by Mel Bay. For all guitars. Modern Guitar Method. All styles, solos & duets. Le...(+)
by Mel Bay. For all
guitars. Modern Guitar
Method. All styles, solos
& duets. Level: Multiple
Levels. Book. Method.
Size 8.75x11.75. 320
pages. Published by Mel
Bay Pub., Inc.
With Suggested Chordal Accompaniment. Composed by Craig Duncan. Cello,Guitar...(+)
With Suggested Chordal
Accompaniment. Composed
by
Craig Duncan.
Cello,Guitar:
Gospel and
Sacred,Style,Gospel/Sacre
d,Du
et/Ensemble,Solos,Duets
and
Ensemble,Solos. 100
Hymns.
Book. 120 pages.
Published by
Mel Bay Publications, Inc
(75 Short Late Elementary Piano Solos with Optional Duet Accompaniments). Arrang...(+)
(75 Short Late Elementary
Piano Solos with Optional
Duet Accompaniments).
Arranged by Tom Gerou.
For Piano. This edition:
Five Finger Piano. Book;
Piano Collection; Piano
Supplemental. 5 Finger.
Children; Movie; Pop.
Five Finger; Late
Elementary. 152 pages.
Published by Alfred Music
Publishing
For voice duet (male/female) and piano. Format: piano/vocal/chords songbook. Wit...(+)
For voice duet
(male/female) and piano.
Format:
piano/vocal/chords
songbook. With vocal
melody, piano
accompaniment, lyrics,
chord names and guitar
chord diagrams. Wedding.
144 pages. 9x12 inches.
Published by Hal Leonard.
Vocal Score. By Benjamin Britten. Arranged by Arthur Oldham. (Vocal Score). Boo...(+)
Vocal Score. By Benjamin
Britten. Arranged by
Arthur Oldham. (Vocal
Score). Boosey and Hawkes
Large Choral. Book only.
Size 7.25x10.25 inches.
88 pages. Published by
Boosey and Hawkes.
A Creative and Interactive Piano Course for Children. Composed by Hans-Guenter...(+)
A Creative and
Interactive
Piano Course for
Children.
Composed by Hans-Guenter
Heumann. This edition:
Saddle
stitching. Sheet music.
Piano
Duet. Method. Edition
with
Online audio file. 40
pages.
Schott Music #ED13823.
Published by Schott Music
Flute SKU: AP.IF9827CD Flute. Arranged by Various. Instrumental Se...(+)
Flute
SKU:
AP.IF9827CD
Flute. Arranged by
Various. Instrumental
Series. Book and CD. 24
pages. Alfred Music
#00-IF9827CD. Published
by Alfred Music
(AP.IF9827CD).
ISBN
9780769263083. UPC:
029156921854.
English.
These 15
new arrangements can be
played alone, or as duets
or trios in any
instrumental combination.
Titles include: My Heart
Will Go On (Love Theme
from Titanic) * All My
Life * How Do I Live? *
Foolish Games * Time to
Say Goodbye * Pink
Panther * Over the
Rainbow * The Wind
Beneath My Wings * Kiss
from a Rose * Valentine *
Linus & Lucy * Un-break
My Heart * Karen's Theme
* Star Wars.
Easy Instrumental Duets. Composed by Various. Arranged by Mark Phillips. Easy ...(+)
Easy Instrumental Duets.
Composed by Various.
Arranged
by Mark Phillips. Easy
Instrumental Duets.
Movies,
Duet. Softcover. 48
pages.
Published by Hal Leonard
(Piano Duet Play-Along Volume 38). By The Beatles. By John Lennon and Paul McCar...(+)
(Piano Duet Play-Along
Volume 38). By The
Beatles. By John Lennon
and Paul McCartney. Piano
Duet Play-Along.
Softcover with CD. 64
pages. Published by Hal
Leonard
Trombone, Cello SKU: BT.YE0001 Composed by Gioachino Rossini. Book Only. ...(+)
Trombone, Cello
SKU:
BT.YE0001
Composed by
Gioachino Rossini. Book
Only. Yorke Edition
#YE0001. Published by
Yorke Edition
(BT.YE0001).
