in the
cleansing stillness and
blessing of this
emptied-out state of
soul, Eden, through still
hidden, may not be so far
way; though still
unreachable, may be close
enough almost to
touch. $44.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Eden: Out of Time and Out of Space [Conducteur] Theodore Presser Co.
Chamber Music Clarinet, Flute, Guitar, Horn, Viola, Violin, Violoncello SKU: ...(+)
Chamber Music Clarinet,
Flute, Guitar, Horn,
Viola, Violin,
Violoncello SKU:
PR.11442041S
Chamber Concerto for
Guitar and Ensemble.
Composed by George
Rochberg. Full score. 30
pages. Duration 20
minutes. Theodore Presser
Company #114-42041S.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.11442041S). UPC:
680160687022. In
one of the dedicatory
poems to his verse play
The Shadowy Waters
(1906), William Butler
Yeats asks: Is Eden far
away...? Do our woods and
winds and verponds cover
more quiet woods, More
shining winds, more
star-glimmering ponds? Is
Eden out of time and out
of space? How do you
answer such questions? We
have only the vague
elusive promptings of our
own mysterious, troubled
hearts to tell us that
the Eden we long for is
there, somewhere beyond
the physical world which
frames our existence, in
another realm of
different dimensions. And
- what is most painful to
admit - that it is closed
to us in the form in
which we live and
breathe, even if at times
we do have
intimations..., Yeats is
telling us that this
paradise, this Eden we
yearn for is here -
present even if
invisible, palpable even
if intangible. In his
Second Symphony, Mahler
meets an angel who tells
him he can't get into
heaven, he's locked out.
The news is shattering.
What follows is an
inconsolable sorrowing,
the same sorrowing that
comes when we wake to the
realization that we too
are locked out of Eden.
Eden is the heaven of our
longing and desire for
release from pain and
suffering. Eden is the
image in our restive
minds that reflects the
reconciled, resolved,
quiescent state of soul
we hunger for. But Eden
eludes -because it is not
a place. It is a state of
soul which answers none
of the illusory,
hampering conditions that
shape and bind us to the
real world of our bodies,
our appetites, our
passions, and our
beliefs. I have turned
Yeats' question Is Eden
out of time and out of
space? into its own
answering. However near
we may sense its presence
at times, Eden remains
unreachable, ungraspable,
unknowable, unthinkable.
It forever eludes us. I
wrote this music the way
I did to shut out -with
quietness and
otherworldliness - the
clamor and clang of the
raucous Garish Day, to
turn away its tumult and
noise, to negate its
stridency and chaos.
Perhaps in the cleansing
stillness and blessing of
this emptied-out state of
soul, Eden, through still
hidden, may not be so far
way; though still
unreachable, may be close
enough almost to
touch. In one of the
dedicatory poems to his
verse play “The
Shadowy Watersâ€
(1906), William Butler
Yeats asks:“Is Eden
far away…?Do our
woods and windsand
verponds cover morequiet
woods,More shining
winds,more
star-glimmeringponds?Is
Eden out of timeand out
of space?â€How do
you answer such
questions? We have only
the vague elusive
promptings of our own
mysterious, troubled
hearts to tell us that
the Eden we long for is
there, somewhere beyond
the physical world which
frames our existence, in
another realm of
different dimensions. And
– what is most
painful to admit –
that it is closed to us
in the form in which we
live and breathe, even if
at times we do have
intimations…, Yeats
is telling us that this
paradise, this Eden we
yearn for is here
– present even if
invisible, palpable even
if intangible.In his
Second Symphony, Mahler
meets an angel who tells
him he can’t get
into heaven, he’s
locked out. The news is
shattering. What follows
is an inconsolable
sorrowing, the same
sorrowing that comes when
we wake to the
realization that we too
are locked out of
Eden.Eden is the heaven
of our longing and desire
for release from pain and
suffering. Eden is the
image in our restive
minds that reflects the
reconciled, resolved,
quiescent state of soul
we hunger for. But Eden
eludes –because it
is not a place. It is a
state of soul which
answers none of the
illusory, hampering
conditions that shape and
bind us to the real world
of our bodies, our
appetites, our passions,
and our beliefs.I have
turned Yeats’
question “Is Eden
out of time and out of
space?†into its
own answering. However
near we may sense its
presence at times, Eden
remains unreachable,
ungraspable, unknowable,
unthinkable. It forever
eludes us.I wrote this
music the way I did to
shut out –with
quietness and
otherworldliness –
the clamor and clang of
the raucous “Garish
Day,†to turn away
its tumult and noise, to
negate its stridency and
chaos. Perhaps in the
cleansing stillness and
blessing of this
emptied-out state of
soul, Eden, through still
hidden, may not be so far
way; though still
unreachable, may be close
enough almost to
touch. $29.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Essential Jazz Lines: In the Style of Wes Montgomery - Guitar Edition Guitare notes et tablatures [Partition + Accès audio] Mel Bay
Composed by Corey Christiansen. Saddle-stitched. Essential Jazz Lines. Book and ...(+)
Composed by Corey
Christiansen.
