Composed by Geraldine Green. Classical; 21st century. Complete set of parts, co...(+)
Composed by Geraldine
Green. Classical; 21st
century. Complete set of
parts, conductor's
score. Composed 1992.
Duration 23 minutes.
Published by Alea
Publishing
(A7.ALEA1067A).
Flûte, Clarinette, Piano (trio) [Conducteur et Parties séparées] Theodore Presser Co.
Composed by Gabriel Faure (1845-1924). Arranged by Michael Webster. Classical. S...(+)
Composed by Gabriel Faure
(1845-1924). Arranged by
Michael Webster.
Classical. Score and
part(s). With Standard
notation. Composed 2005.
Opus 50. 28 pages.
Duration 5 minutes.
Theodore Presser Company
#114-41756. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.114417560).
Chamber Music Clarinet, Flute, Piano SKU: PR.114417570 For Flute, Bb C...(+)
Chamber Music Clarinet,
Flute, Piano
SKU:
PR.114417570
For
Flute, Bb Clarinet, And
Piano. Composed by
Edvard Grieg. Arranged by
Michael Webster. Sws
each. See the program
notes on pages two and
three of the full score.
Set of Score and Parts.
With Standard notation.
Composed 2008. 40 8 8
pages. Duration 18
minutes. Theodore Presser
Company #114-41757.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.114417570).
ISBN
9781491107867. UPC:
680160636013. 9x12
inches.
The famous
set of dances by Norway's
greatest composer were
written for piano duet.
Grieg later created a
piano solo version, but
refused to orchestrate
the set. After some study
of Grieg and his music,
Michael Webster has
arranged the four dances
for Flute, Clarinet, and
Piano in a faithful
setting, using the piano
duet version as a guide.
This lively Grieg classic
will be a welcome new
addition to performance
programs. For advanced
performers.______________
_________________________
Text from the scanned
back cover:Born in 1944,
MICHAEL WEBSTER made his
New York recital debut at
Town Hall in 1968 with
his eminent father,
Beveridge Webster, as
pianist. In the same
year, he won the Young
Concert Artists
International Competition
and succeeded his
teacher, Stanley Hasty,
as Principal Clarinet in
the Rochester
Philharmonic, a position
he held for twenty years.
Webster has performed
with the Chamber Music
Society of Lincoln
Center, the 92nd Street
Y, with the Tokyo,
Cleveland, Muir, Ying,
Enso, and Dover String
Quartets, and with the
festivals of Marlboro,
Santa Fe, Norfolk,
Chamber Music Northwest,
Angel Fire, Steamboat
Springs, Park City,
Sitka, Kapalua, Bowdoin,
Orcas Island,
Skaneateles, La Musica di
Asolo, Stratford,
Victoria, and Domaine
Forget.As soloist he has
appeared with many
orchestras, including the
Philadelphia Orchestra
under Aaron Copland and
the Boston Pops under
John Williams. His
travels have taken him as
performer and teacher to
most of the 50 states, as
well as Canada,
Mexico,Puerto Rico,
Central and South
America, Europe, Japan,
China, Australia, and New
Zealand. Webster was
Acting Principal Clarinet
of the San Francisco
Symphony, and has served
on the clarinet and/or
conducting faculties of
New England Conservatory,
Boston University,
University of Michigan,
and the Eastman School,
from which he earned his
three degrees. Currently
he is Professor of Music
at Rice Universityâ??s
Shepherd School of Music
and Artistic Director of
the Houston Youth
Symphony, which has won
multiple first prizes in
national performance
competitions.With his
wife, flutist Leone
Buyse, and pianist Robert
Moeling, he plays in the
Webster Trio, which has
recorded his arrangements
on Tour de France and
World Wide Webster for
Crystal Records.
Otherarrangements were
recorded for Nami and
Camerata Tokyo in Japan
with pianist Chizuko
Sawa. Webster has also
recorded for Albany,
Arabesque, Beaumont,
Bridge, Centaur, CRI, and
New World. He has played
at many ClarinetFests for
the International
Clarinet Association and
written a column entitled
â??TeachingClarinetâ?
in The Clarinet Magazine
since 1998. Michael
Webster is a Buffet
artist-clinician,
performing on Buffet
clarinets
exclusively. NORWEGIAN
DANCES (Grieg)Michael
Websterâ??s
transcriptions for Flute,
Clarinet, and Piano have
created the core
literature for this
instrumental genre.
Working directly from
Griegâ??s original piano
four-hands version of the
charmingly familiar
Norwegian Dances, Webster
has given flutists and
clarinetists another
addition to the
ensembleâ??s
repertoire.
