| Neoklassizismus. Dialog
Mit Der Geschichte
(SCHERLIESS VOLKER) [Partition] Barenreiter
Par SCHERLIESS VOLKER. / Méthode / Livre
33.20 EUR - vendu par LMI-partitions Délais: 2-5 jours - En Stock Fournisseur | |
| Coffret Great Piano Solos
Vol.2 Piano seul Amsco Wise Publications
A superb four-volume collection of over 180 solos for the intermediate level Pia...(+)
A superb four-volume collection of over 180 solos for the intermediate level Pianist. Includes popular film and show tunes - themes and songs from top TV shows - and classical favourites from choral works, concertos, ballets, operas and symphonies. / Piano
115.30 EUR - vendu par LMI-partitions Délais: 2-5 jours - En Stock Fournisseur | |
| 100 Hits In C-Dur : Band
2 Piano, Voix et Guitare Bosworth
100 Hits In C-Dur is the second volume of the songbook for solo performers, feat...(+)
100 Hits In C-Dur is the second volume of the songbook for solo performers, featuring 100 timeless classics arranged for Piano, Vocal and Guitar.This songbook is comprised of 100 well-known pop tunes, old classics and timeless favourites to learn. All songs are arranged simply, in the key of C, with chords and full lyrics. Tunes like Rock Around The Clock, Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie, Rhinestone Cowboy and Que Sera are featured to get you singing and playing in no time at all. / Piano/Vocal/Guitare (PVG)
32.60 EUR - vendu par LMI-partitions Délais: 2-5 jours - En Stock Fournisseur | |
| Inside Band 2 Divers Schott
Dans ce livre illustré, plus grande compagnie de danse la Berlin State Ballet, ...(+)
Dans ce livre illustré, plus grande compagnie de danse la Berlin State Ballet, l'Allemagne et son directeur Vladimir Malakhov, l'un des plus renommés et les plus éminents représentants de la scène de ballet international, encore une fois donnent aux lecteurs un regard fascinant sur leur travail en commun : l'intérieur non seulement fournit des impressions des répétitions, mais apporte surtout les dix premières ainsi que les deux reprises des deux dernières saisons de retour à la vie. En outre, le livre illustré contient des portraits de tous les membres de l'ensemble. La société livre Vol. II - un délice visuel pour tous les amoureux du ballet. Christiane Theobald est le gérant de la société et directeur artistique adjoint de la Nawrath Ballet.Enrico de Berlin Etat ont assisté à la DresdenPaluccaSchool et la BerlinStateBalletSchool de 1988 à 1993 où il a formé un danseur de la scène. Depuis 1993, il a effectué engagements à la Berlin State Opera Unter den Linden, le Semperoper de Dresde et la Deutsche Oper de Berlin - depuis 1994 il a également travaillé... / Divers
35.10 EUR - vendu par LMI-partitions Délais: 2-5 jours - En Stock Fournisseur | |
| 100 Hits 80-90 Instruments en Do [Partition] Carisch
100 hits from between 1980-1990, arranged for C instruments with melody line and...(+)
100 hits from between 1980-1990, arranged for C instruments with melody line and chords. Italian language edition. / Pop & rock / Recueil / Instruments en Do
41.20 EUR - vendu par LMI-partitions Délais: 2-5 jours - En Stock Fournisseur | |
| Best Of 1000 #1 Hits The
Later Years Chord
Songbook Paroles et Accords [Partition] - Intermédiaire Amsco Wise Publications
Partie de la collection de titres pour célébrer les 1 000 premiers singles UK ...(+)
