Edited by Briana Ackerman. Arranged by Daniel Kelley. For Flute (or Oboe or Viol...(+)
Edited by Briana
Ackerman. Arranged by
Daniel Kelley. For Flute
(or Oboe or Violin) and
Viola. Duets. Music for
Two. Wedding, Classical.
Level:
Intermediate/Advanced.
Score with 2 parts.
Published by Last Resort
Music Publishing.
Oboe Solo SKU: IS.O6029EM Composed by Charles Camilleri. Woodwinds - Oboe...(+)
Oboe Solo
SKU:
IS.O6029EM
Composed
by Charles Camilleri.
Woodwinds - Oboe.
Metropolis Music
Publishers #O6029EM.
Published by Metropolis
Music Publishers
(IS.O6029EM).
ISBN
9790365060290.
Char
les Camilleri (1931 -
2009) was a Maltese
composer. As a teenager,
he composed a number of
works based on folk music
and legends of his native
Malta. He moved from his
early influences by
Maltese folk music to a
musical form in which
nothing is fixed and his
compositions evolve from
themselves with a sense
of fluency and
inevitability. He
composed over 100 works
for orchestra, chamber
ensemble, voice and solo
instruments. Camilleri's
work has been performed
throughout the world and
his research of folk
music and improvisation,
the influences of the
sounds of Africa and
Asia, together with the
academic study of
European music, helped
him create a universal
style. Camilleri is
recognized in Malta as
one of the major
composers of his
generation. He died on 3
January 2009 at the age
of 77. His funeral took
place two days later at
Naxxar, his long-time
town of residence. Flags
across Malta were flown
at half-mast in tribute
to him.
11 Duets for Flute 2 Flûtes traversières (duo) [Partition + CD] - Intermédiaire Mel Bay
For 2 Flutes or Clarinet and Flute. Composed by Matthias Petzold. Clarinet, ...(+)
For 2 Flutes or Clarinet
and
Flute. Composed by
Matthias
Petzold. Clarinet, Flute,
Fife and Oboe, Music
Styles and
Regions, Classical, Jazz,
Solos and Duets. Book and
Insert with CD. 52 pages.
Published by Mel Bay
Publications, Inc
Score (Study Score) SKU: HL.49045775 Study Score. Composed by Kurt...(+)
Score (Study Score)
SKU: HL.49045775
Study Score.
Composed by Kurt Weill.
Study Score. Classical.
Softcover. Universal
Edition #UE35538.
Published by Universal
Edition (HL.49045775).
ISBN 9783702471132.
UPC: 803452068235.
7.0x10.0x0.436
inches.
Kurt Weill
developed his creative
energies mainly within
the world of musical
theater, where he proved
to be an immensely
productiveand imaginative
innovator, but he also
left behind a small body
of work for the concert
hall. The Concerto for
Violin and Wind Orchestra
op. 12 dates from the
spring of 1924. Scored
for two flutes,
clarinets, bassoons,
horns, one oboe and
trumpet, percussion and
four contrabasses, the
concerto comprises three
movements. While
composing the work, Weill
informed his publisher:
'I am workingon a
concerto for violin and
wind orchestra that I
hope to finish within two
or three weeks. The work
is inspired by the idea -
one never carried out
before - of juxtaposing a
single violin with a
chorus of winds.' The
specific character of
Weill's concerto as music
written for chamber
orchestra (with an often
soloistic treatment of
instruments) leads to a
transparency that
requires utmost precision
in the ensemble playing.
In the quest for an
overall sonic balance,
the coarser-sounding wind
instruments need to
explore all dynamic
nuances. The solo part is
challenging not only from
a technical standpoint
but also from an acoustic
one (it is crucial to
make the violin 'sound').
In spite of these
challenges - or precisely
because of them - critics
in the 1920s called the
solo parthighly idiomatic
and extremely rewarding.
Since then the concerto
has become a 'modern
classic' in concert halls
around the world. (Elmar
Juchem, August 2010). The
score is based on the
critical text of the Kurt
Weill Edition Ser. II,
Vol. 2.
Oboe, clarinet, viola, harp SKU: OU.9780193588769 Composed by Howard Skem...(+)
Oboe, clarinet, viola,
harp
SKU:
OU.9780193588769
Composed by Howard
Skempton. Mixed Ensemble.
44 pages. Duration 8'.
Oxford University Press
#9780193588769. Published
by Oxford University
Press (OU.9780193588769).
ISBN 9780193588769. 12
x 8 inches.
For
oboe, clarinet, viola,
harp The opening movement
of this five-movement
work features the oboe,
being a setting of a solo
piece written by the
composer in memory of
Barbara Hepworth. The
second is a lyrical canon
for oboe, clarinet, and
viola, the third and
fourth movements are
formal and chorale-like
whilst, the last is a
sprightly, rather quirky
march.