Chamber Music Organ, Trumpet SKU: PR.114419810 Composed by Stacy Garrop. ...(+)
Chamber Music Organ,
Trumpet
SKU:
PR.114419810
Composed
by Stacy Garrop. Set of
Score and Parts. 33+12
pages. Duration 21
minutes. Theodore Presser
Company #114-41981.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.114419810).
ISBN
9781491136638. UPC:
680160681921.
Stacy
Garrop’s ROAD
WARRIOR is music of
real-life tragedy,
expressed through the
power of a trumpet/organ
duo. Drawing inspiration
from Neil Peart’s
autobiographical book,
“Ghost Rider:
Travels on the Healing
Road,â€
Garrop’s work
grieves the loss of a
friend’s young son
and the journey to
healing. ROAD
WARRIOR’s
evocative movement titles
are drawn from passages
in Peart’s book:1.
I Am the Ghost Rider2. My
Little Baby Soul3. Are
You With Me
Here?. When Clarion
members Keith Benjamin
(trumpet), Melody Steed
(organ), and I initially
discussed possible topics
for a new piece, Keith
brought up his son
Cameron, who had passed
away at the age of seven
from leukemia. While
Cameron’s life
ended too soon, he left
an indelible and lasting
mark on his those
surrounding him. Keith
asked if I could
commemorate Cameron
musically.In talking over
possible ways to do this,
Keith mentioned the book
Ghost Rider: Travels on
the Healing Road. The
book was written by Neil
Peart, who is well-known
as the longtime drummer
and lyricist of the band
Rush. Peart suffered the
heartbreaking loss of his
daughter in 1997,
followed by his wife 10
months later. In an
effort to work through
the grieving process,
Peart did what his wife
suggested before she
passed: he got onto his
motorcycle and hit the
open road. Ghost Rider
chronicles a year of
Peart’s life in
which he drove for 55,000
miles, zigzagging his way
across Canada, the
western portion of the
United States, Mexico,
and Belize.
Peart’s powerful
story illustrates how he
coped with immense loss
and eventually emerged on
the other side to once
again embrace life. Keith
had found Peart’s
book helpful in dealing
with Cameron’s
death; moreover, Mr.
Peart sent Cameron a
signed cymbal while he
was in the hospital
undergoing treatment.
This unexpected gesture
of compassion and
generosity meant the
world to both Cameron and
Keith.I chose three
phrases from
Peart’s book to
serve as the inspiration
for the movements in Road
Warrior. In the first
movement, I am the ghost
rider, I imagined the
performers to be howling
phantoms that are
haunting drivers on a
nearly deserted highway.
Peart often mentioned
that he felt haunted by
ghosts from the past
while on his journey, and
sometimes felt like a
ghost himself, moving
through an immaterial
world as he rode from
town to town. The second
movement, My little baby
soul, references
Peart’s wording to
define his own inner
essence that he was
trying to protect and
nurture while on his
journey. In this gentle
movement, I capture the
innocence and simplicity
of a newborn soul. The
piece concludes with Are
you with me here? In this
movement, I depict the
performers as they search
to find connections to
those they have lost, and
to those still
living.Over the course of
his travels, Peart kept
up a steady letter
correspondence with his
close friend Brutus. In
one of his first letters,
he repeatedly asks Brutus
if he is with him in
spirit. I found it to be
very poignant that while
in his self-imposed
exile, Peart discovered
that he still needed
connections to humanity.I
wish to thank Mr. Peart
for granting me
permission to use his
phrases as the movement
titles, and for serving
as the inspiration for
Road Warrior. Rarely do
any of us make it through
our lives without being
touched by the loss of
someone dear to us. I
found Peart’s
insights into his
grieving and recovery
process to be insightful,
eloquent, and
surprisingly comforting.
His journey is a touching
reminder that with enough
fortitude and time, we
can work through what
fate deals us and
continue down our own
road of life.
Voice(s) with various inst. SKU: BR.DV-9515-01 The people that walked ...(+)
Voice(s) with various
inst.
SKU:
BR.DV-9515-01
The
people that walked in
darkness. Composed by
Johann Georg Reichard.
Edited by Wolfram Steude.
Voice; stapled. Deutscher
Verlag. Baroque period.
Full Score. 24 pages.
Deutscher Verlag fur
Musik #DV 9515-01.
Published by Deutscher
Verlag fur Musik
(BR.DV-9515-01).
ISBN
9790200490596. 9 x 12
inches. German /
English.
In the
latter half of the 18th
and in the 19th century
the Old Preface Testament
Christmas prophecy
(Isaiah 9, 1-6) formed
the basis for numerous
motetto- and cantata-like
compositions originating
from the Erzgebirge and
the Vogtland of Saxony.
