| Klavierspielen-mein Hobby (book+cd) Piano seul - Débutant Schott
Piano - very easy SKU: HL.49015460 Die moderne Klavierschule fur Jugen...(+)
Piano - very easy SKU:
HL.49015460 Die
moderne Klavierschule fur
Jugendliche und
Erwachsene. Composed
by Hans-Gü and nter
Heumann. This edition:
Ring/Spiral binding.
Sheet music with CD.
Edition Schott.
Classical. Edition with
CD. 120 pages. Schott
Music #ED 8246. Published
by Schott Music
(HL.49015460). ISBN
9783795750824.
9.25x12.0x0.679 inches.
German. 'Klavier
spielen - mein schonstes
Hobby' is aimed at young
people and adults who
want to play music in
their free time and look
for an easily
comprehensible, well
thought-out educational
manual.H.-G. Heumann has
gained the experience
that success comes when
learning is fun. He has
therefore selected many
well-known classical and
pop music pieces as well
as pieces from the opera,
adding a CD as a perfect
learning aid.Further
advantages: clear
presentation of the
subject matters in
lessons - 'key finder' as
initial aid in learning
how to read music -
mini-dictionary of music
- tests (incl. solutions)
to monitor the
progress. $31.00 - Voir plus => Acheter | | |
| Looking Up Chorale SATB SATB, Piano St Rose Music Publishing
Choir, Piano Accompaniment (SATB Choir) SKU: HL.277282 SATB and Piano ...(+)
Choir, Piano
Accompaniment (SATB
Choir) SKU:
HL.277282 SATB and
Piano Vocal Score.
Composed by Nico Muhly.
Music Sales America.
Classical. Softcover. 60
pages. St. Rose Music
#SRO10015201. Published
by St. Rose Music
(HL.277282). UPC:
840126915006. 6.75x10.5
inches. Program
note:
Looking Up
is a piece for large
chorus and orchestra, and
is in three sections,
played without pause. In
the 16th century, a
variety of psalters in
meter were printed in
England, with the idea of
making psalm-singing
something that could
happen easily at home,
with the rhyming meter
being an aid to
memorization. These
translations are
wonderful exercises in
brevity and sometimes
clumsy rhymemaking, and
were usually prefaced by
a lengthy explanation as
to their merits; the
title of one of the first
such volumes in English
is: The Psalter of Dauid
newely translated into
Englysh metre in such
sort that it maye the
more decently, and wyth
more delyte of the mynde,
be reade and songe of al
men. I thought it would
be appropriate to set one
of these introductions,
and the first section of
Looking Up sets the
preface to Thomas
Ravenscroft's psalter
(1621), in which he
writes: “The
singing of Psalmes (assay
the Doctors) comforteth
the sorrowfull, pacifieth
the angry, strengtheneth
the weake, humbleth the
proud, gladdeth the
humble, stirres up the
slow, reconcileth
enemies, lifteth up the
heart to heavenly things,
and uniteth the Creature
to his
Creator.”
It
begins meditatively, but
eventually grows agitated
and fervent, with a
vision of the
“quire of Angels
and Saints”
“redoubling
anddescanting” - an
ecstatic and terrifying
vision of the skies
opening up. Ravenscroft
then encourages the use
of instrumental musicfor
worship, at which point,
a long, acrobatic
orchestral interlude with
jagged edges antagonizes
the choir, who sing a
kind of private, anxious
meditation on two
pitches.
One of
the most delicious
biblical texts is an
Apocryphal prayer known
as the Benedicite or the
Prayer of the Three
Children (the same who
were rescued by an angel
after King Nebuchadnezzar
tried to have them burnt
in an oven for not bowing
to his image). The text
is repetitive, obsessive,
and a gift to composers -
each line is an
invocation of an element
of the natural world,
followed by the phrase,
“blesse ye the
Lord, praise him &
magnify him for
ever.” In Looking
Up, the setting begins
with three solo voices,
and then grows to include
the whole choir,
itemizing the whole of
creation. The idea that
these boys are spared
from the furnace and then
five minutes later are
saying, “O ye the
fire and warming heate,
blesse ye the
Lord...” has always
felt very loaded to me,
and the orchestra plays
with this conflict
between joyful praise and
a more terrible (in the
16th-century sense)
awefor the
divine.