Mixed Trios. By Various. Arranged by Daniel Kelley. For Flute or Oboe or Violin....(+)
Mixed Trios. By Various.
Arranged by Daniel
Kelley. For Flute or Oboe
or Violin. Trios. Music
for Three. Classical /
Baroque. Level:
Intermediate/Advanced.
Part 1. Published by Last
Resort Music Publishing.
Mixed Trios. By Various. Arranged by Daniel Kelley. For Flute or Oboe or Violin....(+)
Mixed Trios. By Various.
Arranged by Daniel
Kelley. For Flute or Oboe
or Violin. Trios. Music
for Three. Classical /
Baroque. Level:
Intermediate/Advanced.
Part 2. Published by Last
Resort Music Publishing.
(Chorale cantata). Composed by Felix Bartholdy Mendelssohn (1809-1847). Edited b...(+)
(Chorale cantata).
Composed by Felix
Bartholdy Mendelssohn
(1809-1847). Edited by
Oswald Bill. For SATB
choir, 2 violins, viola,
cello/contrabass, [flute
or oboe or clarinet].
Stuttgart Urtext Edition.
German title: Christe, du
Lamm Gottes. Cantatas,
Mass sections, Lent and
Passiontide, Holy Week,
Eucharist, Communion.
Complete orchestral
parts. Language:
German/English. Composed
1827. A 5. Duration 7
minutes. Published by
Carus Verlag
CA. - Advanced SKU: FT.FM881 Composed by Lenny Cavallaro. Baroque style s...(+)
CA. - Advanced
SKU:
FT.FM881
Composed by
Lenny Cavallaro. Baroque
style suite. Classical.
Score. Forton Music
#FM881. Published by
Forton Music (FT.FM881).
ISBN 9790570487806. 21
x 30 cm
inches.
This
baroque style
composition, like so many
of that period, actually
derived from another
work. The composer had
written a work for
unaccompanied bassoon,
which was dedicated to
Robert Ronnes. He then
transposed it to another
key and added some
double-stops, and it thus
emerged as a partita for
unaccompanied double
bass. However, despite
his great love for the
cor anglais, Cavallaro
hesitated. Such an
arrangement would
obviously be somewhat
more difficult due to the
smaller range of that
instrument. Nevertheless,
with minimal revisions to
the score, the entire
suite emerged - quite
successfully, according
to Kyoko Hida-Battaglia,
an English horn player in
the USA. Of course, Bach
did not write solo works
for cor anglais, but
given that composer's
wonderful music for
various members of the
oboe family, the
instrument surely lends
itself to such
repertoire. Let us hope
that this piece will
inspire other composers
to follow suit! (Phrasing
and dynamics are left to
the players
discretion).
Chamber Music SKU: PR.164002120 Composed by Dan Welcher. Set of Score and...(+)
Chamber Music
SKU:
PR.164002120
Composed
by Dan Welcher. Set of
Score and Parts. With
Standard notation.
32+16+12+12+12 pages.
Duration 16 minutes.
Theodore Presser Company
#164-00212. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.164002120).
UPC:
680160037582.
Works
of chamber music
including flute and
strings are not nearly as
numerous as those for
clarinet, or even the
oboe. Probably the reason
for this is the less
assertive, more pure tone
the flute possesses - it
can't compete for volume
or range with the
clarinet, except in its
top octave, and the
oboe's tone is more
penetrating and easily
discerned from within a
string texture.
Consequently, composers
who have written for
flute and strings have
done so in lightweight
divertimento works:
compare, for instance,
the delicate flute
quartets of Mozart with
his monumental quintet
for clarinet and strings.
When Karl and Joan
Karber approached me with
the ideas of writing a
work for flute and string
trio, I originally
thought it would be best
to write a humorous,
rather offhand piece -
but a look at their
repertoire (mostly
comprised of smaller
works of the Rococo
period) convinced me that
it was the last thing
they needed. In spite of
the challenge (or maybe
because of it?), I
determined to write a
large work, and a serious
work. Zephyrus (named for
the God of the West Wind,
in deference to the
flute) is a
three-movement work, with
each movement cast in a
very different form, but
all three being built of
the same twelve-note
series. There is also a
rhythmic motive and a
pair of themes that
appear in all three
movements. The
first movement plays with
the idea of contrast and
persuasion. The flute, at
the outset, is the
hell-for-leather
protagonist, charging and
swooping around the
strings - who seem oddly
unconcerned by his
passion. Indeed, they
have a more somber song
to sing - and as the
movement unfolds, the
flute becomes less and
less active, while the
strings become
increasingly enlivened.
By the midpoint, when all
four instruments are
finally in the same meter
and the same tempo, the
flute's energy has
finally infected the
other three players, and
this energy does not let
up until the movement's
abrupt final cadence.