From very early times,
this text was included in
Matins for Christmas day,
hut until the period
specified it was usually
intoned on a reciting
note. The present cantata
is one of the few
surviving testimonies to
musical activity in the
small Thuringian town of
Schleiz. The prophecy Das
Volk, so im Finstern
wandelt was written -
probably for performance
at court services - in
all likelihood by Johann
Georg Reichard, a
magistrate in the
Grafschaft (County) of
Reuss who later held
higher judicial
appointments. Reichard
was born at Oels
(Olefoica) in Silesia in
1710 and studied law at
Leipzig from 1732. He
then went to Schleiz and
rose from the position of
archivist to high legal
office, at the same time
succeeding Gottfried
Siegmund Liebich (d.
1736) as director of the
court chapel. He died in
Schleiz on 2 June 1782. A
few of his church
cantatas and other pieces
(serenades etc) written
for the court at Schleiz
once belonged to the
Fursten- and Landesschule
of St Augustine at Grimma
whose music holdings are
now preserved in Dresden.
Some of Reichard's
compositions are
autograph, some in copies
made by his son Heinrich
Gottfried Reichard
(1742-1801) who pursued
an active career at
Grimma both in music and
ancient philology, first
as cantor, finally as
co-rector. The 'Prophecy'
cantata survives
anonymously in a score
copied by Heinrich
Gottfried Reichard who
may well have sung it
himself when he was
fourteen, before bis
voice broke - as the date
Anno 17 56 suggests. He
probably prepared the
score in bis later years
from the original parts,
now no langer existent,
as he did in the case of
other works of his
father's. Whether he
revised the musical text,
and to what extent,
cannot now be
established. This short
and attractive work has
all the lightness and
exuberance of the rococo
as well as genuine
emotional depth. In
addition, it is easy to
perform and should prove
very popular.
Liturgically, it still
occupies a place in
Christmas matins or
vespers. Permission for
this publication was
kindly given by Dr.
Wolfgang Reich of the
Sachsische
Landesbibliothek Dresden,
Musikabteilung. Wolfram
Steude, Dresden, January
1972.
It Takes Four to Tango Quatuor de Clarinettes: 4 clarinettes [Conducteur et Parties séparées] Theodore Presser Co.
For 3 B-Flat Clarinets and Bass Clarinet (Quartet or Ensemble). By Daniel Dorff....(+)
For 3 B-Flat Clarinets
and Bass Clarinet
(Quartet or Ensemble). By
Daniel Dorff. Wind
quartet. For Clarinet I,
Clarinet II, Clarinet
III, Bass Clarinet. Score
and parts. 4 pages.
Duration 2:30. Published
by Theodore Presser
Company.
Chamber Music Clarinet, Flute, Piano SKU: PR.114417610 Based on themes...(+)
Chamber Music Clarinet,
Flute, Piano
SKU:
PR.114417610
Based
on themes from Puccini's
Madama Butterfly.
Composed by Michael
Webster. Sws each. See
the notes on Madama
Butterfly on page two and
the notes on Sonata
Cho-Cho-San on page three
of the full score.
Contemporary. Set of
Score and Parts. With
Standard notation.
Composed 1997. 44+8+12
pages. Duration 24
minutes, 28 seconds.
Theodore Presser Company
#114-41761. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.114417610).
ISBN
9781491107904. UPC:
680160636051. 9x12
inches.
SONATA
CHO-CHO-SAN(Based on
themes from
Puccini’s Madama
Butterfly)In the spirit
of the great 19th-century
opera fantasies for
woodwinds, Michael
Webster has created a
concert trio on the many
great arias from
Puccini's Madama
Butterfly. However, as
its name implies, Sonata
Cho-Cho-San is not the
typical virtuosic
operatic potpourri.
Rather, it follows the
plot, resembling a sonata
mirroring Puccini's use
of recurring and
developing themes.
Webster makes the most of
the winds as versatile
performers - equally
suited to deliver
Puccini's beautiful vocal
writing, and to ornament
and embroider the
poignant themes in
symphonic style. For
advanced
performers.______________
_________________________
Text from the scanned
back cover:Born in 1944,
Michael Webster made his
New York recital debutat
Town Hall in 1968 with
his eminent father,
Beveridge Webster, as
pianist. In the same
year, he won the Young
Concert Artists
International Competition
and succeeded his
teacher, Stanley Hasty,
as Principal Clarinet in
the Rochester
Philharmonic, a position
he held for twenty years.