Partie de la collection de titres pour célébrer les 1 000 premiers singles UK No.1, cette énorme anthologie est emballée avec vos visites très préférés. Plus de 100 ceux de nombre de ces dernières années sont présentés dans cette sélection a ne pas manquer, tous présentée pour vous avec paroles complètes et guide de corde de guitare. Comprend des chansons par The Clash, The Spice Girls, de U2 et de Ricky Martin, pour ne nommer que quelques-uns ! / Chant Et Guitare / 256 pages / Partition
23.20 EUR - vendu par LMI-partitions Délais: 2-5 jours - En Stock Fournisseur | |
| La Rondine [Blu-Ray]
[(+Booklet)] Video - Pas de partitions DVD Opéra et Ballets
G.Puccini (1858-1924) : La Rondine, opéra comique en trois actes. Graham Vick, ...(+)
G.Puccini (1858-1924) : La Rondine, opéra comique en trois actes. Graham Vick, mise en scène Théâtre de la Fenice, Venise 2008 Système NTSC - Code région : 0 - 106
Description
Les musiciens vénitiens y sont aussi à l aise qu un poisson dans la lagune, sous la baguette élégante de Carlo Rizzi, qu on a souvent connue plus banale. De même Fiorenza Cedolins, Tosca quelque peu anodine, trouve ici des accents émouvants, des nuances délicates, flirtant avec le mélo sans tomber dans la caricature. Autour d elle Ruggero à la voix encore verte qui sait traduire les souffrances du jeune homme découvrant l amour, une Lisette piquante, exquise et ravissante, un Prunier dont on apprécie la verve, un Rambaldo qui joue les séducteurs aux tempes grises .... --M.Parouty / Diapason
13.10 EUR - vendu par Amazon Délais: En Stock | |
| Dip In 100 Graded
Clarinette [Partition] - Facile Amsco Wise Publications
Dip In to this great selection of popular songs, jazz standards, film themes and...(+)
Dip In to this great selection of popular songs, jazz standards, film themes and show tunes!
All the tunes are specially arranged for Clarinet, with chord symbols at concert pitch for easy accompaniment, and are graded to suit a wide range of playing levels. Each song is awarded a star rating based on difficulty - making this folio ideal for everyone, from the beginning clarinet player to the experienced musician.
Includes hit songs by The Beatles, Coldplay, Oasis, Elvis Presley, KT Tunstall, James Blunt, Frank Sinatra, Andrew Lloyd Webber, Jeff Buckley and many more. Where else can you find such a fun collection of tunes, from such a wide variety of artists? / Clarinette / 160 pages / Partition
31.50 EUR - vendu par LMI-partitions Délais: 2-5 jours - En Stock Fournisseur | |
| Prost N. - Adolphe Sax
Album En Français Saxophone et Piano Lemoine, Henry
Adolphe Sax Album Discipline / Instrument : Saxophone et piano Genre : ...(+)
Adolphe Sax Album Discipline / Instrument : Saxophone et piano Genre : classique Média : Partition Nombre de pages : 36 12 Format : 23 x 31 cm Editeur : Lemoine Réf. : 28891 Date de parution : 31/05/2013 ISBN / ISMN : 9790230988919 Contenu BERLIOZ : 1er Solo - BIZET : Ouverture - BIZET : Intermezzo - DELIBES : Barcarolle - FRY : Berceuse - MASSENET : Vision - MASSENET : Air des Larmes - SAINT-SAENS : Orient - THOMAS : Deux chants du Pérou - THOMAS : Récit - WETTGE : Fantaisie Notice Adolphe Sax, inventeur génial du saxophone (breveté en 1846) est nommé au poste de Directeur de la Musique de Scène à l'Opéra de Paris entre 1847 et 1894. C'est la place idéale pour promouvoir et expérimenter ses instruments à l'orchestre - l'inventeur finit par imposer le saxophone dans certaines oeuvres lyriques, symphoniques, musiques de ballets et bien sûr les musiques régimentaires. On recense de nombreuses apparitions de l'instrument, d'abord timidement mêlé à l'orchestre puis dans de véritables solos pittoresques. Si l'intervention des saxophones dans la Corona d'Italia de G. Rossini, Tannhaüser de R. Wagner, la Damnation de Faust de H. Berlioz, Ondine