The second
movement begins with a
tag from the first - as
if the energy left over
was too great to simply
stop. At length, though,
a very poignant flute
melody appears over an
almost bluesy harmony in
the strings. After this
has been fully exposed, a
slight increase in
motion, marked gently
rocking in triplets,
features a theme-fragment
from Leonard Bernstein's
Symphony No. 2 (Kaddish).
Bernstein died as I was
writing this work, and it
seemed quite natural to
encourage what was
already implicit in the
music, and create an
Elegy for L.B. The music
rises and peaks, then in
the recapitulation of the
opening the Kaddish theme
reappears, as the
ensemble suggests a
gentle song of sleep.
The final movement
is a Rondo-Variations
form, with the slight
alteration of adding the
main theme of the second
movement in what would be
the trio of the form. The
ritornello theme is a
kind of ethnic dance
music, almost an allusion
to the Klezmer ensembles
of Eastern Europe. The
successive episodes
between the ritornelli
are loosely organized
variations on the basic
theme, but always
beginning with a metric
modulation, a rhythmic
changing of gears. The
movement reaches and apex
of speed and furious
pulsing, then abruptly
pirouttes, and finishes.
Zephyrus was
written between April and
November of 1990 in
Austin, Aspen, and
Honolulu, and is
dedicated to Karl Kraber
and The Chamber Soloists
of Austin. --Dan
Welcher.
Choralkantate. By Felix Mendelssohn. Edited by Bill, Oswald. For SATB Choir, 2 V...(+)
Choralkantate. By Felix
Mendelssohn. Edited by
Bill, Oswald. For SATB
Choir, 2 Violins, Viola,
Cello/Contrabass, [Flute
or Oboe or Clarinet].
Cantatas, Mass Sections;
Stuttgart Urtext
editions; Occasions:
Eucharist, Communion; Use
during church year: Lent
and Passiontide, Holy
Week. Score. Language:
German/English. Composed
1827. 20 pages. Duration
7 min. Published by Carus
Verlag (German import).
Choralkantate. By Felix Mendelssohn. Edited by Bill, Oswald. For SATB Choir, 2 V...(+)
Choralkantate. By Felix
Mendelssohn. Edited by
Bill, Oswald. For SATB
Choir, 2 Violins, Viola,
Cello/Contrabass, [Flute
or Oboe or Clarinet].
Full score available
separately - see item
CA.4018400. Cantatas,
Mass Sections; Stuttgart
Urtext editions;
Occasions: Eucharist,
Communion; Use during
church year: Lent and
Passiontide, Holy Week.
Organ reduction.
Language: German/English.
Composed 1827. 12 pages.
Duration 7 min. Published
by Carus Verlag (German
import).
SKU: PR.16400212S Composed by Dan Welcher. With Standard notation. Durati...(+)
SKU: PR.16400212S
Composed by Dan Welcher.
With Standard notation.
Duration 16 minutes.
Theodore Presser Company
#164-00212S. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.16400212S).
UPC:
680160037605.
Works
of chamber music
including flute and
strings are not nearly as
numerous as those for
clarinet, or even the
oboe. Probably the reason
for this is the less
assertive, more pure tone
the flute possesses - it
can't compete for volume
or range with the
clarinet, except in its
top octave, and the
oboe's tone is more
penetrating and easily
discerned from within a
string texture.
Consequently, composers
who have written for
flute and strings have
done so in lightweight
divertimento works:
compare, for instance,
the delicate flute
quartets of Mozart with
his monumental quintet
for clarinet and strings.
When Karl and Joan
Karber approached me with
the ideas of writing a
work for flute and string
trio, I originally
thought it would be best
to write a humorous,
rather offhand piece -
but a look at their
repertoire (mostly
comprised of smaller
works of the Rococo
period) convinced me that
it was the last thing
they needed. In spite of
the challenge (or maybe
because of it?), I
determined to write a
large work, and a serious
work. Zephyrus (named for
the God of the West Wind,
in deference to the
flute) is a
three-movement work, with
each movement cast in a
very different form, but
all three being built of
the same twelve-note
series. There is also a
rhythmic motive and a
pair of themes that
appear in all three
movements. The
first movement plays with
the idea of contrast and
persuasion. The flute, at
the outset, is the
hell-for-leather
protagonist, charging and
swooping around the
strings - who seem oddly
unconcerned by his
passion. Indeed, they
have a more somber song
to sing - and as the
movement unfolds, the
flute becomes less and
less active, while the
strings become
increasingly enlivened.
By the midpoint, when all
four instruments are
finally in the same meter
and the same tempo, the
flute's energy has
finally infected the
other three players, and
this energy does not let
up until the movement's
abrupt final cadence.
The second
movement begins with a
tag from the first - as
if the energy left over
was too great to simply
stop. At length, though,
a very poignant flute
melody appears over an
almost bluesy harmony in
the strings. After this
has been fully exposed, a
slight increase in
motion, marked gently
rocking in triplets,
features a theme-fragment
from Leonard Bernstein's
Symphony No. 2 (Kaddish).