Webster has performed
with the Chamber Music
Society of Lincoln
Center, the 92nd Street
Y, with the Tokyo,
Cleveland, Muir, Ying,
Enso, and Dover String
Quartets, and with the
festivals of Marlboro,
Santa Fe, Norfolk,
Chamber Music Northwest,
Angel Fire, Steamboat
Springs, Park City,
Sitka, Kapalua, Bowdoin,
Orcas Island,
Skaneateles, La Musica di
Asolo, Stratford,
Victoria, and Domaine
Forget.As soloist he has
appeared with many
orchestras, including the
Philadelphia Orchestra
under Aaron Copland and
the Boston Pops under
John Williams. His
travels have taken him as
performer and teacher to
most of the 50 states, as
well as Canada,
Mexico,Puerto Rico,
Central and South
America, Europe, Japan,
China, Australia, and New
Zealand. Webster was
Acting Principal Clarinet
of the San Francisco
Symphony, and has served
on the clarinet and/or
conducting faculties of
New England Conservatory,
Boston University,
University of Michigan,
and the Eastman School,
from which he earned his
three degrees. Currently
he is Professor of Music
at Rice
University’s
Shepherd School of Music
and Artistic Director of
the Houston Youth
Symphony, which has won
multiple first prizes in
national performance
competitions.With his
wife, flutist Leone
Buyse, and pianist Robert
Moeling, he plays in the
Webster Trio, which has
recorded his arrangements
on Tour de France and
World Wide Webster for
Crystal Records.
Otherarrangements were
recorded for Nami and
Camerata Tokyo in Japan
with pianist Chizuko
Sawa. Webster has also
recorded for Albany,
Arabesque, Beaumont,
Bridge, Centaur, CRI, and
New World. He has played
at many ClarinetFests for
the International
Clarinet Association and
written a column entitled
“TeachingClarinetâ
€ in The Clarinet
Magazine since 1998.
Michael Webster is a
Buffet artist-clinician,
performing on Buffet
clarinets
exclusively.
Violin 1 SKU: BR.DV-9515A-15 The people that walked in darkness. C...(+)
Violin 1
SKU:
BR.DV-9515A-15
The
people that walked in
darkness. Composed by
Johann Georg Reichard.
Voice; stapled. Deutscher
Verlag. Baroque period.
Part. 4 pages. Deutscher
Verlag fur Musik #DV
9515a-15. Published by
Deutscher Verlag fur
Musik (BR.DV-9515A-15).
ISBN 9790200490602. 9
x 12 inches.
German.
In the
latter half of the 18th
and in the 19th century
the Old Preface Testament
Christmas prophecy
(Isaiah 9, 1-6) formed
the basis for numerous
motetto- and cantata-like
compositions originating
from the Erzgebirge and
the Vogtland of Saxony.
From very early times,
this text was included in
Matins for Christmas day,
hut until the period
specified it was usually
intoned on a reciting
note. The present cantata
is one of the few
surviving testimonies to
musical activity in the
small Thuringian town of
Schleiz. The prophecy Das
Volk, so im Finstern
wandelt was written -
probably for performance
at court services - in
all likelihood by Johann
Georg Reichard, a
magistrate in the
Grafschaft (County) of
Reuss who later held
higher judicial
appointments. Reichard
was born at Oels
(Olefoica) in Silesia in
1710 and studied law at
Leipzig from 1732. He
then went to Schleiz and
rose from the position of
archivist to high legal
office, at the same time
succeeding Gottfried
Siegmund Liebich (d.
1736) as director of the
court chapel. He died in
Schleiz on 2 June 1782. A
few of his church
cantatas and other pieces
(serenades etc) written
for the court at Schleiz
once belonged to the
Fursten- and Landesschule
of St Augustine at Grimma
whose music holdings are
now preserved in Dresden.
Some of Reichard's
compositions are
autograph, some in copies
made by his son Heinrich
Gottfried Reichard
(1742-1801) who pursued
an active career at
Grimma both in music and
ancient philology, first
as cantor, finally as
co-rector. The 'Prophecy'
cantata survives
anonymously in a score
copied by Heinrich
Gottfried Reichard who
may well have sung it
himself when he was
fourteen, before bis
voice broke - as the date
Anno 17 56 suggests. He
probably prepared the
score in bis later years
from the original parts,
now no langer existent,
as he did in the case of
other works of his
father's. Whether he
revised the musical text,
and to what extent,
cannot now be
established. This short
and attractive work has
all the lightness and
exuberance of the rococo
as well as genuine
emotional depth. In
addition, it is easy to
perform and should prove
very popular.
Liturgically, it still
occupies a place in
Christmas matins or
vespers. Permission for
this publication was
kindly given by Dr.
Wolfgang Reich of the
Sachsische
Landesbibliothek Dresden,
Musikabteilung. Wolfram
Steude, Dresden, January
1972.
Violin 2 SKU: BR.DV-9515A-16 The people that walked in darkness. C...(+)
Violin 2
SKU:
BR.DV-9515A-16
The
people that walked in
darkness. Composed by
Johann Georg Reichard.
Voice; stapled. Deutscher
Verlag. Baroque period.
Part. 4 pages. Deutscher
Verlag fur Musik #DV
9515a-16. Published by
Deutscher Verlag fur
Musik (BR.DV-9515A-16).
ISBN 9790200490619. 9
x 12 inches.
