(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
(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
(C Edition) For voice and C instrument. Format: fakebook. With vocal melody, lyr...(+)
(C Edition) For voice and
C instrument. Format:
fakebook. With vocal
melody, lyrics and chord
names. Series: Hal
Leonard Fake Books. 856
pages. 9x12 inches.
Published by Hal Leonard.
Band Concert Band - Grade 2 SKU: CF.YPS105 Warm-Ups and Fundamentals(+)
Band Concert Band - Grade
2
SKU: CF.YPS105
Warm-Ups and
Fundamentals.
Composed by Larry Clark.
Collate - FS SWS - spine:
3/4 or .75. Young
Performance Series. Set
of Score and Parts. With
Standard notation.
16+4+8+8+4+10+4+4+8+8+8+1
2+4+6+2+2+4+2+20 pages.
Duration 2 minutes, 53
seconds. Carl Fischer
Music #YPS105. Published
by Carl Fischer Music
(CF.YPS105).
ISBN
9780825884870. UPC:
798408084875. 9 x 12
inches. Key: Bb
major.
Based on our
popular New Bennett Band
Book series, we have
compiled march-style
warm-ups in a separate
publication so they may
be used by all bands
wishing to learn from
them. These innovative
warm-ups and fundamental
drills are the ultimate
method of teaching and
reinforcing the March
style. How To Use the
March Warm-upsPlaying in
a march style can present
difficulties for young
students. The most
prevalent problem is that
students have a tendency
to play every note too
short. Conversely,
accented notes are
usually played
incorrectly with too much
tongue. Do marches
contain short notes?
Absolutely, but these
shortest of notes should
be reserved for notes
that precede an accent or
notes that are
specifically marked with
a staccato. Think of
unmarked notes as being
separated, but not short
and certainly not clipped
or stopped with the
tongue. Accented notes
should be played with
more weight using air and
more length, and not just
a harder tongue. Accents
are given to show
emphasis to a note and
should be thought of in
this manner.The warm-up
exercises provided in
this collection should
give you many
opportunities to stress
the above-mentioned
comments on march
performance style. The
following gives an
explanation on the
purpose and use of each
of these exercises.No. 1
– Basic Chords and
ModulationsOne of the
challenges of playing
marches with young
students is successfully
performing the key change
at the Trio. This
exercise presents the
three basic chords
(tonic, subdominant and
dominant) in each of the
three keys in this
collection of marches.
You can also use this
exercise to teach and
reinforce the style of
accented notes. You may
want to have your band
play major scales in
succession by fourths to
reinforce the concept of
modulation to the
subdominant that occurs
at the Trio (i.e. the
B≤-major scale,
then the E≤-major
scale, then the
A≤-major scale). I
might suggest getting the
students to try
continuing the pattern
all the way around the
circle of fourths.No. 2
– March Style in
B≤ MajorThis
exercise contains many
opportunities to teach
and reinforce the
difference between
staccato and accented
notes. The melody voices
move up and down the
B≤-major scale,
while other instruments
play chords commonly
found in the marches in
this collection. These
include diminished
chords, secondary
dominant chords (i.e. the
V of the V) and other
common chromatic chords
that Fillmore often
used.No. 3 –
Cakewalk Rhythm in
B≤ MajorThe simple
syncopated rhythm in this
exercise is common to
many marches. This drill
gives you the opportunity
to teach/ reinforce the
standard ar-ticulation
and natural accent of
this rhythmic pattern.
Again, this exercise uses
an ascending and
descending major-scale
pattern as the melodic
basis, accompanied by
chords commonly found in
American- style
marches.No. 4 –
The March Scale in
B≤ MajorI call this
exercise “The March
Scale,†because
often in marches (and
especially in these
marches) the descending
half-step is part of the
melodic material. These
chromatic figures give
the melodies of many
marches their charm and
flow. Thus, I devised
this exercise and others
like it in E≤ major
and A≤ major to
familiarize students with
these patterns. I would
suggest playing the
pattern in a variety of
ways different from what
is written. Here are some
other
possibilities:•
Tongue one, slur
three• Slur two,
tongue two• Tongue
two, slur two•
Tongue one, slur two,
tongue oneGradually
increase the tempo to the
march tempo and the
articulation style will
fall right into
place.Another important
consideration is the
performance of the bass
line and the bass-drum
part. Too often, the bass
drum and bass instruments
play their parts with
equal emphasis on both
beats in the measure.
This is incorrect, and
frequently makes the
marchNo. 5 – March
Style in E≤
MajorThis is a similar to
exercise No. 2, but with
a different rhythmic
pattern. Emphasize the
difference between
accented and unaccented
notes. Also, play the
exercise with line
direction moving the
musical line forward.
Experiment and play the
exercise with different
dynamic choices and with
hairpins up and down in
different ways.No. 6
– More March Style
in E≤ MajorExercise
No. 6 comprises more
rhythmic patterns and
harmonic materials in
E≤ major to teach
and reinforce the march
style. This exercise
em-phasizes the
sixteenth-note rhythm, as
notated in the third
measure of the exercise.
Young stu- dents have a
tendency to
“crush†the
sixteenths; consequently,
they lack clarity. It
would be a good idea to
work this rhythmic figure
on a scale pattern with
all of the instruments in
the band as an additional
warm-up exercise.No. 7
– The March Scale
in E≤ MajorSee the
information for No. 4 and
apply it to this
exercise. Use all of the
various articulations
described above as
well.No. 8 – March
Style in A≤
MajorSee the information
for No. 2 and apply it to
this exercise.No. 9
– Cakewalk Rhythm
in A≤ MajorSee the
information for No. 3 and
apply it to this
exercise.No. 10 –
The March Scale in
A≤ MajorSee the
information for No. 4 and
apply it to this
exercise.Other Ideas for
March PerformanceA
rehearsal practice that
has worked very well for
me is to start out by
having the band play the
march very slowly at
about Å’ = 60 in a
chorale/legato style. The
slow tempo is a fine
opportunity to work on
clarity of harmonic move-
ment and to work on the
balance and blend of the
tutti band sound. This
will pay great dividends
toward improving the
sound of your band.