The text
for the third, and
shortest, section is
taken from Christopher
Smart's (1722-1771) A
Song to David,
purportedly written
during his confinement in
a mental asylum. This ode
to King David points out
how David, as the author
of some of the Psalms,
observes the whole world
from the
“clustering
spheres” to the
“nosegay in the
vale.&rdquo. $7.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Sleep, My Child [Conducteur] - Facile Carl Fischer
Orchestra Cello, Contrabass, Piano, Viola, Violin 1, Violin 2, Violin 3 - Grade ...(+)
Orchestra Cello,
Contrabass, Piano, Viola,
Violin 1, Violin 2,
Violin 3 - Grade 2.5
SKU: CF.YAS186F
Shlof, Mayn Kind.
Composed by Larry Clark.
Young String Orchestra
(YAS). Full score. With
Standard notation. 12
pages. Carl Fischer Music
#YAS186F. Published by
Carl Fischer Music
(CF.YAS186F). ISBN
9781491151884. UPC:
680160909384. 9 x 12
inches. A stunning
and heart-wrenching
composition based on the
Jewish folk son Shlof,
Mayn Kind. You can
hear the emotional
content pour out of this
piece written in memory
of an outstanding
orchestra director. The
piece beginnings with
original material to set
the tone, followed by a
violin solo on the song.
It them develops through
a variety of different
harmonic presentation
before building to a nice
key change and climatic
moment. The piece ends as
it began, but with a more
hopeful tone. An amazing
piece. Sleep, My Child
was commissioned by the
Madison Middle School
Band and Orchestra in
Tampa, Florida, and is
dedicated to the memory
of their Director of
Orchestras Kevin Frye.
Director of Bands Chris
Shultz championed the
commissioning of this
piece to honor Kevin
after he passed away in
December 2016. Mr. Frye
was a beloved member of
the staff at Madison
Middle as well as the
music community of Tampa
and the state of
Florida. I was a
personal friend of
Kevin’s. We were
in several musical groups
together when we were
young that were formative
to both of our musical
careers. I also
guest-conducted his
Madison Middle School
Orchestra several times
over the past four years.
His musicianship,
teaching skills and love
for his students were
exemplary.When taking on
the challenge of writing
a piece to honor
Kevin’s legacy,
Mr. Shultz and I decided
to try and include
several important aspects
of Kevin’s life
into the piece. Kevin was
proudly Jewish, a
fantastic trumpet player
and loved Jazz. With that
in mind, and after a lot
of research, a Jewish
folk song Shlof, Mayn
Kind was selected as the
basis for the piece, not
to be religious, but to
honor his faith and
heritage. Plus it is a
beautiful song and I felt
the title reflected the
sentiment I was looking
to express, which is of
someone taking rest after
a long battle with
illness, so a lullaby
seemed appropriate.I also
wanted to incorporate
Jazz into the piece, but
in a concert setting, so
you will hear as the
piece develops, the
harmonies of the folk
song expand into ones
found more commonly in
Jazz compositions.Â
Not in a far out way, but
in a subtle way to again
honor this part of his
life. For example the
climactic moment of the
piece at the fermata in
m. 57 is a Dbmaj9#11
chord. It appropriately
give the piece the angst
that I was looking for at
this moment in the piece,
while honoring the
importance of Jazz in
Kevin’s musical
life.The piece was also
conceived to include both
the Madison band and
orchestra in the
performance at the
premiere. I wanted the
pieces to work separately
by the band and
separately by the
orchestra, but I also
wanted them to be able to
play the piece together
to honor Kevin.The piece
begins with original
material designed to set
the mood of the piece
with a tempo/style
marking of pensive, but
also as material that I
used as connective
musical tissue between
statements of the folk
song. After this
introduction, the folk
song is presented by a
solo violin (or clarinet)
with orchestral
accompaniment in a simple
straight forward
presentation of the song.