Saddle-stitched.
Essential Jazz Lines.
Book and online audio.
Published by Mel Bay
Publications, Inc
(MB.99905M).
$19.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Images of Fear Guitare Fennica Gehrman
Guitar SKU: FG.55011-071-7 Hommage to Paul Klee. Composed by Kai N...(+)
Guitar SKU:
FG.55011-071-7
Hommage to Paul
Klee. Composed by Kai
Nieminen. Fennica Gehrman
#55011-071-7. Published
by Fennica Gehrman
(FG.55011-071-7). ISBN
9790550110717. Comp
leted in Karstula,
Finland during late July
2010, this carefully
structured, but also
free-ranging work is
drawn from ideas for a
much earlier work in four
movements, Fantasy dating
from the 1980s. Kai
Nieminen has been for a
long time an admirer of
the work of artist Paul
Klee (1879-1940), and the
solo presented in its
final form here is
influenced by the
painting Dances caused by
Fear or as it is often
refered to Dancing from
Fear painted towards the
end of Klee's life in
Bern, 1938. Having
left Germany for
Switzerland in December
1933, Klee's later works
were often full of signs
and lines, very often
represented in black,
depicting human figures
or various objects
against a variety of
coloured backgrounds, in
the case of this painting
of a brownish hue. This
development in his
painting style and
technique is felt by some
to be an effect perhaps
of his long-term illness,
systemic sclerosis, but
in the case of Dances
caused by Fear there is
suggested an atmosphere
of panic and terror, an
attempt to escape from
horrors to come (World
War II), represented in
the violent movement of
the arms and legs of the
figures, and the dark,
indeed brooding nature of
the colours. In Kai
Nieminen's guitar work
Images of Fear, there is
only a very brief passage
of calm at the very
beginning, after which
come three main connected
sections in which a wide
range of musically
unsettling ideas emerge
one by one, making use of
the tritone, minor
seconds, glissandos,
tamboura, campanella,
etc. The third and final
section incorporates the
grouping of 5
sixteenth-notes, to give
an uneasy feeling to the
music, with a short
haunting and pleading
five-note phrase
(Cantando) heard
immediately following
this passage, before the
work ends with further
glissandos, and distant
and diminishing
harmonics. As with
Kai Nieminen's other
guitar works, the use of
'orchestral colour' is
vital to the performance,
and passages suggestive
of for example brass,
strings, woodwind, etc.,
should be taken into
account and played with
suitably considered
contrast of tone.
John Mills. $16.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 4 to 6 weeks | | |
| Kaleidoscope Sky Orchestre d'harmonie - Facile Carl Fischer
Band concert band - Grade 3 SKU: CF.CPS250 Composed by Peter Sciaino. Set...(+)
Band concert band - Grade
3 SKU: CF.CPS250
Composed by Peter
Sciaino. Set of Score and
Parts.
27+12+12+6+12+12+12+6+6+6
+6+4+4+8+8+8+4+4+6+6+6+4+
12+4+2+6+10 pages.