German.
In the
latter half of the 18th
and in the 19th century
the Old Preface Testament
Christmas prophecy
(Isaiah 9, 1-6) formed
the basis for numerous
motetto- and cantata-like
compositions originating
from the Erzgebirge and
the Vogtland of Saxony.
From very early times,
this text was included in
Matins for Christmas day,
hut until the period
specified it was usually
intoned on a reciting
note. The present cantata
is one of the few
surviving testimonies to
musical activity in the
small Thuringian town of
Schleiz. The prophecy Das
Volk, so im Finstern
wandelt was written -
probably for performance
at court services - in
all likelihood by Johann
Georg Reichard, a
magistrate in the
Grafschaft (County) of
Reuss who later held
higher judicial
appointments. Reichard
was born at Oels
(Olefoica) in Silesia in
1710 and studied law at
Leipzig from 1732. He
then went to Schleiz and
rose from the position of
archivist to high legal
office, at the same time
succeeding Gottfried
Siegmund Liebich (d.
1736) as director of the
court chapel. He died in
Schleiz on 2 June 1782. A
few of his church
cantatas and other pieces
(serenades etc) written
for the court at Schleiz
once belonged to the
Fursten- and Landesschule
of St Augustine at Grimma
whose music holdings are
now preserved in Dresden.
Some of Reichard's
compositions are
autograph, some in copies
made by his son Heinrich
Gottfried Reichard
(1742-1801) who pursued
an active career at
Grimma both in music and
ancient philology, first
as cantor, finally as
co-rector. The 'Prophecy'
cantata survives
anonymously in a score
copied by Heinrich
Gottfried Reichard who
may well have sung it
himself when he was
fourteen, before bis
voice broke - as the date
Anno 17 56 suggests. He
probably prepared the
score in bis later years
from the original parts,
now no langer existent,
as he did in the case of
other works of his
father's. Whether he
revised the musical text,
and to what extent,
cannot now be
established. This short
and attractive work has
all the lightness and
exuberance of the rococo
as well as genuine
emotional depth. In
addition, it is easy to
perform and should prove
very popular.
Liturgically, it still
occupies a place in
Christmas matins or
vespers. Permission for
this publication was
kindly given by Dr.
Wolfgang Reich of the
Sachsische
Landesbibliothek Dresden,
Musikabteilung. Wolfram
Steude, Dresden, January
1972.
Hope Was Born This Night Chorale 2 parties Unison/2-parties, Piano [Octavo] - Débutant Word Music
(A Glorious Celebration of Christmas). Composed by Dale Mathews. Arranged by...(+)
(A Glorious Celebration
of
Christmas). Composed by
Dale
Mathews. Arranged by
Allan
Douglas and Sarah
Huffman. For
unison/2-part choir,
piano
accompaniment.
Collection.
Very Simply Word.
Christmas.
Difficulty: very easy.
Choral
score. Duration ca. 23
minutes. Published by
Word
Music
Chamber Music Violin SKU: PR.114422260 For solo violin. Composed b...(+)
Chamber Music Violin
SKU: PR.114422260
For solo violin.
Composed by Stacy Garrop.
Sws. Performance Score.
12 pages. Duration
0:09:00. Theodore Presser
Company #114-42226.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.114422260).
ISBN
9781491133866. UPC:
680160683352. 9 x 12
inches.
Legends of
the phoenix are found in
stories from ancient
Egypt and Greece. While
each culture possesses a
range of stories
encompassing the myth,
these tales tend toward
similar traits: a sacred
bird with brilliantly
colored plumage and
melodious call lives for
typically 500 years, then
dies in a nest of embers,
only to be reborn among
the flames. Phoenix
Rising consists of two
movements: I. Dying in
Embers represents an old
phoenix settling on top
of a pile of embers and
breathing its last
breath; II. Reborn in
Flames depicts the
newly-born phoenix
getting its first taste
of flight. Legends of
the phoenix are found in
stories from ancient
Egypt and Greece. While
each culture possesses a
range of stories
encompassing the phoenix
myth, these tales tend to
share similar traits: a
sacred bird with
brilliantly colored
plumage and melodious
call lives for typically
five hundred years; then
the bird dies in a nest
of embers, only to be
reborn among the
flames.In Egyptian
stories, the phoenix
gathers scented wood and
spices for its
funeral/rebirth pyre,
then collects the ashes
from its earlier
incarnation and flies
them to the temple of the
sun in Heliopolis to
offer as a tribute to the
sun god.In Greek myths,
the phoenix was
approximately the size of
an eagle and was adorned
with red and gold
feathers; it would fly
from either India or
Arabia to Heliopolis to
give its offering. The
bird’s association
with immortality and
resurrection are
particularly intriguing
aspects of these tales,
giving numerous writers
(including William
Shakespeare, C.S. Lewis,
and J.K. Rowling) a rich
resource for their own
stories.Phoenix Rising
consists of two
movements. I. Dying in
embers represents an old
phoenixwho is settling on
top of a pile of embers
and breathing its last
breath. II. Reborn in
flames depicts the
newly-born phoenix
getting its first taste
of flight.Phoenix Rising
was commissioned by
saxophonist Christopher
Creviston, who has
recorded the work on the
Blue Griffin label. The
composer has also made
editions of the work for
flute and for clarinet
(also available from
Theodore Presser
Company).