Bernstein died as I was
writing this work, and it
seemed quite natural to
encourage what was
already implicit in the
music, and create an
Elegy for L.B. The music
rises and peaks, then in
the recapitulation of the
opening the Kaddish theme
reappears, as the
ensemble suggests a
gentle song of sleep.
The final movement
is a Rondo-Variations
form, with the slight
alteration of adding the
main theme of the second
movement in what would be
the trio of the form. The
ritornello theme is a
kind of ethnic dance
music, almost an allusion
to the Klezmer ensembles
of Eastern Europe. The
successive episodes
between the ritornelli
are loosely organized
variations on the basic
theme, but always
beginning with a metric
modulation, a rhythmic
changing of gears. The
movement reaches and apex
of speed and furious
pulsing, then abruptly
pirouttes, and finishes.
Zephyrus was
written between April and
November of 1990 in
Austin, Aspen, and
Honolulu, and is
dedicated to Karl Kraber
and The Chamber Soloists
of Austin. --Dan
Welcher.
(Based on the Etudes of Franz Whilhelm Ferling). By John Walker, Franz Wilhelm F...(+)
(Based on the Etudes of
Franz Whilhelm Ferling).
By John Walker, Franz
Wilhelm Ferling. Edited
by Amy Porter. Arranged
by Cyrille Rose. For
flute and piano. Carl
Fischer Classic Studies.
Book and CD. 44 pages.
Published by Carl Fischer
Orchestra SKU: BA.BA06861 Sinfonie (1923-1928). Composed by Leos J...(+)
Orchestra
SKU:
BA.BA06861
Sinfonie
(1923-1928). Composed
by Leos Janacek. Arranged
by Leoš Faltus and
Miloš Štedron. This
edition: complete
edition, urtext edition.
Linen. Complete Critical
Edition of the Works of
Leos Janacek H/3.
Complete edition, Score,
Set of parts. Duration 40
minutes. Baerenreiter
Verlag #BA06861_00.
Published by Baerenreiter
Verlag (BA.BA06861).
ISBN 9790260104211.
34.3 x 27 cm
inches.
Leoš
Janácek’s
symphonic fragment Dunaj
(The Danube) dates from
the period of the
composition of
“Katya
Kabanovaâ€. The
composer was not
concerned with a
musical-picturesque
description of a river
landscape, but with the
mythical link between
women’s destinies
and
water.
“Pale
green waves of the
Danube! There are so many
of you, and one followed
by another. You remain
interlocked in a
continuous flow. You
surprise yourselves where
you ended up – on
the Czech shores! Look
back downstream and you
will have an impression
of what you have left
behind in your haste. It
pleases you here. Here I
will rest with my
symphony.†Thus
Leoš Janácek
described the idea behind
the composition project
which occupied him in
1923/24. However, after
further work, it remained
incomplete in 1926. His
“symphonyâ€
entitled Dunaj has
survived as a
continuously-notated,
four-movement bundle of
sketches in score form.
It is one of the works
which occupied him until
his death. The scholarly
reconstruction by the two
Brno composers Miloš
Štedron and Leoš
Faltus closely follows
the original
manuscript.
A
whole conglomeration of
motifs stands behind the
incomplete work. What at
first seems like a
counterpart to
Smetana’s Vltava,
in fact doesn’t
turn out to be a musical
depiction of the Danube.
On the contrary, the
fateful link between the
destiny of women, water
and death permeates the
range of motifs found in
the work. It seems to be
no coincidence that
Janácek, whilst
working on the opera
Katya Kabanova, in which
the Volga, as the river
bringing death plays an
almost mythical role,
planned a Danube
symphony, and that its
content was linked with
the destiny of women: in
the sketches, two poems
were found which may have
provided the stimulus for
several movements of the
symphony. He copied a
poem by Pavla
Kriciková into the
second movement, in which
a girl remarks that
whilst bathing in a pond,
she was observed by a
man. Filled with shame,
the young naked woman
jumps into the water and
drowns. The outer
movements likewise draw
on the poem
“Lola†by the
Czech writer Sonja
Špálová,
published under the
pseudonym Alexander
Insarov. This is about a
prostitute who asks for
her heart’s
desire: she is given a
palace, but then goes on
a long search for it and
is finally no longer
wanted by anyone. She
suffers, feels cold and
just wants a warm fire.
Janácek adds his
remark “she jumps
into the Danube†to
the inconclusive
ending.
To these
tangible literary models
is added Adolf
Veselý’s verbal
account which reports
that the composer wanted
to portray “in the
Danube, the female sex
with all its passions and
driving forcesâ€.
The third movement is
said to characterise the
city of Vienna in the
form of a
woman.
It is
evident that in his
composition, Janácek
was not striving for a
simple, natural lyricism.