It
was a chance visit to a
second hand bookshop in
Nottingham that set me on
the trail of Rossini's
now well-known Duetto for
cello and double bass.
But the story begins
earlier than that. In the
1960s I was studying the
double bass at the Royal
College of Music with
Adrian Beers, who was at
that time principal of
the English Chamber
Orchestra, on the front
desk of the Philharmonia
Orchestra, and a member
of the Melos Ensemble of
London (then one of the
leading ensembles of the
world). I was working on
the 'Dragonetti
Concerto', as most young
players do, and I wanted
to find out a bit about
it. My teacher said he
thought the autograph
manuscript might be in
the British Library,which
was all the encouragement
I needed to secure a pass
to the Reading Room so I
could go and see for
myself.
There,
sure enough, I found a
large collection of
Dragonetti's autograph
manuscripts, together
with other bound volumes
relating to his life. The
papers had been lovingly
collated and annotated by
Vincent Novello, one of
Dragonetti's closest
friends, then deposited
in the library before his
departure to Italy in
1848, two years after
Dragonetti's death. One
of the volumes included a
lot of letters about
various engagements and
music festivals, copies
of orders for strings
Dragonetti wanted from
Italy, details about
paintings he wanted to
buy, and numerous
invitations to private
functions. The manuscript
of the 'Dragonetti
Concerto', of course,
wasn't among the papers
â?? we now know it to
have been written by
Edouard Nanny a century
or so later.
One name that
came up regularly in the
documents was that of Sir
George Smart. Smart had
been a violinist in
Salomon's orchestra and
had played for Haydn at
his London concerts in
the 1790s. As a child he
had learnt much about
music from his father,
who had in turn been
present at many of
Handel's rehearsals when
he was preparing some of
his major works for the
first time. Smart was
also a fine keyboard
player, becoming organist
of the Chapel Royal in
1822. As a conductor.
New music
(post-2000). Score.
Composed 2016/17/20. 12
pages. Duration 8'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #EB
9253. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.EB-9253).
ISBN
9790004185537. 9 x 12
inches.
Marche
fatale is an incautiously
daring escapade that may
annoy the fans of my
compositions more than my
earlier works, many of
which have prevailed only
after scandals at their
world premieres. My
Marche fatale has,
though, little
stylistically to do with
my previous compositional
path; it presents itself
without restraint, if not
as a regression, then
still as a recourse to
those empty phrases to
which modern civilization
still clings in its daily
utility music, whereas
music in the 20th and
21st centuries has long
since advanced to new,
unfamiliar soundscapes
and expressive
possibilities. The key
term is banality. As
creators we despise it,
we try to avoid it -
though we are not safe
from the cheap banal even
within new aesthetic
achievements.Many
composers have
incidentally accepted the
banal. Mozart wrote Ein
musikalischer Spass [A
Musical Jape], a
deliberately amateurishly
miscarried sextet.
Beethoven's Bagatellen
op. 119 were rejected by
the publisher on the
grounds that few will
believe that this minor
work is by the famous
Beethoven. Mauricio Kagel
wrote, tongue in cheek,
so to speak, Marsche, um
den Sieg zu verfehlen
[Marches for being
Unvictorious], Ligeti
wrote Hungarian Rock; in
his Circus Polka
Stravinsky quoted and
distorted the famous, all
too popular Schubert
military march, composed
at the time for piano
duet. I myself do not
know, though, whether I
ought to rank my Marche
fatale alongside these
examples: I accept the
humor in daily life, the
more so as this daily
life for some of us is
not otherwise to be
borne. In music, I
mistrust it, considering
myself all the closer to
the profounder idea of
cheerfulness having
little to do with humor.
However: Isn't a march
with its compelling claim
to a collectively martial
or festive mood absurd, a
priori? Is it even music
at all? Can one march and
at the same time listen?
Eventually, I resolved to
take the absurd seriously
- perhaps bitterly
seriously - as a
debunking emblem of our
civilization that is
standing on the brink.