Chamber Music Flute(s) SKU: PR.114419610 For solo Flute and Alto Flute...(+)
Chamber Music Flute(s)
SKU: PR.114419610
For solo Flute and
Alto Flute (one
player). Composed by
Stacy Garrop. Sws.
Performance Score. 12
pages. Duration 9:30.
Theodore Presser Company
#114-41961. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.114419610).
ISBN
9781491132302. UPC:
680160677108. 9 x 12
inches.
Legends of
the phoenix are found in
stories from ancient
Egypt and Greece. While
each culture possesses a
range of stories
encompassing the myth,
these tales tend toward
similar traits: a sacred
bird with brilliantly
colored plumage and
melodious call lives for
typically 500 years, then
dies in a nest of embers,
only to be reborn among
the flames. Phoenix
Rising consists of two
movements: I. Dying in
Embers represents an old
phoenix settling on top
of a pile of embers and
breathing its last
breath; II. Reborn in
Flames depicts the
newly-born phoenix
getting its first taste
of flight. Legends of
the phoenix are found in
stories from ancient
Egypt and Greece. While
each culture possesses a
range of stories
encompassing the phoenix
myth, these tales tend to
share similar traits: a
sacred bird with
brilliantly colored
plumage and melodious
call lives for typically
five hundred years; then
the bird dies in a nest
of embers, only to be
reborn among the
flames.In Egyptian
stories, the phoenix
gathers scented wood and
spices for its
funeral/rebirth pyre,
then collects the ashes
from its earlier
incarnation and flies
them to the temple of the
sun in Heliopolis to
offer as a tribute to the
sun god.In Greek myths,
the phoenix was
approximately the size of
an eagle and was adorned
with red and gold
feathers; it would fly
from either India or
Arabia to Heliopolis to
give its offering. The
bird’s association
with immortality and
resurrection are
particularly intriguing
aspects of these tales,
giving numerous writers
(including William
Shakespeare, C.S. Lewis,
and J.K. Rowling) a rich
resource for their own
stories.Phoenix Rising
consists of two
movements. I. Dying in
embers represents an old
phoenixwho is settling on
top of a pile of embers
and breathing its last
breath. II. Reborn in
flames depicts the
newly-born phoenix
getting its first taste
of flight.Phoenix Rising
was commissioned by
saxophonist Christopher
Creviston, who has
recorded the work on the
Blue Griffin label. The
composer has also made
editions of the work for
flute and for clarinet
(also available from
Theodore Presser
Company).
A Period Piece for
Bands of Winds.
Composed by Carter Pann.
Folio. Set of Score and
Parts.
16+16+16+8+16+16+24+24+24
+16+8+8+8+8+16+16+16+16+1
6+16+16+8+8+8+8+16+16+16+
16+32+20+8+8+8+4+4+60
pages. Duration 12:30.
Theodore Presser Company
#115-40233. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.115402330).
ISBN
9781491129555. UPC:
680160667727. 9 x 12
inches.
Armed with
a prodigious gift for
forging musical
identities, “Lord
Carter Nicholas
Pann†presents an
offering inspired by the
Elizabethan Era and an
appreciation for the
works of Percy Grainger.
Pann’s suite tells
a story of palace
intrigue, outlined by the
movement titles:1.
Overture - Young Tom
Abel, Heir to Cecil
Abel’s Fortune2.
Sarabande - Father Daniel
Bennett from the Abbey at
Lockwood Cross3.
Pastorale - Joseph
Dimplesweet, His
Lordship’s Oldest
Farmhand4. Gallop - Lord
William H. Pettybone,
Duke of Bremingham. At
Her Ladyship’s
Request (2016) was an
idea born out of
admiration for the wind
works of Percy Grainger
– most notably his
Lincolnshire Posey.The
names and places here are
all fictitious. Four
countrymen have come
forward at Her
Ladyship’s request
as we commoners (and for
as long as I can
remember) have been led
to believe Her Highness
has grown complacent in
her aged betrothal to His
Lordship.I. It has long
been established in this
hill country that young,
svelte Tom Abel has
caught her fancy eye. He
knocks about with the
swagger of a visiting
dignitary, confident and
cocksure. And then there
is his father’s
fortune. Cecil Abel may
be the richest man in the
land save for His
Lordship. Tom, his only
son, will run his face
straight into that pile
the moment his old man
kicks.II. It is rare to
spy Father Daniel
Bennett, High Priest from
the Abbey at Lockwood
Cross, loitering in our
very own town
square…but not as
of late.III. Is Her
Ladyship so desperate as
to call upon Old Man
Dimplesweet? Were you to
confirm this, I would
have straightened my back
and spit the ground
before you. Then I saw
what could not possibly
be misconstrued. And
where is His Lordship
anyway?IV. Pettybone!