The River Danube is
masculine in the Slavic
language –
“ten Dunajâ€
– and assumes an
almost mythical
significance in the
national character,
indeed often also a role
bringing death. The four
movements are motivically
conceived. Elements of
sound painting, small
wave-like figures in the
first movement, motoric,
driving movements in the
third are obvious
evocations of water. And
the content and the
literary level are easy
to discover. The
“tremolo of the
four timpaniâ€,
which was amongst
Janácek’s first
inspirations, appears in
the second movement. It
is not difficult to
retrace in it the fate of
the drowning bather. The
oboe enters lamentoso
towards the end of the
movement over timpani
playing tremolo, its
descending figure is
taken over by the flute,
then upper strings and
intensified considerably.
The motif of drowning
– Lola’s
despair – returns
again in the fourth
movement in the clarinet,
before the work ends
abruptly and
dramatically.
One
special effect is the use
of a soprano voice in the
motor-driven third
movement. The singer
vocalises mainly in
parallel with the solo
oboe, but also in
dialogue with other parts
such as the viola
d’amore, which
Janácek used in
several late works as a
sort of “voice of
loveâ€.
About
Barenreiter
Urtext
What can I
expect from a Barenreiter
Urtext
edition?<
/p>
MUSICOLOGICA
LLY SOUND - A
reliable musical text
based on all available
sources - A
description of the
sources -
Information on the
genesis and history of
the work - Valuable
notes on performance
practice - Includes
an introduction with
critical commentary
explaining source
discrepancies and
editorial decisions
... AND
PRACTICAL -
Page-turns, fold-out
pages, and cues where you
need them - A
well-presented layout and
a user-friendly
format - Excellent
print quality -
Superior paper and
binding
Oboe and piano SKU: ST.C513 Composed by Mary Chandler. Wind & brass music...(+)
Oboe and piano
SKU:
ST.C513
Composed by
Mary Chandler. Wind &
brass music. Clifton
Edition #C513. Published
by Clifton Edition
(ST.C513).
ISBN
9790570815135.
Sonatina for
Oboe and Piano was
composed in 1967 and
given its first
performance by Dinah
Demuth, to whom it is
dedicated. The Sonatina
for Cor Anglais and Piano
of 1968 was also written
for Dinah Demuth, then a
member of the Midland
Light Orchestra, whose
broadcasts included solo
works such as these two
Sonatinas. This Sonatina
was originally published
by Phylloscopus
Publications in
1995.
Dr. Kristin
Leitterman is currently
the Assistant Professor
of Oboe at Arkansas State
University in Jonesboro,
Arkansas, USA, where she
teaches oboe and bassoon,
Double Reed Techniques,
and coaches small chamber
ensembles. She is also
the Director of the
Lucarelli Oboe Master
Class, a week-long
immersive oboe master
class founded by Bert
Lucarelli in 1996. As a
guest artist she has
presented master classes
at many institutions,
including the Manhattan
School of Music, New York
University, and the Hartt
School.
As a
researcher, Kirstin has
interests in the life and
works of Mary Chandler.
She has presented her
research at The Juilliard
School, Music by Women
Festival, the
International Double Reed
Society conferences, and
the Brazilian Double Reed
Society’s conference in
João Pessoa, Paraíba,
Brazil.
24 pieces for piano. Composed by Peter Wolf. Contemporary Music. EMB. Classic...(+)
24 pieces for piano.
Composed by Peter Wolf.
Contemporary Music. EMB.
Classical. Softcover.
Composed 2019. 128 pages.
Editio Musica Budapest
#EMBZ15087. Published by
Editio Musica Budapest
Wind Quintet SKU: HL.14019938 Composed by John McCabe. Music Sales Americ...(+)
Wind Quintet
SKU:
HL.14019938
Composed
by John McCabe. Music
Sales America. Classical.
Book [Softcover]. Music
Sales #NOV360094.
Published by Music Sales
(HL.14019938).
Post
cards was
written in 1991 for the
Vega Wind Quintet, who
first performed it at the
Huddersfield Festival in
the same year. It is a
reworking of a set of
eight Bagatelles written
in 1965: each movement
has been rewritten and
enlarged to a greater or
lesser extent. The title
was chosen to emphasise
the nature of the pieces,
which are in a sense
brief postcards from
different genres (fugato,
dance, etc).
John
McCabe (1939-2015)
was a British composer,
pianist and music
administrator. He studied
at the Royal Manchester
College of Music and
built a career as a
virtuoso pianist.
However, he also wrote
several hundred musical
compositions,ranging from
large-scale orchestral
works to chamber music
and solo instrumental
pieces - it is said the
only classical genre he
did not write for was
opera.
Orchestra SKU: BT.YKM570369270 Composed by Robert Saxton. Score Only. Com...(+)
Orchestra
SKU:
BT.YKM570369270
Composed by Robert
Saxton. Score Only.