This is followed by a
woodwind section
statement of the folk
song accompanied by muted
trumpets. During this
presentation the harmony
starts to expand with
more color notes in the
chords. The low brass are
added half way through
this statement to add
depth and lushness.The
introductory material
returns, but with some
angry hits in the lower
voices. This leads to a
full ensemble state of
new material that is used
to transition to the
climax of the piece, and
to build tension. After
the build, the piece
modulates to a shortened
statement of the folk
song with more advanced
harmonies and an active
counter line in the
violas, horns, saxes and
first clarinets to
further build the
tension. This tension
is released at the
fermata in m. 57 as
mentioned above. After a
thoughtful pause, the
piece concludes with a
completion of the folk
song again with a solo
violin (or clarinet)
followed by a return of
the introductory material
to tie the piece
together. The piece ends
hopeful, with a solo
trumpet (Kevin’s
instrument) that is
dissonant at first, but
then resolves as if to
say, Everything will be
OK! It has been my
distinct honor to have
been asked to write this
piece in Kevin’s
memory! I hope that in
some small way the piece
helps to bring comfort to
his family, students,
colleagues and to all
those that knew
him!–Larry
ClarkLakeland, FLÂ
2017.
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 $8.50 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Sleep, My Child - Facile Carl Fischer
Orchestra Cello, Contrabass, Piano, Viola, Violin 1, Violin 2, Violin 3 - Grade ...(+)
Orchestra Cello,
Contrabass, Piano, Viola,
Violin 1, Violin 2,
Violin 3 - Grade 2.5
SKU: CF.YAS186
Shlof, Mayn Kind.
Composed by Larry Clark.
Young String Orchestra
(YAS). Set of Score and
Parts. With Standard
notation.
8+5+2+8+5+5+3+12 pages.
Duration 2018. Carl
Fischer Music #YAS186.
Published by Carl Fischer
Music (CF.YAS186).
ISBN 9781491151518.
UPC: 680160909018. 9 x 12
inches. Key: D
minor. A stunning
and heart-wrenching
composition based on the
Jewish folk son Shlof,
Mayn Kind. You can
hear the emotional
content pour out of this
piece written in memory
of an outstanding
orchestra director. The
piece beginnings with
original material to set
the tone, followed by a
violin solo on the song.
It them develops through
a variety of different
harmonic presentation
before building to a nice
key change and climatic
moment. The piece ends as
it began, but with a more
hopeful tone. An amazing
piece. Sleep, My Child
was commissioned by the
Madison Middle School
Band and Orchestra in
Tampa, Florida, and is
dedicated to the memory
of their Director of
Orchestras Kevin Frye.
Director of Bands Chris
Shultz championed the
commissioning of this
piece to honor Kevin
after he passed away in
December 2016. Mr. Frye
was a beloved member of
the staff at Madison
Middle as well as the
music community of Tampa
and the state of
Florida. I was a
personal friend of
Kevin’s. We were
in several musical groups
together when we were
young that were formative
to both of our musical
careers. I also
guest-conducted his
Madison Middle School
Orchestra several times
over the past four years.
His musicianship,
teaching skills and love
for his students were
exemplary.When taking on
the challenge of writing
a piece to honor
Kevin’s legacy,
Mr. Shultz and I decided
to try and include
several important aspects
of Kevin’s life
into the piece. Kevin was
proudly Jewish, a
fantastic trumpet player
and loved Jazz. With that
in mind, and after a lot
of research, a Jewish
folk song Shlof, Mayn
Kind was selected as the
basis for the piece, not
to be religious, but to
honor his faith and
heritage. Plus it is a
beautiful song and I felt
the title reflected the
sentiment I was looking
to express, which is of
someone taking rest after
a long battle with
illness, so a lullaby
seemed appropriate.I also
wanted to incorporate
Jazz into the piece, but
in a concert setting, so
you will hear as the
piece develops, the
harmonies of the folk
song expand into ones
found more commonly in
Jazz compositions.Â
Not in a far out way, but
in a subtle way to again
honor this part of his
life. For example the
climactic moment of the
piece at the fermata in
m. 57 is a Dbmaj9#11
chord. It appropriately
give the piece the angst
that I was looking for at
this moment in the piece,
while honoring the
importance of Jazz in
Kevin’s musical
life.The piece was also
conceived to include both
the Madison band and
orchestra in the
performance at the
premiere. I wanted the
pieces to work separately
by the band and
separately by the
orchestra, but I also
wanted them to be able to
play the piece together
to honor Kevin.The piece
begins with original
material designed to set
the mood of the piece
with a tempo/style
marking of pensive, but
also as material that I
used as connective
musical tissue between
statements of the folk
song. After this
introduction, the folk
song is presented by a
solo violin (or clarinet)
with orchestral
accompaniment in a simple
straight forward
presentation of the song.