Gradually increase the
tempo to the march tempo
and the articulation
style will fall right
into place.Another
important consideration
is the performance of the
bass line and the
bass-drum part. Too
often, the bass drum and
bass instruments play
their parts with equal
emphasis on both beats in
the measure. This is
incorrect, and frequently
makes the march.
Hymns
for Wind Ensemble.
Composed by Dan Welcher.
Folio. Set of Score and
Parts.
4+24+24+16+8+4+4+24+12+12
+8+4+4+4+4+8+8+8+8+4+4+4+
4+8+8+8+8+8+8+8+8+4+16+4+
8+4+8+8+4+4+4+48 pages.
Duration 10 minutes, 41
seconds. Theodore Presser
Company #165-00100.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.165001000).
ISBN
9781491129241. UPC:
680160669776. 9 x 12
inches.
Commissione
d for a consortium of
high school and college
bands in the north Dallas
region, FOR THEMYSTIC
HARMONY is a 10-minute
inspirational work in
homage to Norwood and
Elizabeth Dixon,patrons
of the Fort Worth
Symphony and the Van
Cliburn Competition.
Welcher draws melodic
flavorfrom five American
hymns, spirituals, and
folk tunes of the 19th
century. The last of
these sources toappear is
the hymn tune For the
Beauty of the Earth,
whose third stanza is the
quatrain: “For the
joy of earand eye, For
the heart and
mind’s delight,
For the mystic harmony,
Linking sense to sound
and sight,â€giving
rise to the work’s
title. This work,
commissioned for a
consortium of high school
bands in the north Dallas
area, is my fifteenth
maturework for wind
ensemble (not counting
transcriptions). When I
asked Todd Dixon, the
band director
whospearheaded this
project, what kind of a
work he most wanted, he
first said
“something
that’s basically
slow,†butwanted to
leave the details to me.
During a long subsequent
conversation, he
mentioned that his
grandparents,Norwood and
Elizabeth Dixon, were
prime supporters of the
Fort Worth Symphony,
going so far as to
purchase anumber of high
quality instruments for
that orchestra. This
intrigued me, so I asked
more about his
grandparentsand was
provided an 80-page
biographical sketch.
Reading that article,
including a long section
about theirdevotion to
supporting a young man
through the rigors of the
Van Cliburn International
Piano Competition fora
number of years, moved me
very much. Norwood and
Elizabeth Dixon
weren’t just
supporters of the arts;
theywere passionate
lovers of music and
musicians. I determined
to make this work a
testament to that love,
and tothe religious faith
that sustained them both.
The idea of using extant
hymns was also suggested
by Todd Dixon,and this
10-minute work is the
result.I have employed
existing melodies in
several works, delving
into certain kinds of
religious music more than
a fewtimes. In seeking
new sounds, new ways of
harmonizing old tunes,
and the contrapuntal
overlaying of one
tunewith another, I was
able to make works like
ZION (using 19th-century
Revivalist hymns) and
LABORING SONGS(using
Shaker melodies) reflect
the spirit of the
composers who created
these melodies, without
sounding likepastiches or
medleys. I determined to
do the same with this new
work, with the added
problem of
employingmelodies that
were more familiar. I
chose five tunes from the
19th century: hymns,
spirituals, and
folk-tunes.Some of these
are known by differing
titles, but they all
appear in hymnals of
various Christian
denominations(with
various titles and
texts). My idea was to
employ the tunes without
altering their notes,
instead using aconstantly
modulating sense of
harmony —
sometimes leading to
polytonal harmonizations
of what are
normallysimple four-chord
hymns.The work begins and
ends with a repeated
chime on the note C: a
reminder of steeples,
white clapboard
churchesin the country,
and small church organs.
Beginning with a
Mixolydian folk tune of
Caribbean origin
presentedtwice with
layered entrances, the
work starts with a
feeling of mystery and
gentle sorrow. It
proceeds, after along
transition, into a second
hymn that is sometimes
connected to the sea
(hence the sensation of
water andwaves throughout
it). This tune, by John
B. Dykes (1823-1876), is
a bit more chromatic and
“shifty†than
mosthymn-tunes, so I
chose to play with the
constant sensation of
modulation even more than
the original does. Atthe
climax, the familiar
spiritual “Were you
there?†takes over,
with a double-time
polytonal feeling
propelling itforward at
“Sometimes it
causes me to
tremble.â€Trumpets
in counterpoint raise the
temperature, and the
tempo as well, leading
the music into a third
tune (ofunknown
provenance, though it
appears with different
texts in various hymnals)
that is presented in a
sprightlymanner. Bassoons
introduce the melody, but
it is quickly taken up by
other instruments over
three
“verses,â€cons
tantly growing in
orchestration and volume.
A mysterious second tune,
unrelated to this one,
interrupts it inall three
verses, sending the
melody into unknown
regions.The final melody
is “For the Beauty
of the Earth.†This
tune by Conrad Kocher
(1786-1872) is commonly
sung atThanksgiving
— the perfect
choice to end this work
celebrating two people
known for their
generosity.Keeping the
sense of constant
modulation that has been
present throughout, I
chose to present this
hymn in threegrowing
verses, but with a twist:
every four bars, the
“key†of the
hymn seems to shift
— until the
“Lord of all,
toThee we praiseâ€
melody bursts out in a
surprising compound
meter. This, as it turns
out, was the
“mystery
tuneâ€heard earlier
in the piece. After an
Ivesian, almost polytonal
climax, the Coda begins
over a long B( pedal. At
first,it seems to be a
restatement of the first
two phrases of “For
the Beauty†with
long spaces between them,
but it soonchanges to a
series of
“Amenâ€
cadences, widely
separated by range and
color. These, too, do not
conform to anykey, but
instead overlay each
other in ways that are
unpredictable but
strangely comforting.The
third verse of “For
the Beauty of the
Earth†contains
this quatrain:“For
the joy of ear and eye,
–For the heart and
mind’s delightFor
the mystic harmonyLinking
sense to sound and
sightâ€and it was
from this poetry that I
drew the title for the
present work. It is my
hope that audiences and
performerswill find
within it a sense of
grace: more than a little
familiar, but also quite
new and unexpected.