Duration 4 minutes, 40
seconds. Carl Fischer
Music #CPS250. Published
by Carl Fischer Music
(CF.CPS250). ISBN
9781491159576. UPC:
680160918164. Kalei
doscope Sky is inspired
by the breathtaking
pastime of hot-air
ballooning and the
glorious festivals around
the world that honor the
practice. A sky full of
colorful spheres
elegantly floating at the
Albuquerque International
Balloon Fiesta,
International Balloon
Festival of
Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu,
Bristol International
Balloon Fiesta, Mondial
Air Ballons and more draw
thousands of people to
witness awe-inspiring
scenes full of passionate
balloonists. Traditional
hot-air balloons mix with
creatively designed
balloons to thrill the
tens of thousands of
spectators below. While I
personally am not a
person who dreams of
taking my own
flight--heights are not
my thing--I have to
marvel at how gently and
easily these vessels
float among the clouds.
It truly is an image of
exquisite freedom. This
piece reflects the view
and experience of the
onlooker taking in an
elegantly shifting scene
reminiscent of
kaleidoscope patterns.
Spectators like me can
appreciate the beauty and
vibrancy associated with
a horizon full of
adventurous balloonists
and their wondrous
aircrafts. Kaleidoscope
Sky starts in a
triumphant and
celebratory fashion and
continues to conjure
images reminiscent of the
wide variety of soaring
colors on display at a
hot-air balloon event.
Ultimately, the piece
appropriately concludes
with a suspenseful, yet
graceful, run to the
finish line. Melodic
lines should soar with
attention being paid to
phrase markings and
assigned articulations.
Encourage musicians to
allow room for the
melodic material to be
heard in thicker textures
where supporting
harmonies are often
rhythmic in nature. These
harmonies should support,
and not cloud the
melodies. The meter
changes should sound
effortless, and the
continuous figures in the
percussion will help to
achieve this effect. The
snare drum, in
particular, should bring
accented notes to the
foreground while
maintaining a steady
textural effect with
non-accented notes as a
rhythmic background. This
will go a long way in
finding a cohesive
subdivision and ensemble
pulse. Kaleidoscope
Sky is inspired by the
breathtaking pastime of
hot-air ballooning and
the glorious festivals
around the world that
honor the practice. A sky
full of colorful spheres
elegantly floating at the
Albuquerque International
Balloon Fiesta,
International Balloon
Festival of
Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu,
Bristol International
Balloon Fiesta, Mondial
Air Ballons and more draw
thousands of people to
witness awe-inspiring
scenes full of passionate
balloonists. Traditional
hot-air balloons mix with
creatively designed
balloons to thrill the
tens of thousands of
spectators below. While I
personally am not a
person who dreams of
taking my own
flight—heights are
not my thing—I
have to marvel at how
gently and easily these
vessels float among the
clouds. It truly is an
image of exquisite
freedom. This piece
reflects the view and
experience of the
onlooker taking in an
elegantly shifting scene
reminiscent of
kaleidoscope patterns.
Spectators like me can
appreciate the beauty and
vibrancy associated with
a horizon full of
adventurous balloonists
and their wondrous
aircrafts. Kaleidoscope
Sky starts in a
triumphant and
celebratory fashion and
continues to conjure
images reminiscent of the
wide variety of soaring
colors on display at a
hot-air balloon event.
Ultimately, the piece
appropriately concludes
with a suspenseful, yet
graceful, run to the
finish line.Melodic lines
should “soarâ€
with attention being paid
to phrase markings and
assigned articulations.
Encourage musicians to
allow room for the
melodic material to be
heard in thicker textures
where supporting
harmonies are often
rhythmic in nature. These
harmonies should support,
and not
“cloud†the
melodies. The meter
changes should sound
effortless, and the
continuous figures in the
percussion will help to
achieve this effect. The
snare drum, in
particular, should bring
accented notes to the
foreground while
maintaining a steady
textural effect with
non-accented notes as a
rhythmic background. This
will go a long way in
finding a cohesive
subdivision and ensemble
pulse. $95.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Popsicle Rocket Sunrise (from Summer Suite) Orchestre à Cordes [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Intermédiaire Imagine Music
Composed by Greg Bartholomew. For "trumpet, percussion & string orc...(+)
Composed by Greg
Bartholomew.
For "trumpet,
percussion &
string orchestra".
Pathways
Series. Level 4. Score
and set
of parts. Duration
"3 minutes,
40 seconds".
Published by
Imagine Music
$40.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 4 to 6 weeks | | |
Page suivante 1 31 61 61 91 |