This is followed by a
woodwind section
statement of the folk
song accompanied by muted
trumpets. During this
presentation the harmony
starts to expand with
more color notes in the
chords. The low brass are
added half way through
this statement to add
depth and lushness.The
introductory material
returns, but with some
angry hits in the lower
voices. This leads to a
full ensemble state of
new material that is used
to transition to the
climax of the piece, and
to build tension. After
the build, the piece
modulates to a shortened
statement of the folk
song with more advanced
harmonies and an active
counter line in the
violas, horns, saxes and
first clarinets to
further build the
tension. This tension
is released at the
fermata in m. 57 as
mentioned above. After a
thoughtful pause, the
piece concludes with a
completion of the folk
song again with a solo
violin (or clarinet)
followed by a return of
the introductory material
to tie the piece
together. The piece ends
hopeful, with a solo
trumpet (Kevin’s
instrument) that is
dissonant at first, but
then resolves as if to
say, Everything will be
OK! It has been my
distinct honor to have
been asked to write this
piece in Kevin’s
memory! I hope that in
some small way the piece
helps to bring comfort to
his family, students,
colleagues and to all
those that knew
him!–Larry
ClarkLakeland, FLÂ
2017.
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 $55.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Ein Hauch von Unzeit Violoncelle [Conducteur] Breitkopf & Härtel
Cello solo SKU: BR.EB-9074 (Plainte sur la perte de la reflexion music...(+)
Cello solo SKU:
BR.EB-9074
(Plainte sur la perte
de la reflexion
musicale). Composed
by Klaus Huber. Edited by
Michael Bach. Arranged by
Michael Bach. Solo
instruments; stapled.
Edition Breitkopf. You
will need a copy of BG
1002 for each player to
perform the version for
variable instrumentation
(BG 1004). Music
post-1945; New music
(post-2000). Score.
Composed 1972. 12 pages.
Duration 20'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #EB 9074.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.EB-9074).
ISBN 9790004179499. 9
x 12 inches. World
premieres:I version for
flute: Wiesbaden, 1972II
version for piano: Nyon,
1972III version for var.
insts.: Cologne, May 29,
1976VI version for
accordeon: Fribourg, June
25, 1987VIII version for
violoncello Tokyo:
October 14, 1989X version
for organ: Stuttgart,
March 28, 2018This work
(A Breath of the
Untimely) was first
written for solo Flute
and dedicated to Aurele
Nicolet. Its bears the
subtitle Lament on the
Loss of Musical Thought -
some Madrigals for Solo
Flute or Flute with any
other Instruments. This
serves as a playing
instruction but doubles
at the same time as an
outmoded programme: it
refers back to the
musical origin of the
opening lamenting motif,
a tradition which was
once of its time but is
not of our time - namely
the Lamento genre which
gave the title to the
Chaconne in Purcell's
opera Dido and Aeneas.