The way - seemingly
unstoppable - into the
black hole of all
debilitating demons: that
can become serene. My old
request of myself and my
music-creating
surroundings is to write
a non-music, whence the
familiar concept of music
is repeatedly re-defined
anew and differently, so
that derailed here -
perhaps? - in a
treacherous way, the
concert hall becomes the
place of mind-opening
adventures instead of a
refuge in illusory
security. How could that
happen? The rest is -
thinking.(Helmut
Lachenmann, 2017)CD
(Version for
Piano):Nicolas Hodges CD
Wergo WER 7393 2
Bibliography:Ich bin
nicht ,,pietistisch
verformt. Ein Gesprach
[von Jan Brachmann] mit
dem Komponisten Helmut
Lachenmann, in: FAZ vom
7. Juni 2018, p.
15.
World premiere
of the piano version:
Mito/Japan, June 17,
2017, World premiere of
the orchestral version:
Stuttgart, January 1,
2018, World premiere of
the ensemble version:
Frankfurt, December 9,
2020.
New music
(post-2000). Full score.
Composed 2016/17/20. 48
pages. Duration 8'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #PB
5432. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.PB-5432).
ISBN
9790004212790. 10 x 12.5
inches.
Marche
fatale is an incautiously
daring escapade that may
annoy the fans of my
compositions more than my
earlier works, many of
which have prevailed only
after scandals at their
world premieres. My
Marche fatale has,
though, little
stylistically to do with
my previous compositional
path; it presents itself
without restraint, if not
as a regression, then
still as a recourse to
those empty phrases to
which modern civilization
still clings in its daily
utility music, whereas
music in the 20th and
21st centuries has long
since advanced to new,
unfamiliar soundscapes
and expressive
possibilities. The key
term is banality. As
creators we despise it,
we try to avoid it -
though we are not safe
from the cheap banal even
within new aesthetic
achievements.Many
composers have
incidentally accepted the
banal. Mozart wrote Ein
musikalischer Spass [A
Musical Jape], a
deliberately amateurishly
miscarried sextet.
Beethoven's Bagatellen
op. 119 were rejected by
the publisher on the
grounds that few will
believe that this minor
work is by the famous
Beethoven. Mauricio Kagel
wrote, tongue in cheek,
so to speak, Marsche, um
den Sieg zu verfehlen
[Marches for being
Unvictorious], Ligeti
wrote Hungarian Rock; in
his Circus Polka
Stravinsky quoted and
distorted the famous, all
too popular Schubert
military march, composed
at the time for piano
duet. I myself do not
know, though, whether I
ought to rank my Marche
fatale alongside these
examples: I accept the
humor in daily life, the
more so as this daily
life for some of us is
not otherwise to be
borne. In music, I
mistrust it, considering
myself all the closer to
the profounder idea of
cheerfulness having
little to do with humor.
However: Isn't a march
with its compelling claim
to a collectively martial
or festive mood absurd, a
priori? Is it even music
at all? Can one march and
at the same time listen?
Eventually, I resolved to
take the absurd seriously
- perhaps bitterly
seriously - as a
debunking emblem of our
civilization that is
standing on the brink.
The way - seemingly
unstoppable - into the
black hole of all
debilitating demons: that
can become serene. My old
request of myself and my
music-creating
surroundings is to write
a non-music, whence the
familiar concept of music
is repeatedly re-defined
anew and differently, so
that derailed here -
perhaps? - in a
treacherous way, the
concert hall becomes the
place of mind-opening
adventures instead of a
refuge in illusory
security. How could that
happen? The rest is -
thinking.(Helmut
Lachenmann, 2017)CD
(Version for
Piano):Nicolas Hodges CD
Wergo WER 7393 2
Bibliography:Ich bin
nicht ,,pietistisch
verformt. Ein Gesprach
[von Jan Brachmann] mit
dem Komponisten Helmut
Lachenmann, in: FAZ vom
7. Juni 2018, p.
15.
World premiere
of the piano version:
Mito/Japan, June 17,
2017, World premiere of
the orchestral version:
Stuttgart, January 1,
2018, World premiere of
the ensemble version:
Frankfurt, December 9,
2020.