Conniving…
insidious. I don’t
believe there has been a
greater rivalry among men
for generations. The
Duke’s ego alone
could run our nation. The
grudges he grows are
notorious. His mount is
legendary. The day has
come to collect his
toll.
Composed by
Victor Herbert. Symphonic
Band (SPS). Full score.
With Standard notation.
40 pages. Carl Fischer
Music #SPS78F. Published
by Carl Fischer Music
(CF.SPS78F).
ISBN
9781491153239. UPC:
680160910731.
Festi
val March is presented in
a new edition arranged by
Richard Summers. It is a
tour de force composition
for advanced bands and
hearkens back to a bygone
era during the golden age
of the band movement.
Directors and students
will hear operatic music
from composer Victor
Herbert who is best known
for his Christmas
classic, Toyland. This
is a richly scored
masterpiece that deserves
to return to standard
status in concert band
repertoire. We are proud
to bring you this new
setting of this cherished
classic. About the
CompositionFestival March
by Victor Herbert was
written for the
Pittsburgh Symphony and
first performed under
Herbert’s
direction in Chicago on
Dec. 9, 1901 celebrating
the 12th anniversary
of Chicago’s
Auditorium Theatre. Also
known as the Auditorium
Festival March, he
included it many times
for programs of a
festival nature. The main
theme Auld Lang Syne, a
famous Scottish folk
song, is incorporated
many times along with
brass fanfares,
interludes and march
melodies. This band
arrangement is very
similar to the original
orchestral composition.
The missing string parts,
the addition of the
saxophone section and
other band instruments,
editing of the
superimposed triplets
against
sixteenth notes, to
one or the other, and
articulations suitable
for the band, were major
challenges. The style of
early twentieth-century
American music is
captured here. This
arrangement will give
band musicians access to
a fine piece of music
that could only be
appreciated by orchestra
musicians up to now.
Although suitable for
many occasions, this
piece is a great way to
begin or end a December
holiday concert.
 Notes to the
ConductorVictor
Herbert’s music
can be interpreted in a
romantic style, which is
the conductor’s
responsibility to read in
nuance and musicality.
The beginning and other
triple-tonguing sections
of this piece have a
March of the Toys quality
to it. Â The interludes
and Auld Lang Syne
sections are legato and
musical. The March
sections can also be
shaped musically.About
the ComposerVictor
Herbert was born in
Ireland in 1861 and
raised in Germany. When
he moved to America in
1886, he joined the
Metropolitan Opera as
principal cellist and
eventually composed many
works including
forty-three operettas
on Broadway from the
1890s to World War I,
including Naughty
Marietta and Babes in
Toyland. Victor Herbert
conducted the Pittsburgh
Symphony from 1898 to
1904 and then was the
conductor of his own
Victor Herbert Orchestra.
He formed ASCAP with a
group of composers in
1914 and was the director
until his death in 1924.
Among his thirty-one
compositions for
orchestra, Festival March
was a favorite of his and
was eventually published
by Carl Fischer Music.
 .
Composed by
Victor Herbert. Symphonic
Band (SPS). Set of Score
and Parts. With Standard
notation.
3+12+12+6+6+3+12+24+24+6+
6+8+8+6+6+9+18+18+27+8+8+
8+8+9+9+9+9+12+3+6+6+40+6
pages. Duration 7:37.
Carl Fischer Music
#SPS78. Published by Carl
Fischer Music (CF.SPS78).
ISBN 9781491152553.
UPC: 680160910052. Key:
Bb major.
Festival
March is presented in a
new edition arranged by
Richard Summers. It is a
tour de force composition
for advanced bands and
hearkens back to a bygone
era during the golden age
of the band movement.
Directors and students
will hear operatic music
from composer Victor
Herbert who is best known
for his Christmas
classic, Toyland. This
is a richly scored
masterpiece that deserves
to return to standard
status in concert band
repertoire. We are proud
to bring you this new
setting of this cherished
classic. Festival
March by Victor Herbert
was written for the
Pittsburgh Symphony and
first performed under
Herbert’s
direction in Chicago on
Dec. 9, 1901 celebrating
the 12th anniversary
of Chicago’s
Auditorium Theatre. Also
known as the Auditorium
Festival March, he
included it many times
for programs of a
festival nature. The main
theme Auld Lang Syne, a
famous Scottish folk
song, is incorporated
many times along with
brass fanfares,
interludes and march
melodies. This band
arrangement is very
similar to the original
orchestral composition.