Almost simultaneously I
wrote a second version
for Piano (for Piano
one-and-a-half hands),
which already formulates
possible approaches for
the performer, in some
detail, to the indicated,
quasi-canonic version of
the piece in the
programme. The multiple
version Ein Hauch von
Unzeit III realizes a
concrete version of a
formal state which floats
between strict canon and
aleatoric principles:
each of the musicians who
are spread throughout the
hall introduces their own
idiomatic translation of
the flute part. And so
the music exists,
omnipresent, not only
spatially throughout the
hall, but also formally
in a sort of fluctuating
simultaneity. For that
reason, it was my express
wish to any potential
interpreter that they
should construct entirely
their own version of the
piece. A healthy number
of musicians have
responded to my
suggestion - versions of
the piece have now been
made for guitar
(Cornelius Schwehr,
Gunther Schneider),
accordion (Hugo Noth),
double bass (Fernando
Grillo), violin
(Hansheinz Schneeberger),
viola, violoncello, and
double bass (trio basso,
Koln), violoncello
(Michael Bach), trombone
(Andrew Digby) and,
created by myself, a sung
version for voice (to
words by Georg Wilhelm
Friedrich Hegel und Max
Bense), and for viola.The
most important
requirement for the whole
piece is absolute
stillness, which should
as far as possible
emanate from the
performer. The pauses are
occasionally in this
respect the most
important element. These
may, if one can find the
necessary stillness,
become very long.Ein
Hauch von Unzeit (A
Breath of the Untimely) -
time almost
dissolves!(Klaus Huber,
1989/2014 - translation:
David
Alberman)CD:Jean-Luc
Menet (Bass flute)CD
Traversieres
120.270Jean-Luc Menet
(fl)CD STR
37039Bibliography:Zimmerm
ann, Heidy:
Zeitgestaltung im
Kompositionsprozess bei
Klaus Huber - dargestellt
anhand von Skizzen, in:
Mnemosyne. Zeit und
Gedachtnis in der
europaischen Musik des
ausgehenden 20.
Jahrhunderts, hrsg. von
Dorothea Redepenning und
Joachim Steinheuer,
Saarbrucken: Pfau 2006,
S. 90-109
World
premiere: VIII version
for violoncello Tokyo:
October 14, 1989. $30.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 4 weeks | | |
| Ein Hauch von Unzeit [Conducteur] Breitkopf & Härtel
Trombone(s) solo SKU: BR.EB-9160 (Plainte sur la perte de la reflexion...(+)
Trombone(s) solo SKU:
BR.EB-9160
(Plainte sur la perte
de la reflexion
musicale). Composed
by Klaus Huber. Edited by
Andrew Digby. Arranged by
Andrew Digby. Solo
instruments; stapled.
Edition Breitkopf. You
will need a copy of BG
1002 for each player to
perform the version for
variable instrumentation
(BG 1004). Music
post-1945; New music
(post-2000). Score.
Composed 1972. 12 pages.
Duration 20'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #EB 9160.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.EB-9160).
ISBN 9790004181966. 9
x 12 inches. World
premieres:I version for
flute: Wiesbaden, 1972II
version for piano: Nyon,
1972III version for var.
insts.: Cologne, May 29,
1976VI version for
accordeon: Fribourg, June
25, 1987VIII version for
violoncello Tokyo:
October 14, 1989X version
for organ: Stuttgart,
March 28, 2018This work
(A Breath of the
Untimely) was first
written for solo Flute
and dedicated to Aurele
Nicolet. Its bears the
subtitle Lament on the
Loss of Musical Thought -
some Madrigals for Solo
Flute or Flute with any
other Instruments. This
serves as a playing
instruction but doubles
at the same time as an
outmoded programme: it
refers back to the
musical origin of the
opening lamenting motif,
a tradition which was
once of its time but is
not of our time - namely
the Lamento genre which
gave the title to the
Chaconne in Purcell's
opera Dido and Aeneas.
Almost simultaneously I
wrote a second version
for Piano (for Piano
one-and-a-half hands),
which already formulates
possible approaches for
the performer, in some
detail, to the indicated,
quasi-canonic version of
the piece in the
programme. The multiple
version Ein Hauch von
Unzeit III realizes a
concrete version of a
formal state which floats
between strict canon and
aleatoric principles:
each of the musicians who
are spread throughout the
hall introduces their own
idiomatic translation of
the flute part. And so
the music exists,
omnipresent, not only
spatially throughout the
hall, but also formally
in a sort of fluctuating
simultaneity. For that
reason, it was my express
wish to any potential
interpreter that they
should construct entirely
their own version of the
piece. A healthy number
of musicians have
responded to my
suggestion - versions of
the piece have now been
made for guitar
(Cornelius Schwehr,
Gunther Schneider),
accordion (Hugo Noth),
double bass (Fernando
Grillo), violin
(Hansheinz Schneeberger),
viola, violoncello, and
double bass (trio basso,
Koln), violoncello
(Michael Bach), trombone
(Andrew Digby) and,
created by myself, a sung
version for voice (to
words by Georg Wilhelm
Friedrich Hegel und Max
Bense), and for viola.The
most important
requirement for the whole
piece is absolute
stillness, which should
as far as possible
emanate from the
performer. The pauses are
occasionally in this
respect the most
important element. These
may, if one can find the
necessary stillness,
become very long.Ein
Hauch von Unzeit (A
Breath of the Untimely) -
time almost
dissolves!(Klaus Huber,
1989/2014 - translation:
David
Alberman)CD:Jean-Luc
Menet (Bass flute)CD
Traversieres
120.270Jean-Luc Menet
(fl)CD STR
37039Bibliography:Zimmerm
ann, Heidy:
Zeitgestaltung im
Kompositionsprozess bei
Klaus Huber - dargestellt
anhand von Skizzen, in:
Mnemosyne. Zeit und
Gedachtnis in der
europaischen Musik des
ausgehenden 20.