Composed 2021. 70 pages.
University of York Music
Press #YKM570369270.
Published by University
of York Music Press
(BT.YKM570369270).
A Hymn to the
Thames was commissioned
by James Turnbull and the
Music Director of the St
Paul’s Sinfonia, Andrew
Morley. It was begun in
2019 and completed early
in 2020. There are four
movements played without
a break, which follow the
Thames from its Cotswold
source to the North Sea.
As the first performance
took place in St
ALfege’s Church,
Greenwich, this seemed
appropriate. The solo
oboe represents both a
wanderer along the river
path and the spirit of
the river. The pitch
centres of the movements
spell out the musical
letters of the river
(tHAmES—B natural, A, E
and E flat) so that the
river’s name is
projected across the
whole work. In addition,
the musical letters found
in James Turnbull, Andrew
Morley and my wife,
Teresa Cahill ( who was
born in Maidenhead and
brought up by the river
in Rotherhithe) are
entwined in various
guises. The first
movement grows from the
depths, the soloist
entering with
fanfare-like gestures,
followed by lyrical music
and breaks into a dance
as the river gathers
momentum. The third
movement is slow and
sustained and
geographically the Thames
flows through Oxford. The
music is based on the
well-known In Nomine
‘head motif’ from the
Gloria tibi Trinitas Mass
by the early Tudor
composer, John Taverner,
who was the first
Director of Music at
Christ Church, Oxford.
The orchestra provides a
screen or veil above
which the solo oboe
dreams and ruminates.
This leads directly into
the fourth and final
movement which begins in
the depths once more,
interrupting the oboe’s
held note from the end of
the third movement. The
waters’ increasing
intensity and power are
represented throughout by
a moto perpetuo of quick,
steady semiquavers. Near
the close, the woodwind
play O Nata Lux by Thomas
Tallis, the great Tudor
composer who, with his
wife Joan, is buried in
St Alfege’s. Beneath
this, the lower strings
continue the fast
semiquaver movement of
the river and, above, the
violins are heard as a
halo of harmonics. At the
close, the oboe rises,
opening out to the
future, and celebrating
its voyage, while the
orchestra fades as the
river meets the sea. A
Hymn to the Thames lasts
approximately 17
minutes.
Trio [Conducteur et Parties séparées] Theodore Presser Co.
Chamber Music Flute, Horn, Piano SKU: PR.114424380 Composed by Eric Ewaze...(+)
Chamber Music Flute,
Horn, Piano
SKU:
PR.114424380
Composed
by Eric Ewazen. Sws.
Score and parts. Theodore
Presser Company
#114-42438. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.114424380).
ISBN
9781491138076. UPC:
680160693467. 18 x 12
inches.
If you love
playing Eric Ewazen’s
flute sonatas or horn
chamber music, or if you
are fan of Brahms’s
chamber music, then this
exhilarating work is for
you! Among Ewazen’s
most performed works, the
TRIO, inspired by the
Brahms horn trio and
originally for Violin,
Horn, and Piano, has been
adapted by the composer
for Flute, Horn, and
Piano. With a rollicking
scherzo and beautiful
melodic movements, this
21-minute work is a joy
to play and to listen
to. I’ve always been
fascinated and inspired
by chamber works offering
several instrumental
versions of the same
piece, resulting in a new
feel and color. One
famous example is the
great Franck Sonata,
originally for violin and
piano, and beautifully
arranged for flute and
piano by Jean-PIerre
Rampal. Subsequently
other versions of the
piece were created for an
array of instruments:
cello, oboe, clarinet,
saxophone, and even tuba!
Creating this flute
version of my TRIO (flute
replacing the original
violin part), considered
the range, allowing the
flute to sometimes sing
in a bright, higher
register than the
original violin part;
passages where there were
double stops in the
violin now have
arpeggiated
figurations. The
original scoring for
Horn, Violin, and Piano
was commissioned by and
gratefully dedicated to
Chamberosity,
representing an homage to
one of my favorite
chamber pieces of all
time, the Trio for Horn,
Violin, and Piano by
Brahms. Having both
performed (on piano) and
analyzed that work, I so
loved Brahms’ wonderful
weaving of the colors of
the instruments, creating
an almost orchestral
color palette. For years
I wanted to write a trio
for the same combination,
and when my friends in
Chamberosity were
enthusiastic about me
writing that piece for
them, I was
delighted. The four
movements are modeled
after the Brahms, with a
slow-fast-slow-fast
scheme to the entire
work. A gentle, somewhat
mysterious first movement
accumulates depth and
momentum as it proceeds,
only to return to the
gentle world of the
opening. The second
movement is a rip-roaring
scherzo, a true energetic
dance with melodies
tossed back and forth
from the violin to the
horn, while the piano
provides a resonant
accompaniment, inserting
its own lively melodies
as counterpoint to the
violin and horn. The
third movement is filled
with melancholy, with
long lyric melodies
appearing sometimes as
solos, sometimes as
duets, and sometimes as a
chorale with all three
instruments singing their
soulful songs. The final
movement, following an
austere, dramatic
introduction, turns into
a grand fugue, with a
jumping fugue theme full
of life and excitement,
culminating in the themes
heard in augmentation,
strong and bold.