The missing string parts,
the addition of the
saxophone section and
other band instruments,
editing of the
superimposed triplets
against
sixteenth notes, to
one or the other, and
articulations suitable
for the band, were major
challenges. The style of
early twentieth-century
American music is
captured here. This
arrangement will give
band musicians access to
a fine piece of music
that could only be
appreciated by orchestra
musicians up to now.
Although suitable for
many occasions, this
piece is a great way to
begin or end a December
holiday concert.
 Notes to the
ConductorVictor
Herbert’s music
can be interpreted in a
romantic style, which is
the conductor’s
responsibility to read in
nuance and musicality.
The beginning and other
triple-tonguing sections
of this piece have a
March of the Toys quality
to it. Â The interludes
and Auld Lang Syne
sections are legato and
musical. The March
sections can also be
shaped musically.About
the ComposerVictor
Herbert was born in
Ireland in 1861 and
raised in Germany. When
he moved to America in
1886, he joined the
Metropolitan Opera as
principal cellist and
eventually composed many
works including
forty-three operettas
on Broadway from the
1890s to World War I,
including Naughty
Marietta and Babes in
Toyland. Victor Herbert
conducted the Pittsburgh
Symphony from 1898 to
1904 and then was the
conductor of his own
Victor Herbert Orchestra.
He formed ASCAP with a
group of composers in
1914 and was the director
until his death in 1924.
Among his thirty-one
compositions for
orchestra, Festival March
was a favorite of his and
was eventually published
by Carl Fischer Music.
 .
Chamber Music Trombone, Piano SKU: PR.114414450 Man vs. Machine. C...(+)
Chamber Music Trombone,
Piano
SKU:
PR.114414450
Man
vs. Machine. Composed
by Adolphus Hailstork.
Sws. Folk. Set of Score
and Parts. With Standard
notation. Composed 2009.
24+8 pages. Duration 12
minutes. Theodore Presser
Company #114-41445.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.114414450).
ISBN
9781598064087. UPC:
680160597635. 9x12
inches.
Inspired by
the tale of a legendary
folk hero, Adolphus
Hailstork’s
tour-de-force for
trombone and piano is a
riveting portrayal of the
steely strength and
stamina of John Henry, a
former slave who helped
build the American
railroads and ultimately
outperformed a steam
engine. This composition
uses quotes from the
spiritual Every Time I
Feel the Spirit and the
folk song The Ballad of
John Henry. For advanced
players. Duration:
13’_______________
_________________________
__Text on the scanned
back cover:JOHN HENRY'S
BIG(MAN vs. MACHINE)FOR
TROMBONE AND
PIANOInspired by the tale
of the legendary hero,
Adolphus
Hailstork’s
tour-de-force for
trombone and piano is a
riveting portrayal of the
steely strength and
stamina of John Henry, a
former slave who helped
build the American
railroads and ultimately
outperformed a steam
engine. PROGRAM NOTES
by the ComposerJohn Henry
was born a slave in the
1840’s or
1850’s. It is
important to remember
that no one knows for
sure if John Henry
existed or is a tall tale
created by writers. That
is one of the things that
makes the legend so
intriguing.According to
the legend, he grew to
stand 6 feet tall, 200
pounds – a giant
in that day.Though the
story of John Henry
sounds like the
quintessential tall tale,
it is certainly based, at
least in part, on
historical circumstance.
There are disputes as to
where the legend
originates. Some place
John Henry in West
Virginia, while recent
research suggests
Alabama. Still, all share
a similar back-story.In
order to construct the
railroads, companies
hired thousands of men to
smooth out terrain and
cut through obstacles
that stood in the way of
the proposed tracks. One
such chore that figures
heavily into some of the
earliest John Henry
ballads is the blasting
of the Big Bend Tunnel,
more than a mile straight
through a mountain in
West
Virginia.Steel-drivinâ
™ men like John Henry
used large hammers and
stakes to pound holes
into the rock, which were
were then filled with
explosives that would
blast a cavity deeper and
deeper into the mountain.
In the folk ballads, the
central event took place
under such conditions.
Eager to reduce costs and
speed up progress, some
tunnel engineers were
using steam drills to
power their way into the
rock. According to the
great American tall
tales, on hearing of the
machine, John Henry
challenged the steam
drill to a contest. He
won, but died of
exhaustion, his life cut
short by his own
superhuman effort.This
composition uses quotes
from the spiritual Every
Time I Feel the Spirit
and the folk song The
Ballad of John Henry.JOHN
HENRY’S BIG was
composed for trombonist
David Jackson.