Jahrhunderts, hrsg. von
Dorothea Redepenning und
Joachim Steinheuer,
Saarbrucken: Pfau 2006,
S. 90-109. $30.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 4 weeks | | |
| Ein Hauch von Unzeit [Conducteur] Breitkopf & Härtel
Voice(s) solo SKU: BR.EB-8424 (Plainte sur la perte de la reflexion mu...(+)
Voice(s) solo SKU:
BR.EB-8424
(Plainte sur la perte
de la reflexion
musicale). Composed
by Klaus Huber. Arranged
by Klaus Huber. Voice;
stapled. Edition
Breitkopf. You will
need a copy of BG 1002
for each player to
perform the version for
variable instrumentation
(BG 1004). Music
post-1945; New music
(post-2000). Score.
Composed 1972. 8 pages.
Duration 20'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #EB 8424.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.EB-8424).
ISBN 9790004185254. 9
x 12 inches. World
premieres:I version for
flute: Wiesbaden, 1972II
version for piano: Nyon,
1972III version for var.
insts.: Cologne, May 29,
1976VI version for
accordeon: Fribourg, June
25, 1987VIII version for
violoncello Tokyo:
October 14, 1989X version
for organ: Stuttgart,
March 28, 2018This work
(A Breath of the
Untimely) was first
written for solo Flute
and dedicated to Aurele
Nicolet. Its bears the
subtitle Lament on the
Loss of Musical Thought -
some Madrigals for Solo
Flute or Flute with any
other Instruments. This
serves as a playing
instruction but doubles
at the same time as an
outmoded programme: it
refers back to the
musical origin of the
opening lamenting motif,
a tradition which was
once of its time but is
not of our time - namely
the Lamento genre which
gave the title to the
Chaconne in Purcell's
opera Dido and Aeneas.
Almost simultaneously I
wrote a second version
for Piano (for Piano
one-and-a-half hands),
which already formulates
possible approaches for
the performer, in some
detail, to the indicated,
quasi-canonic version of
the piece in the
programme. The multiple
version Ein Hauch von
Unzeit III realizes a
concrete version of a
formal state which floats
between strict canon and
aleatoric principles:
each of the musicians who
are spread throughout the
hall introduces their own
idiomatic translation of
the flute part. And so
the music exists,
omnipresent, not only
spatially throughout the
hall, but also formally
in a sort of fluctuating
simultaneity. For that
reason, it was my express
wish to any potential
interpreter that they
should construct entirely
their own version of the
piece. A healthy number
of musicians have
responded to my
suggestion - versions of
the piece have now been
made for guitar
(Cornelius Schwehr,
Gunther Schneider),
accordion (Hugo Noth),
double bass (Fernando
Grillo), violin
(Hansheinz Schneeberger),
viola, violoncello, and
double bass (trio basso,
Koln), violoncello
(Michael Bach), trombone
(Andrew Digby) and,
created by myself, a sung
version for voice (to
words by Georg Wilhelm
Friedrich Hegel und Max
Bense), and for viola.The
most important
requirement for the whole
piece is absolute
stillness, which should
as far as possible
emanate from the
performer. The pauses are
occasionally in this
respect the most
important element. These
may, if one can find the
necessary stillness,
become very long.Ein
Hauch von Unzeit (A
Breath of the Untimely) -
time almost
dissolves!(Klaus Huber,
1989/2014 - translation:
David
Alberman)CD:Jean-Luc
Menet (Bass flute)CD
Traversieres
120.270Jean-Luc Menet
(fl)CD STR
37039Bibliography:Zimmerm
ann, Heidy:
Zeitgestaltung im
Kompositionsprozess bei
Klaus Huber - dargestellt
anhand von Skizzen, in:
Mnemosyne. Zeit und
Gedachtnis in der
europaischen Musik des
ausgehenden 20.