Amazing Grace Violon et Piano - Intermédiaire MorningStar Music Publishers
By Duane Funderburk. Arranged by Duane Funderburk. For violin, piano, optional o...(+)
By Duane Funderburk.
Arranged by Duane
Funderburk. For violin,
piano, optional oboe and
strings quintet. Organ
with Instruments.
General. Moderately
Difficult. Score and solo
part. 8 pages. Published
by MorningStar Music
Publishers
Composed by Muzio
Clementi. Arranged by
Douglas Townsend. Carl
Fischer Young String
Orchestra Series.
Classical. Full score.
With Standard notation.
12 pages. Carl Fischer
Music #YAS13F. Published
by Carl Fischer Music
(CF.YAS13F).
ISBN
9780825848339. UPC:
798408048334. 8.5 X 11
inches. Key: G
major.
IApart from
some of his Sonatinas,
Opus 36, Clementi's life
and music are hardly
known to the piano
teachers and students of
today. For example, in
addition to the above
mentioned Sonatinas,
Clementi wrote sixty
sonatas for the piano,
many of them unjustly
neglected, although his
friend Beethoven regarded
some of them very highly.
Clementi also wrote
symphonies (some of which
he arranged as piano
sonatas), a substantial
number of waltzes and
other dances for the
piano as well as sonatas
and sonatinas for piano
four-hands.In addition to
composing, Clementi was a
much sought after piano
teacher, and included
among his students John
Field (Father of the
'Nocturne'), and
Meyerbeer.In his later
years, Clementi became a
very successful music
publisher, publishing
among other works the
first English edition of
Beethoven's Violin
Concerto, in the great
composer's own
arrangement for the
piano, as well as some of
his string quartets.
Clementi was also one of
the first English piano
manufacturers to make
pianos with a metal frame
and string them with
wire.The Sonatina in C,
Opus 36, No. 1 was one of
six such works Clementi
wrote in 1797. He must
have been partial to
these little pieces (for
which he also provided
the fingerings), since
they were reissued
(without the fingering)
by the composer shortly
after 1801. About 1820,
he issued ''the sixth
edition, with
considerable improvements
by the author;· with
fingerings added and
several minor changes,
among which were that
many of them were written
an octave higher.IIIt has
often been said,
generally by those
unhampered by the facts,
that composers of the
past (and, dare we add,
the present?), usually
handled their financial
affairs with their public
and publishers with a
poor sense of business
acumen or common sense.
As a result they
frequently found
themselves in financial
straits.Contrary to
popular opinion, this was
the exception rather than
the rule. With the
exception of Mozart and
perhaps a few other
composers, the majority
of composers then, as
now, were quite
successful in their
dealings with the public
and their publishers, as
the following examples
will show.It was not
unusual for 18th- and
19th-century composers to
arrange some of their
more popular compositions
for different
combinations of
instruments in order to
increase their
availability to a larger
music-playing public.
Telemann, in the
introduction to his
seventy-two cantatas for
solo voice and one melody
instrument (flute, oboe
or violin, with the usual
continua) Der Harmonische
Gottesdienst, tor
example, suggests that if
a singer is not available
to perform a cantata the
voice part could be
played by another
instrument. And in the
introduction to his Six
Concertos and Six Suites
for flute, violin and
continua, he named four
different instrumental
combinations that could
perform these pieces, and
actually wrote out the
notes for the different
possibilities. Bach
arranged his violin
concertos for keyboard,
and Beethoven not only
arranged his Piano Sonata
in E Major, Opus 14, No.
1 for string quartet, he
also transposed it to the
key of F. Brahm's
well-known Quintet in F
Minor for piano and
strings was his own
arrangement of his
earlier sonata for two
pianos, also in F
Minor.IIIWe come now to
Clementi. It is well
known that some of his
sixty piano sonatas were
his own arrangements of
some of his lost
symphonies, and that some
of his rondos for piano
four-hands were
originally the last
movements of his solo
sonatas or piano trios.In
order to make the first
movement of his
delightful Sonatina in C,
Opus 36, No. 1 accessible
to young string players,
I have followed the
example established by
the composer himself by
arranging and transposing
one of his piano
compositions from one
medium (the piano) to
another. (string
instruments). In order to
simplify the work for
young string players, in
the process of adapting
it to the new medium it
was necessary to
transpose it from the
original key of C to G,
thereby doing away with
some of the difficulties
they would have
encountered in the
original key. The first
violin and cello parts
are similar to the right-
and left-hand parts of
the original piano
version. The few changes
I have made in these
parts have been for the
convenience of the string
players, but in no way do
they change the nature of
the music.Since the
original implied a
harmonic framework in
many places, I have added
a second violin and viola
part in such a way that
they not only have
interesting music to
play, but also fill in
some of the implied
harmony without in any
way detracting from the
composition's musical
value. Occasionally, it
has been necessary to
raise or lower a few
passages an octave or to
modify others slightly to
make them more accessible
for young players.It is
hoped that the musical
value of the composition
has not been too
compromised, and that
students and teachers
will come to enjoy this
little piece in its new
setting as much as
pianists have in the
original one. This
arrangement may also be
performed by a solo
string quartet. When
performed by a string
orchestra, the double
bass part may be
omitted.- Douglas
TownsendString editing by
Amy Rosen.