Band Bass Clarinet, Bass
Drum, Bassoon 1, Bassoon
2, Bongos, Castanets,
Celesta, Clarinet,
Clarinet 1, Clarinet 2,
Clarinet 3, Contrabass
Clarinet, Contrabassoon,
English Horn, Euphonium,
Euphonium T.C., Flute 1,
Flute 2, Horn 1, Horn 2,
Horn 3 and more.
SKU:
PR.16500100F
Hymns
for Wind Ensemble.
Composed by Dan Welcher.
Sws. Full score. 48
pages. Duration 10
minutes, 41 seconds.
Theodore Presser Company
#165-00100F. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.16500100F).
ISBN
9781491114421. UPC:
680160669783. 9 x 12
inches.
Commissione
d for a consortium of
high school and college
bands in the north Dallas
region, FOR THEMYSTIC
HARMONY is a 10-minute
inspirational work in
homage to Norwood and
Elizabeth Dixon,patrons
of the Fort Worth
Symphony and the Van
Cliburn Competition.
Welcher draws melodic
flavorfrom five American
hymns, spirituals, and
folk tunes of the 19th
century. The last of
these sources toappear is
the hymn tune For the
Beauty of the Earth,
whose third stanza is the
quatrain: “For the
joy of earand eye, For
the heart and
mind’s delight,
For the mystic harmony,
Linking sense to sound
and sight,â€giving
rise to the work’s
title. This work,
commissioned for a
consortium of high school
bands in the north Dallas
area, is my fifteenth
maturework for wind
ensemble (not counting
transcriptions). When I
asked Todd Dixon, the
band director
whospearheaded this
project, what kind of a
work he most wanted, he
first said
“something
that’s basically
slow,†butwanted to
leave the details to me.
During a long subsequent
conversation, he
mentioned that his
grandparents,Norwood and
Elizabeth Dixon, were
prime supporters of the
Fort Worth Symphony,
going so far as to
purchase anumber of high
quality instruments for
that orchestra. This
intrigued me, so I asked
more about his
grandparentsand was
provided an 80-page
biographical sketch.
Reading that article,
including a long section
about theirdevotion to
supporting a young man
through the rigors of the
Van Cliburn International
Piano Competition fora
number of years, moved me
very much. Norwood and
Elizabeth Dixon
weren’t just
supporters of the arts;
theywere passionate
lovers of music and
musicians. I determined
to make this work a
testament to that love,
and tothe religious faith
that sustained them both.
The idea of using extant
hymns was also suggested
by Todd Dixon,and this
10-minute work is the
result.I have employed
existing melodies in
several works, delving
into certain kinds of
religious music more than
a fewtimes. In seeking
new sounds, new ways of
harmonizing old tunes,
and the contrapuntal
overlaying of one
tunewith another, I was
able to make works like
ZION (using 19th-century
Revivalist hymns) and
LABORING SONGS(using
Shaker melodies) reflect
the spirit of the
composers who created
these melodies, without
sounding likepastiches or
medleys. I determined to
do the same with this new
work, with the added
problem of
employingmelodies that
were more familiar. I
chose five tunes from the
19th century: hymns,
spirituals, and
folk-tunes.Some of these
are known by differing
titles, but they all
appear in hymnals of
various Christian
denominations(with
various titles and
texts). My idea was to
employ the tunes without
altering their notes,
instead using aconstantly
modulating sense of
harmony —
sometimes leading to
polytonal harmonizations
of what are
normallysimple four-chord
hymns.The work begins and
ends with a repeated
chime on the note C: a
reminder of steeples,
white clapboard
churchesin the country,
and small church organs.
Beginning with a
Mixolydian folk tune of
Caribbean origin
presentedtwice with
layered entrances, the
work starts with a
feeling of mystery and
gentle sorrow. It
proceeds, after along
transition, into a second
hymn that is sometimes
connected to the sea
(hence the sensation of
water andwaves throughout
it). This tune, by John
B. Dykes (1823-1876), is
a bit more chromatic and
“shifty†than
mosthymn-tunes, so I
chose to play with the
constant sensation of
modulation even more than
the original does. Atthe
climax, the familiar
spiritual “Were you
there?†takes over,
with a double-time
polytonal feeling
propelling itforward at
“Sometimes it
causes me to
tremble.â€Trumpets
in counterpoint raise the
temperature, and the
tempo as well, leading
the music into a third
tune (ofunknown
provenance, though it
appears with different
texts in various hymnals)
that is presented in a
sprightlymanner. Bassoons
introduce the melody, but
it is quickly taken up by
other instruments over
three
“verses,â€cons
tantly growing in
orchestration and volume.
A mysterious second tune,
unrelated to this one,
interrupts it inall three
verses, sending the
melody into unknown
regions.The final melody
is “For the Beauty
of the Earth.†This
tune by Conrad Kocher
(1786-1872) is commonly
sung atThanksgiving
— the perfect
choice to end this work
celebrating two people
known for their
generosity.Keeping the
sense of constant
modulation that has been
present throughout, I
chose to present this
hymn in threegrowing
verses, but with a twist:
every four bars, the
“key†of the
hymn seems to shift
— until the
“Lord of all,
toThee we praiseâ€
melody bursts out in a
surprising compound
meter. This, as it turns
out, was the
“mystery
tuneâ€heard earlier
in the piece. After an
Ivesian, almost polytonal
climax, the Coda begins
over a long B( pedal. At
first,it seems to be a
restatement of the first
two phrases of “For
the Beauty†with
long spaces between them,
but it soonchanges to a
series of
“Amenâ€
cadences, widely
separated by range and
color. These, too, do not
conform to anykey, but
instead overlay each
other in ways that are
unpredictable but
strangely comforting.The
third verse of “For
the Beauty of the
Earth†contains
this quatrain:“For
the joy of ear and eye,
–For the heart and
mind’s delightFor
the mystic harmonyLinking
sense to sound and
sightâ€and it was
from this poetry that I
drew the title for the
present work. It is my
hope that audiences and
performerswill find
within it a sense of
grace: more than a little
familiar, but also quite
new and unexpected.