Jahrhunderts, hrsg. von
Dorothea Redepenning und
Joachim Steinheuer,
Saarbrucken: Pfau 2006,
S. 90-109. $24.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 4 weeks | | |
| Ein Hauch von Unzeit Orgue [Conducteur] Breitkopf & Härtel
Organ SKU: BR.EB-9300 (Plainte sur la perte de la reflexion musicale)<...(+)
Organ SKU:
BR.EB-9300
(Plainte sur la perte
de la reflexion
musicale). Composed
by Klaus Huber. Arranged
by A. Digby and M.
Sattelberger. Solo
instruments; stapled.
Edition Breitkopf. World
premieres: I version for
flute: Wiesbaden, 1972.
Music post-1945; New
music (post-2000). Score.
Composed 1972. 20 pages.
Duration 20'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #EB 9300.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.EB-9300).
ISBN 9790004187647. 9
x 12 inches. World
premieres:I version for
flute: Wiesbaden, 1972II
version for piano: Nyon,
1972III version for var.
insts.: Cologne, May 29,
1976VI version for
accordeon: Fribourg, June
25, 1987VIII version for
violoncello Tokyo:
October 14, 1989X version
for organ: Stuttgart,
March 28, 2018This work
(A Breath of the
Untimely) was first
written for solo Flute
and dedicated to Aurele
Nicolet. Its bears the
subtitle Lament on the
Loss of Musical Thought -
some Madrigals for Solo
Flute or Flute with any
other Instruments. This
serves as a playing
instruction but doubles
at the same time as an
outmoded programme: it
refers back to the
musical origin of the
opening lamenting motif,
a tradition which was
once of its time but is
not of our time - namely
the Lamento genre which
gave the title to the
Chaconne in Purcell's
opera Dido and Aeneas.
Almost simultaneously I
wrote a second version
for Piano (for Piano
one-and-a-half hands),
which already formulates
possible approaches for
the performer, in some
detail, to the indicated,
quasi-canonic version of
the piece in the
programme. The multiple
version Ein Hauch von
Unzeit III realizes a
concrete version of a
formal state which floats
between strict canon and
aleatoric principles:
each of the musicians who
are spread throughout the
hall introduces their own
idiomatic translation of
the flute part. And so
the music exists,
omnipresent, not only
spatially throughout the
hall, but also formally
in a sort of fluctuating
simultaneity. For that
reason, it was my express
wish to any potential
interpreter that they
should construct entirely
their own version of the
piece. A healthy number
of musicians have
responded to my
suggestion - versions of
the piece have now been
made for guitar
(Cornelius Schwehr,
Gunther Schneider),
accordion (Hugo Noth),
double bass (Fernando
Grillo), violin
(Hansheinz Schneeberger),
viola, violoncello, and
double bass (trio basso,
Koln), violoncello
(Michael Bach), trombone
(Andrew Digby) and,
created by myself, a sung
version for voice (to
words by Georg Wilhelm
Friedrich Hegel und Max
Bense), and for viola.The
most important
requirement for the whole
piece is absolute
stillness, which should
as far as possible
emanate from the
performer. The pauses are
occasionally in this
respect the most
important element. These
may, if one can find the
necessary stillness,
become very long.Ein
Hauch von Unzeit (A
Breath of the Untimely) -
time almost
dissolves!(Klaus Huber,
1989/2014 - translation:
David
Alberman)CD:Jean-Luc
Menet (Bass flute)CD
Traversieres
120.270Jean-Luc Menet
(fl)CD STR
37039Bibliography:Zimmerm
ann, Heidy:
Zeitgestaltung im
Kompositionsprozess bei
Klaus Huber - dargestellt
anhand von Skizzen, in:
Mnemosyne. Zeit und
Gedachtnis in der
europaischen Musik des
ausgehenden 20.