About Carl
Fischer Young String
Orchestra
Series
Thi
s series of Grade 2/Grade
2.5 pieces is designed
for second and third year
ensembles. The pieces in
this series are
characterized
by: --Occasionally
extending to third
position --Keys
carefully considered for
appropriate
difficulty --Addition
of separate 2nd violin
and viola
parts --Viola T.C.
part
included --Increase
in independence of parts
over beginning levels
Composed by
Jeremy Martin. Folio.
Sps. Set of Score and
Parts.
4+4+2+2+2+8+8+4+2+4+4+2+2
+2+2+3+3+3+4+4+4+4+3+3+3+
6+4+4+2+2+1+1+1+1+4+24
pages. Duration 6
minutes, 28 seconds. Carl
Fischer Music #SPS87.
Published by Carl Fischer
Music (CF.SPS87).
ISBN
9781491156445. UPC:
680160914982. 9 x 12
inches.
About the
Work In the spring of
2008 a large number of
wildfires plagued the
west coast, including the
area where my wife and I
lived in northern
California. Firefighters
all along the West Coast
worked overtime in what
seemed like an endless
battle to protect
residents and their
homes. After hearing of a
number of firefighters
who had lost their lives
in the struggle, I
composed this work as a
dedication to them, in
honor of their sacrifice.
It is not dedicated to
any one person or group,
or even just to the
west-coast firefighters
who battled those
horrible wildfires;
instead, to all
firefighters who have
given their lives in the
line of duty. Although
designed as a standalone
work, I highly recommend
following this
composition with one of
the many fine band
settings of Amazing
Grace, as it is commonly
performed at firefighter
memorials. The one by
Frank Ticheli is superb,
and if you have access to
a good piper there is an
excellent version by Jay
Dawson which features a
solo verse for bagpipe;
both are quite stirring.
Performance Notes The
sustained slower tempo
may prove a challenge for
some groups; as always,
emphasize subdivision.
Cues should be used only
if necessary due to
limited instrumentation.
The clarinet and
cup-muted trumpets at m.
39 should be very
sostenuto (almost
organ-like); be careful
to stagger breathe. The
tempo change at m. 55
should not be much of a
challenge, but many
groups may tend to slow
back down to the original
tempo by m. 59; the
timpani player can
greatly assist in
avoiding this problem.
The coda at m. 82 may be
taken more slowly than
the indicated tempo if
your solo flutist can
manage the lengthy
sustained notes. About
the WorkIn the spring of
2008 a large number of
wildfires plagued the
west coast, including the
area where my wife and I
lived in northern
California. Firefighters
all along the West Coast
worked overtime in what
seemed like an endless
battle to protect
residents and their
homes. After hearing of a
number of firefighters
who had lost their lives
in the struggle, I
composed this work as a
dedication to them, in
honor of their sacrifice.
It is not dedicated to
any one person or group,
or even just to the
west-coast firefighters
who battled those
horrible wildfires;
instead, to all
firefighters who have
given their lives in the
line of duty.Although
designed as a standalone
work, I highly recommend
following this
composition with one of
the many fine band
settings of Amazing
Grace, as it is commonly
performed at firefighter
memorials. The one by
Frank Ticheli is superb,
and if you have access to
a good piper there is an
excellent version by Jay
Dawson which features a
solo verse for bagpipe;
both are quite
stirring.Performance
Notes The sustained
slower tempo may prove a
challenge for some
groups; as always,
emphasize subdivision.
Cues should be used only
if necessary due to
limited instrumentation.
The clarinet and
cup-muted trumpets at m.
39 should be very
sostenuto (almost
“organ-likeâ€)
; be careful to stagger
breathe. The tempo change
at m. 55 should not be
much of a challenge, but
many groups may tend to
slow back down to the
original tempo by m. 59;
the timpani player can
greatly assist in
avoiding this problem.
The coda at m. 82 may be
taken more slowly than
the indicated tempo if
your solo flutist can
manage the lengthy
sustained notes.