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.
Scott Joplin Reconsidered. Composed by Scott Joplin (1868-1917). Edited by L...(+)
Scott Joplin
Reconsidered.
Composed by Scott Joplin
(1868-1917). Edited by
Lara
Downes. Collection.
Theodore
Presser Company
#440-40028.
Published by Theodore
Presser
Company
Arab Dance Big band [Conducteur et Parties séparées] Jazz Lines Publications
By Claude Thornhill. Edited by Jeffrey Sultanof. Arranged by Gil Evans. For Big ...(+)
By Claude Thornhill.
Edited by Jeffrey
Sultanof. Arranged by Gil
Evans. For Big Band.
Swing. Advanced. Full
score and set of parts.
Published by Jazz Lines
Publications
The Doctor Is Out Big band [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Intermédiaire Sierra Music
By Bob Curnow. Arranged by Bob Curnow. Jazz Ensemble / Jazz Band. The Bob Curnow...(+)
By Bob Curnow. Arranged
by Bob Curnow. Jazz
Ensemble / Jazz Band. The
Bob Curnow Big Band
Series; Doc Severinsen
Series. Up Tempo Trumpet
Feature. Grade 4-5. Score
and set of parts.
Published by Sierra Music
For voice and C instrument. Format: fakebook. With vocal melody, lyrics and chor...(+)
For voice and C
instrument. Format:
fakebook. With vocal
melody, lyrics and chord
names. Traditional pop
and vocal standards.
Series: Hal Leonard Fake
Books. 424 pages. 9x12
inches. Published by Hal
Leonard.
Guardians of the Waves Orchestre d'harmonie [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Intermédiaire Anglo Music
Concert Band/Harmonie - Grade 3.5 SKU: BT.AMP-481-010 Composed by Philip ...(+)
Concert Band/Harmonie -
Grade 3.5
SKU:
BT.AMP-481-010
Composed by Philip
Sparke. Ceremonial
Series. Concert March.
Set (Score & Parts).
Composed 2021. Anglo
Music Press #AMP 481-010.
Published by Anglo Music
Press (BT.AMP-481-010).
English-German-French-
Dutch.
Guardians
of the Waves was
commissioned by the Japan
Coast Guard Band to
celebrate their 30th
anniversary in 2018. They
gave the premiere as part
of a 30th anniversary
concert on November 8th
that year. Set in
traditionalmarch form,
Guardians of the
Waves opens with a
short introduction, which
leads to the main theme,
played initially by the
brass and then repeated
with a florid woodwind
descant. The theme is
extended and morphs into
asecond theme, first
played tutti and then
quietly repeated by
bassoon, tenor sax and
euphonium. This leads to
a conventional
‘bass
strain’, played
twice with varying
accompaniments. A quieter
trio section follows,
delicatelyscored and
featuring the tenor
instruments of the band.
Taken up by the full
band, this leads back to
a recall of the
introduction and a return
to the main two themes,
which lead to a triumphal
close.
Guardian
s of the Waves werd
geschreven in opdracht
van de Japan Coast Guard
Band ter gelegenheid van
het dertigjarig bestaan
van dit orkest, in 2018.
De première vond
plaats tijdens het
jubileumconcert op 8
november van datjaar. Het
werk, dat is gecomponeerd
in een traditionele
marsvorm, begint met een
korte introductie die het
hoofdthema inleidt, dat
aanvankelijk wordt
gespeeld door het koper
en dan wordt herhaald met
een weelderige discant in
hethout. Het thema wordt
voortgezet en gaat over
in een tweede thema,
eerst tutti gespeeld en
rustig herhaald door
fagot, tenorsax en
eufonium. Dit thema voert
ons mee naar een
conventionele baslijn,
die twee keer wordt
gespeeld metvariërende
begeleiding. Daarna volgt
een kalmer triogedeelte,
dat delicaat is getoonzet
en waarin de
tenorinstrumenten van het
orkest ruimschoots aan
bod komen. Het wordt dan
overgenomen door het
complete orkest en brengt
onsterug naar de
inleiding en de twee
hoofdthema’s,
uitmondend in een
triomfantelijk
slot.
Guardians
of the Waves wurde
von der Japan Coast Guard
Band anlässlich ihres
30-jährigen Bestehens
im Jahr 2018 in Auftrag
gegeben. Die
Uraufführung fand am
8. November 2018 im
Rahmen eines
Jubiläumskonzertes
statt.Guardians of the
Waves wurde als
traditioneller Marsch
komponiert und beginnt
mit einer kurzen
Einleitung, die zum
Hauptthema führt.
Dieses wird zunächst
von den Blechbläsern
gespielt und dann von den
Oberstimmen in
denHolzbläsern mit
Verzierungen wiederholt.
Das Thema wird erweitert
und geht in ein zweites
Thema über, das
zunächst vom Tutti
gespielt und dann von
Fagott, Tenorsaxophon und
Euphonium leise
wiederholt wird.
Anschließend
erklingteine
traditionelle Melodie in
den Bassinstrumenten, die
mit unterschiedlicher
Begleitung zweimal
gespielt wird. Es folgt
ein ruhigeres Trio, das
zart besetzt ist und die
Tenorinstrumente des
Blasorchesters
hervorhebt. Dies
wirdschließlich vom
gesamten Blasorchester
aufgegriffen und führt
zu einer Wiederholung der
Einleitung und einer
Rückkehr zu den beiden
Hauptthemen, die in einen
triumphalen Schluss
überleiten.