Jahrhunderts, hrsg. von
Dorothea Redepenning und
Joachim Steinheuer,
Saarbrucken: Pfau 2006,
S. 90-109
World
premiere: Stuttgart,
Hospitalkirche, March 28,
2018. $39.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 4 weeks | | |
| Ein Hauch von Unzeit [Conducteur] Breitkopf & Härtel
SKU: BR.EB-9397 (Plainte sur la perte de la reflexion musicale). C...(+)
SKU: BR.EB-9397
(Plainte sur la perte
de la reflexion
musicale). Composed
by Klaus Huber. Stapled.
Edition Breitkopf. World
premieres: I version for
flute: Wiesbaden, 1972.
Music post-1945; New
music (post-2000). Score.
Composed 1972. 12 pages.
Duration 20'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #EB 9397.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.EB-9397).
ISBN 9790004188712. 9
x 12 inches. World
premieres:I version for
flute: Wiesbaden, 1972II
version for piano: Nyon,
1972III version for var.
insts.: Cologne, May 29,
1976VI version for
accordeon: Fribourg, June
25, 1987VIII version for
violoncello Tokyo:
October 14, 1989X version
for organ: Stuttgart,
March 28, 2018This work
(A Breath of the
Untimely) was first
written for solo Flute
and dedicated to Aurele
Nicolet. Its bears the
subtitle Lament on the
Loss of Musical Thought -
some Madrigals for Solo
Flute or Flute with any
other Instruments. This
serves as a playing
instruction but doubles
at the same time as an
outmoded programme: it
refers back to the
musical origin of the
opening lamenting motif,
a tradition which was
once of its time but is
not of our time - namely
the Lamento genre which
gave the title to the
Chaconne in Purcell's
opera Dido and Aeneas.
Almost simultaneously I
wrote a second version
for Piano (for Piano
one-and-a-half hands),
which already formulates
possible approaches for
the performer, in some
detail, to the indicated,
quasi-canonic version of
the piece in the
programme. The multiple
version Ein Hauch von
Unzeit III realizes a
concrete version of a
formal state which floats
between strict canon and
aleatoric principles:
each of the musicians who
are spread throughout the
hall introduces their own
idiomatic translation of
the flute part. And so
the music exists,
omnipresent, not only
spatially throughout the
hall, but also formally
in a sort of fluctuating
simultaneity. For that
reason, it was my express
wish to any potential
interpreter that they
should construct entirely
their own version of the
piece. A healthy number
of musicians have
responded to my
suggestion - versions of
the piece have now been
made for guitar
(Cornelius Schwehr,
Gunther Schneider),
accordion (Hugo Noth),
double bass (Fernando
Grillo), violin
(Hansheinz Schneeberger),
viola, violoncello, and
double bass (trio basso,
Koln), violoncello
(Michael Bach), trombone
(Andrew Digby) and,
created by myself, a sung
version for voice (to
words by Georg Wilhelm
Friedrich Hegel und Max
Bense), and for viola.The
most important
requirement for the whole
piece is absolute
stillness, which should
as far as possible
emanate from the
performer. The pauses are
occasionally in this
respect the most
important element. These
may, if one can find the
necessary stillness,
become very long.Ein
Hauch von Unzeit (A
Breath of the Untimely) -
time almost
dissolves!(Klaus Huber,
1989/2014 - translation:
David
Alberman)CD:Jean-Luc
Menet (Bass flute)CD
Traversieres
120.270Jean-Luc Menet
(fl)CD STR
37039Bibliography:Zimmerm
ann, Heidy:
Zeitgestaltung im
Kompositionsprozess bei
Klaus Huber - dargestellt
anhand von Skizzen, in:
Mnemosyne. Zeit und
Gedachtnis in der
europaischen Musik des
ausgehenden 20.
Jahrhunderts, hrsg. von
Dorothea Redepenning und
Joachim Steinheuer,
Saarbrucken: Pfau 2006,
S. 90-109. $30.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 4 weeks | | |
1 |