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Đurđevdan - Djurdjevdan - Ederlezi - for brass quartet #Brass Quartet #INTERMEDIATE #serbian folk song #Zoran Radanovic #Đurđevdan - Djurdjevdan #Zoran Radanovic #SheetMusicPlus
Brass Quartet Trombone,Trumpet,Tuba - Level 3 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1145549 Composed by serbian folk song. Arranged by Zoran Radanovic. Film/TV,Folk,Jazz,Patriotic,Traditional. 12 pages. Zoran Radanovic #745791. Published by Zoran Radanovic (A0.1145549). This arrangement is for very famous serbian folk song and movie song in BALKAN RUMBA STYLE for brass quartet with bass and set of parts. Diese Arrangement ist für sehr berühmtes serbisches Volkslied in BALKAN RUMBA RHYTMUS für Brass Quartett mit Bass und Partitüren. Ovaj aranzman je za vrlo poznatu srpsku narodnu pesmu za duvački kvartet sa basovima i sa partiturama. Ederlezi is a popular traditional folk song of the Romani people in the Balkans. The song got its name from Ederlezi, which is a festival[1] celebrating the return of springtime, especially by the Romani people of the Balkans, and elsewhere around the world. Ederlezi is the Romani name for the Feast of Saint George. It is celebrated on 6 May [O.S. 23 April] (occurring approximately 40 days after the spring equinox),[2]. The various Balkan spellings (Herdeljez, Erdelezi) are variants of the Turkish Hıdırellez, a holiday signaling the beginning of spring, occurring on the same day.Goran Bregović's version titled Ederlezi (Scena Djurdjevdana Na Rijeci) was famously used in Emir Kusturica's movie Time of the Gypsies.[1] It was performed by the Macedonian singer Vaska Jankovska.[6] Ederlezi (Scena Djurdjevdana Na Rijeci) also appeared in the movie Borat, although it has no connection to the authentic music of Kazakhstan. The text in brackets in Serbo-Croatian means: The scene of Đurđevdan on the river, a description of a Đurđevdan celebration on a river in the movie Time of the Gypsies where that song was used. Sacha Baron Cohen's movie does not have a Đurđevdan river scene.[7][8] In both soundtrack albums – Time of the Gypsies and Stereophonic Musical Listenings That Have Been Origin in Moving Film Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan – it was credited to Goran Bregović, although he is not the author nor the singer of the song on these albums. However, he arranged the song.