Concert Band/Harmonie - Grade 3.5 SKU: BT.AMP-481-140 Composed by Philip ...(+)
Concert Band/Harmonie -
Grade 3.5
SKU:
BT.AMP-481-140
Composed by Philip
Sparke. Ceremonial
Series. Concert March.
Score Only. Composed
2021. 32 pages. Anglo
Music Press #AMP 481-140.
Published by Anglo Music
Press (BT.AMP-481-140).
English-German-French-
Dutch.
Guardians
of the Waves was
commissioned by the Japan
Coast Guard Band to
celebrate their 30th
anniversary in 2018. They
gave the premiere as part
of a 30th anniversary
concert on November 8th
that year. Set in
traditionalmarch form,
Guardians of the
Waves opens with a
short introduction, which
leads to the main theme,
played initially by the
brass and then repeated
with a florid woodwind
descant. The theme is
extended and morphs into
asecond theme, first
played tutti and then
quietly repeated by
bassoon, tenor sax and
euphonium. This leads to
a conventional
‘bass
strain’, played
twice with varying
accompaniments. A quieter
trio section follows,
delicatelyscored and
featuring the tenor
instruments of the band.
Taken up by the full
band, this leads back to
a recall of the
introduction and a return
to the main two themes,
which lead to a triumphal
close.
Guardian
s of the Waves werd
geschreven in opdracht
van de Japan Coast Guard
Band ter gelegenheid van
het dertigjarig bestaan
van dit orkest, in 2018.
De première vond
plaats tijdens het
jubileumconcert op 8
november van datjaar. Het
werk, dat is gecomponeerd
in een traditionele
marsvorm, begint met een
korte introductie die het
hoofdthema inleidt, dat
aanvankelijk wordt
gespeeld door het koper
en dan wordt herhaald met
een weelderige discant in
hethout. Het thema wordt
voortgezet en gaat over
in een tweede thema,
eerst tutti gespeeld en
rustig herhaald door
fagot, tenorsax en
eufonium. Dit thema voert
ons mee naar een
conventionele baslijn,
die twee keer wordt
gespeeld metvariërende
begeleiding. Daarna volgt
een kalmer triogedeelte,
dat delicaat is getoonzet
en waarin de
tenorinstrumenten van het
orkest ruimschoots aan
bod komen. Het wordt dan
overgenomen door het
complete orkest en brengt
onsterug naar de
inleiding en de twee
hoofdthema’s,
uitmondend in een
triomfantelijk
slot.
Guardians
of the Waves wurde
von der Japan Coast Guard
Band anlässlich ihres
30-jährigen Bestehens
im Jahr 2018 in Auftrag
gegeben. Die
Uraufführung fand am
8. November 2018 im
Rahmen eines
Jubiläumskonzertes
statt.Guardians of the
Waves wurde als
traditioneller Marsch
komponiert und beginnt
mit einer kurzen
Einleitung, die zum
Hauptthema führt.
Dieses wird zunächst
von den Blechbläsern
gespielt und dann von den
Oberstimmen in
denHolzbläsern mit
Verzierungen wiederholt.
Das Thema wird erweitert
und geht in ein zweites
Thema über, das
zunächst vom Tutti
gespielt und dann von
Fagott, Tenorsaxophon und
Euphonium leise
wiederholt wird.
Anschließend
erklingteine
traditionelle Melodie in
den Bassinstrumenten, die
mit unterschiedlicher
Begleitung zweimal
gespielt wird. Es folgt
ein ruhigeres Trio, das
zart besetzt ist und die
Tenorinstrumente des
Blasorchesters
hervorhebt. Dies
wirdschließlich vom
gesamten Blasorchester
aufgegriffen und führt
zu einer Wiederholung der
Einleitung und einer
Rückkehr zu den beiden
Hauptthemen, die in einen
triumphalen Schluss
überleiten.
Christmas In The Round Orchestre d'harmonie [Conducteur et Parties séparées + CD] - Intermédiaire Belwin
Christmas in the Round arranged by Robert W. Smith. Concert Band. Concert Band. ...(+)
Christmas in the Round
arranged by Robert W.
Smith. Concert Band.
Concert Band. Belwin
Concert Band. Form:
Medley. Christmas;
Contemporary; Winter.
Grade 3. Conductor Score
and Parts. 328 pages.
Published by Belwin
Publishing
Band Concert Band SKU: PR.465000130 For Large Wind Ensemble. Compo...(+)
Band Concert Band
SKU:
PR.465000130
For
Large Wind Ensemble.
Composed by Dan Welcher.
Sws. Contemporary. Full
score. With Standard
notation. Composed 2010.
Duration 14 minutes.
Theodore Presser Company
#465-00013. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.465000130).
ISBN
9781598064070. UPC:
680160600144. 9x12
inches.
Following a
celebrated series of wind
ensemble tone poems about
national parks in the
American West, Dan
Welcher’s Upriver
celebrates the Lewis &
Clark Expedition from the
Missouri River to
Oregon’s Columbia
Gorge, following the
Louisiana Purchase of
1803. Welcher’s
imaginative textures and
inventiveness are freshly
modern, evoking our
American heritage,
including references to
Shenandoah and other folk
songs known to have been
sung on the expedition.
For advanced players.
Duration:
14’. In 1803,
President Thomas
Jefferson sent Meriwether
Lewis and William
Clark’s Corps of
Discovery to find a water
route to the Pacific and
explore the uncharted
West. He believed woolly
mammoths, erupting
volcanoes, and mountains
of pure salt awaited
them. What they found was
no less mind-boggling:
some 300 species unknown
to science, nearly 50
Indian tribes, and the
Rockies.Ihave been a
student of the Lewis and
Clark expedition, which
Thomas Jefferson called
the “Voyage of
Discovery,†for as
long as I can remember.
This astonishing journey,
lasting more than
two-and-a-half years,
began and ended in St.
Louis, Missouri —
and took the travelers up
more than a few rivers in
their quest to find the
Northwest Passage to the
Pacific Ocean. In an age
without speedy
communication, this was
akin to space travel out
of radio range in our own
time: no one knew if,
indeed, the party had
even survived the voyage
for more than a year.
Most of them were
soldiers. A few were
French-Canadian voyageurs
— hired trappers
and explorers, who were
fluent in French (spoken
extensively in the
region, due to earlier
explorers from France)
and in some of the Indian
languages they might
encounter. One of the
voyageurs, a man named
Pierre Cruzatte, also
happened to be a
better-than-average
fiddle player. In many
respects, the travelers
were completely on their
own for supplies and
survival, yet,
incredibly, only one of
them died during the
voyage. Jefferson had
outfitted them with food,
weapons, medicine, and
clothing — and
along with other
trinkets, a box of 200
jaw harps to be used in
trading with the Indians.
Their trip was long,
perilous to the point of
near catastrophe, and
arduous. The dream of a
Northwest Passage proved
ephemeral, but the
northwestern quarter of
the continent had finally
been explored, mapped,
and described to an
anxious world. When the
party returned to St.
Louis in 1806, and with
the Louisiana Purchase
now part of the United
States, they were greeted
as national heroes.Ihave
written a sizeable number
of works for wind
ensemble that draw their
inspiration from the
monumental spaces found
in the American West.
Four of them (Arches, The
Yellowstone Fires,
Glacier, and Zion) take
their names, and in large
part their being, from
actual national parks in
Utah, Wyoming, and
Montana. But Upriver,
although it found its
voice (and its finale) in
the magnificent Columbia
Gorge in Oregon, is about
a much larger region.
This piece, like its
brother works about the
national parks,
doesn’t try to
tell a story. Instead, it
captures the flavor of a
certain time, and of a
grand adventure. Cast in
one continuous movement
and lasting close to
fourteen minutes, the
piece falls into several
subsections, each with
its own heading: The
Dream (in which
Jefferson’s vision
of a vast expanse of
western land is opened);
The Promise, a chorale
that re-appears several
times in the course of
the piece and represents
the seriousness of the
presidential mission; The
River; The Voyageurs; The
River II ; Death and
Disappointment; Return to
the Voyage; and The River
III .The music includes
several quoted melodies,
one of which is familiar
to everyone as the
ultimate “river
song,†and which
becomes the
through-stream of the
work. All of the quoted
tunes were either sung by
the men on the voyage, or
played by
Cruzatte’s fiddle.
From various journals and
diaries, we know the men
found enjoyment and
solace in music, and
almost every night
encampment had at least a
bit of music in it. In
addition to Cruzatte,
there were two other
members of the party who
played the fiddle, and
others made do with
singing, or playing upon
sticks, bones, the
ever-present jaw harps,
and boat horns. From
Lewis’ journals, I
found all the tunes used
in Upriver: Shenandoah
(still popular after more
than 200 years),
V’la bon vent,
Soldier’s Joy,
Johnny Has Gone for a
Soldier, Come Ye Sinners
Poor and Needy (a hymn
sung to the tune
“Beech
Springâ€) and
Fisher’s Hornpipe.
The work follows an
emotional journey: not
necessarily step-by-step
with the Voyage of
Discovery heroes, but a
kind of grand arch.
Beginning in the mists of
history and myth,
traversing peaks and
valleys both real and
emotional (and a solemn
funeral scene), finding
help from native people,
and recalling their zeal
upon finding the one
great river that will, in
fact, take them to the
Pacific. When the men
finally roar through the
Columbia Gorge in their
boats (a feat that even
the Indians had not
attempted), the
magnificent river
combines its theme with
the chorale of
Jefferson’s
Promise. The Dream is
fulfilled: not quite the
one Jefferson had
imagined (there is no
navigable water passage
from the Missouri to the
Pacific), but the dream
of a continental
destiny.
Concert Band/Harmonie - Grade 2.5 SKU: BT.AMP-494-140 Composed by Philip ...(+)
Concert Band/Harmonie -
Grade 2.5
SKU:
BT.AMP-494-140
Composed by Philip
Sparke. Debut Series
(Anglo). Concert March.
Score Only. Composed
2021. 28 pages. Anglo
Music Press #AMP 494-140.
Published by Anglo Music
Press (BT.AMP-494-140).
English-German-French-
Dutch.
March of
the Robot Army was
commissioned by Linda
Anzolin & Giordano-Bruno
Tedeschi for Campobanda
2019, with funds made
available by JUST ITALIA.
Campobanda is an Italian
summer music camp for 8-
to 18-year-olds (held
inCamposilvano in 2019)
which has a different
theme every year. The
theme for 2019 was
‘science
fiction’, so
composer Philip Sparke
chose to write a robot
march. After a quirky
introduction featuring
trumpet calls and
chromaticfigures, the
main theme appears in a
minor mode on clarinet
and tenor sax and is then
taken up by the full
band. A change of key
heralds a new theme, led
by the trumpet and again
repeated by the full
ensemble. A further
change ofkey introduces a
legato
‘trio’
melody over a rather
robotic accompaniment:
instruments are added bit
by bit until a climax is
reached. Small motifs
from the introduction
then lead back to a full
recapitulation,
revisiting thefirst two
themes in new guises
before finishing the
march with a
flourish.
March
of the Robot Army
werd geschreven in
opdracht van Linda
Anzolin & Giordano-Bruno
Tedeschi voor Campobanda
2019: de financiering
werd mogelijk gemaakt
door JUST ITALIA.
Campobanda is een
Italiaans zomermuziekkamp
vooracht- tot
achttienjarigen (dat in
2019 werd gehouden in
Camposilvano) met elk
jaar een ander thema. Het
thema voor 2019 was
sciencefiction, dus
besloot componist Philip
Sparke een robotmars te
schrijven. Na een
grilligeinleiding met
trompetsignalen en
chromatische motieven
verschijnt het hoofdthema
in mineur op klarinet en
tenorsax, waarna het door
het hele orkest wordt
overgenomen. Een
verandering van toonsoort
kondigt een nieuw thema
aan, weeringeleid door de
trompet en herhaald door
het volledige ensemble.
Een verdere
toonsoortverandering
introduceert een legato
‘triomelodieâ€
boven een nogal
robotachtige begeleiding:
er worden stapsgewijs
instrumenten toegevoegd
totde muziek uitmondt in
een hoogtepunt. Korte
figuren uit de inleiding
nemen ons dan mee naar
een volledige herneming,
met een terugkeer naar de
eerste twee
thema’s in een
nieuwe gedaante, waarna
de mars in stijl wordt
afgesloten.
Der
March of the Robot
Army wurde von Linda
Anzolin und
Giordano-Bruno Tedeschi
für Campobanda
2019“ in Auftrag
gegeben und finanziell
von JUST ITALIA
unterstützt. Das
italienische
Sommermusikcamp
Campobanda für 8-
bis18-Jährige fand
2019 in Camposilvano
statt und hat jedes Jahr
ein anderes Motto. 2019
lautete das Thema Science
Fiction“, daher
entschied sich der
Komponist Philip Sparke
dazu, einen Robotermarsch
zu schreiben. Nach
einerskurrilen Einleitung
mit Trompetenrufen und
chromatischen Figuren
erklingt in Klarinetten
und Tenorsaxophonen das
Hauptthema in Moll, das
dann vom gesamten
Orchester aufgegriffen
werd. Ein Tonartwechsel
kündigt ein neues
Thema an,das von der
Trompete vorgestellt und
anschließend vom
gesamten Ensemble
wiederholt wird. Ein
weiterer Tonartwechsel
führt zu einem
melodischen, legato
gespielten Trio-Abschnitt
über einer
roboterhaften Begleitung.
Nach und nachkommen
weitere Instrumente
hinzu, bis der
Höhepunkt erreicht
ist. Kleine Motive aus
der Einleitung führen
dann zu einer Reprise,
wobei die ersten beiden
Themen in neuer Gestalt
wieder aufgegriffen
werden, bevor der Marsch
zum Endehin noch einmal
musikalisch
aufblüht.
March of the Robot Army Orchestre d'harmonie [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Facile Anglo Music
Concert Band/Harmonie - Grade 2.5 SKU: BT.AMP-494-010 Composed by Philip ...(+)
Concert Band/Harmonie -
Grade 2.5
SKU:
BT.AMP-494-010
Composed by Philip
Sparke. Debut Series
(Anglo). Concert March.
Set (Score & Parts).
Composed 2021. Anglo
Music Press #AMP 494-010.
Published by Anglo Music
Press (BT.AMP-494-010).
English-German-French-
Dutch.
March of
the Robot Army was
commissioned by Linda
Anzolin & Giordano-Bruno
Tedeschi for Campobanda
2019, with funds made
available by JUST ITALIA.
Campobanda is an Italian
summer music camp for 8-
to 18-year-olds (held
inCamposilvano in 2019)
which has a different
theme every year. The
theme for 2019 was
‘science
fiction’, so
composer Philip Sparke
chose to write a robot
march. After a quirky
introduction featuring
trumpet calls and
chromaticfigures, the
main theme appears in a
minor mode on clarinet
and tenor sax and is then
taken up by the full
band. A change of key
heralds a new theme, led
by the trumpet and again
repeated by the full
ensemble. A further
change ofkey introduces a
legato
‘trio’
melody over a rather
robotic accompaniment:
instruments are added bit
by bit until a climax is
reached. Small motifs
from the introduction
then lead back to a full
recapitulation,
revisiting thefirst two
themes in new guises
before finishing the
march with a
flourish.
March
of the Robot Army
werd geschreven in
opdracht van Linda
Anzolin & Giordano-Bruno
Tedeschi voor Campobanda
2019: de financiering
werd mogelijk gemaakt
door JUST ITALIA.
Campobanda is een
Italiaans zomermuziekkamp
vooracht- tot
achttienjarigen (dat in
2019 werd gehouden in
Camposilvano) met elk
jaar een ander thema. Het
thema voor 2019 was
sciencefiction, dus
besloot componist Philip
Sparke een robotmars te
schrijven. Na een
grilligeinleiding met
trompetsignalen en
chromatische motieven
verschijnt het hoofdthema
in mineur op klarinet en
tenorsax, waarna het door
het hele orkest wordt
overgenomen. Een
verandering van toonsoort
kondigt een nieuw thema
aan, weeringeleid door de
trompet en herhaald door
het volledige ensemble.
Een verdere
toonsoortverandering
introduceert een legato
‘triomelodieâ€
boven een nogal
robotachtige begeleiding:
er worden stapsgewijs
instrumenten toegevoegd
totde muziek uitmondt in
een hoogtepunt. Korte
figuren uit de inleiding
nemen ons dan mee naar
een volledige herneming,
met een terugkeer naar de
eerste twee
thema’s in een
nieuwe gedaante, waarna
de mars in stijl wordt
afgesloten.
Der
March of the Robot
Army wurde von Linda
Anzolin und
Giordano-Bruno Tedeschi
für Campobanda
2019“ in Auftrag
gegeben und finanziell
von JUST ITALIA
unterstützt. Das
italienische
Sommermusikcamp
Campobanda für 8-
bis18-Jährige fand
2019 in Camposilvano
statt und hat jedes Jahr
ein anderes Motto. 2019
lautete das Thema Science
Fiction“, daher
entschied sich der
Komponist Philip Sparke
dazu, einen Robotermarsch
zu schreiben. Nach
einerskurrilen Einleitung
mit Trompetenrufen und
chromatischen Figuren
erklingt in Klarinetten
und Tenorsaxophonen das
Hauptthema in Moll, das
dann vom gesamten
Orchester aufgegriffen
werd. Ein Tonartwechsel
kündigt ein neues
Thema an,das von der
Trompete vorgestellt und
anschließend vom
gesamten Ensemble
wiederholt wird. Ein
weiterer Tonartwechsel
führt zu einem
melodischen, legato
gespielten Trio-Abschnitt
über einer
roboterhaften Begleitung.
Nach und nachkommen
weitere Instrumente
hinzu, bis der
Höhepunkt erreicht
ist. Kleine Motive aus
der Einleitung führen
dann zu einer Reprise,
wobei die ersten beiden
Themen in neuer Gestalt
wieder aufgegriffen
werden, bevor der Marsch
zum Endehin noch einmal
musikalisch
aufblüht.
Band Concert Band SKU: PR.46500013L For Wind Ensemble. Composed by...(+)
Band Concert Band
SKU:
PR.46500013L
For
Wind Ensemble.
Composed by Dan Welcher.
Contemporary. Large
Score. With Standard
notation. Composed 2010.
Duration 14 minutes.
Theodore Presser Company
#465-00013L. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.46500013L).
UPC:
680160600151. 11 x 14
inches.
I n 1803,
President Thomas
Jefferson sent Meriwether
Lewis and William Clarks
Corps of Discovery to
find a water route to the
Pacific and explore the
uncharted West. He
believed woolly mammoths,
erupting volcanoes, and
mountains of pure salt
awaited them. What they
found was no less
mind-boggling: some 300
species unknown to
science, nearly 50 Indian
tribes, and the Rockies.
I have been a student of
the Lewis and Clark
expedition, which Thomas
Jefferson called the
Voyage of Discovery, for
as long as I can
remember. This
astonishing journey,
lasting more than
two-and-a-half years,
began and ended in St.
Louis, Missouri and took
the travelers up more
than a few rivers in
their quest to find the
Northwest Passage to the
Pacific Ocean. In an age
without speedy
communication, this was
akin to space travel out
of radio range in our own
time: no one knew if,
indeed, the party had
even survived the voyage
for more than a year.
Most of them were
soldiers. A few were
French-Canadian voyageurs
hired trappers and
explorers, who were
fluent in French (spoken
extensively in the
region, due to earlier
explorers from France)
and in some of the Indian
languages they might
encounter. One of the
voyageurs, a man named
Pierre Cruzatte, also
happened to be a
better-than-average
fiddle player. In many
respects, the travelers
were completely on their
own for supplies and
survival, yet,
incredibly, only one of
them died during the
voyage. Jefferson had
outfitted them with food,
weapons, medicine, and
clothing and along with
other trinkets, a box of
200 jaw harps to be used
in trading with the
Indians. Their trip was
long, perilous to the
point of near
catastrophe, and arduous.
The dream of a Northwest
Passage proved ephemeral,
but the northwestern
quarter of the continent
had finally been
explored, mapped, and
described to an anxious
world. When the party
returned to St. Louis in
1806, and with the
Louisiana Purchase now
part of the United
States, they were greeted
as national heroes. I
have written a sizeable
number of works for wind
ensemble that draw their
inspiration from the
monumental spaces found
in the American West.
Four of them (Arches, The
Yellowstone Fires,
Glacier, and Zion) take
their names, and in large
part their being, from
actual national parks in
Utah, Wyoming, and
Montana. But Upriver,
although it found its
voice (and its finale) in
the magnificent Columbia
Gorge in Oregon, is about
a much larger region.
This piece, like its
brother works about the
national parks, doesnt
try to tell a story.
Instead, it captures the
flavor of a certain time,
and of a grand adventure.
Cast in one continuous
movement and lasting
close to fourteen
minutes, the piece falls
into several subsections,
each with its own
heading: The Dream (in
which Jeffersons vision
of a vast expanse of
western land is opened);
The Promise, a chorale
that re-appears several
times in the course of
the piece and represents
the seriousness of the
presidential mission; The
River; The Voyageurs; The
River II ; Death and
Disappointment; Return to
the Voyage; and The River
III . The music includes
several quoted melodies,
one of which is familiar
to everyone as the
ultimate river song, and
which becomes the
through-stream of the
work. All of the quoted
tunes were either sung by
the men on the voyage, or
played by Cruzattes
fiddle. From various
journals and diaries, we
know the men found
enjoyment and solace in
music, and almost every
night encampment had at
least a bit of music in
it. In addition to
Cruzatte, there were two
other members of the
party who played the
fiddle, and others made
do with singing, or
playing upon sticks,
bones, the ever-present
jaw harps, and boat
horns. From Lewis
journals, I found all the
tunes used in Upriver:
Shenandoah (still popular
after more than 200
years), Vla bon vent,
Soldiers Joy, Johnny Has
Gone for a Soldier, Come
Ye Sinners Poor and Needy
(a hymn sung to the tune
Beech Spring) and Fishers
Hornpipe. The work
follows an emotional
journey: not necessarily
step-by-step with the
Voyage of Discovery
heroes, but a kind of
grand arch. Beginning in
the mists of history and
myth, traversing peaks
and valleys both real and
emotional (and a solemn
funeral scene), finding
help from native people,
and recalling their zeal
upon finding the one
great river that will, in
fact, take them to the
Pacific. When the men
finally roar through the
Columbia Gorge in their
boats (a feat that even
the Indians had not
attempted), the
magnificent river
combines its theme with
the chorale of Jeffersons
Promise. The Dream is
fulfilled: not quite the
one Jefferson had
imagined (there is no
navigable water passage
from the Missouri to the
Pacific), but the dream
of a continental
destiny.
Chamber Music English Horn, Oboe SKU: CF.WF229 15 Pieces for Oboe and ...(+)
Chamber Music English
Horn, Oboe
SKU:
CF.WF229
15 Pieces
for Oboe and English
Horn. Composed by
Gustave Vogt. Edited by
Kristin Jean Leitterman.
Collection - Performance.
32+8 pages. Carl Fischer
Music #WF229. Published
by Carl Fischer Music
(CF.WF229).
Meet the Band Orchestre d'harmonie [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Facile Playintime
By Sandy Feldstein and Larry Clark. For Beginning Band. Music for Young Bands. C...(+)
By Sandy Feldstein and
Larry Clark. For
Beginning Band. Music for
Young Bands. Correlates
with The Yamaha Advantage
Band Method, Book 2 Pg.
31. Grade 2.5. Published
by Playintime