et le pêcheur de P. Dukas, Hulda de C. Franck ou la 1re symphonie de A. Magnard demeure une tentative anecdotique, d'autres compositeurs comme G. Bizet, C. Saint-Saëns, A. Thomas, V. D'Indy, L. Delibes, G. Charpentier ou J. Massenet offrent à l'instrument de belles phrases chantées au sein même de l'orchestre. On ne compte guère qu'une poignée d'oeuvres de musique de chambre mixte avant 1900. En revanche, la formule saxophone accompagné d'un piano (ou d'une fanfare) est d'usage courant. Les musiques sont écrites principalement par les amis de l'inventeur, souvent chefs de musiques régimentaires qui utilisent un style simple et classique pour les besoins du divertissement de plein air (thèmes et variations virtuoses loin des grands chefs d'oeuvre romantiques de l'époque). Cette petite suite musicale retrace un parcours chronologique des solos de saxophone avant 1900, à découvrir avec une réduction de piano comme support harmonique. Hector Berlioz (1803-1869), véritable défenseur des inventions de Sax, vante les mérites du saxophone dans son Traité d'instrumentation. C'est lui qui utilise la 1re fois l'instrument dans une oeuvre pour 6 instruments à vent afin de saluer avec enthousiasme les inventions du célèbre facteur belge. Hymne pour les instruments de Sax sera donné en public le 3 février 1844 à Paris salle Hertz, Adolphe Sax jouant lui-même la partie de saxophone basse en Mib. La partition demeurant malheureusement introuvable, on sait néanmoins que l'Hymne était une adaptation de son Chant sacré pour choeur composé quelques mois plus tôt. Le 1er solo présenté ici est une possible reconstitution du solo de saxophone. La Berceuse, solo originellement joué au saxophone soprano, est extraite de Santa Claus Symphony (1853) de William Henry Fry (1813-1854). Le compositeur né américain était un fervent admirateur d'Adolphe Sax et le 1er compositeur américain à écrire pour grand orchestre. Ce solo est symbolique : il s'agirait de la première intégration du saxophone aux Etats-Unis, 50 ans avant le jazz dixieland. Récit est une véritable cadence consacrée au saxophone alto sur un accompagnement de pizzicati de cordes et tenues de cuivres. Ce récit est extrait du récit et prologue du 2nd tableau de l'Acte II de l'opéra Hamlet (1868) de Ambroise Thomas (1811-1896). Les deux chants du Pérou (1865) sont originellement harmonisés habilement pour 3 saxophones d'après des chants joués par les Indiens sur la Quena, leur instrument national. Orient est un solo de saxophone tiré de la grande marche militaire pour orchestre à vents Orient et Occident opus 25 (1869). Camille Saint-Saëns (1835-1921) a souvent utilisé le pupitre de saxophones, tant dans ses ouvrages symphoniques que lyriques. L'Ouverture et l'Intermezzo de Georges Bizet (1838-1875) sont des solos de saxophone alto des plus remarquables. Ils sont extraits des suites pour orchestre de la musique de scène de l'Arlésienne (1872). La Barcarolle de Léo Delibes (1836-1891) est tirée de son ballet séduisant Sylvia (1876). On y entend un solo très élégant au saxophone alto. Jules Massenet (1842-1912) utilise le saxophone de nombreuses fois. On apprécie bien sûr la valse avec saxophone dans son opéra Le Roi de Lahore, mais c'est surtout grâce à son opéra Werther que le saxophone a été reconnu. Dans l'Air des larmes de Werther (1892), le saxophone dialogue superbement avec le personnage de Charlotte. Le solo de Vision est un chant au saxophone alto qui donne la réplique à Hérode dans l'opéra Hérodiade (1881). La Fantaisie de ce recueil est un extrait de la Fantaisie variée pour saxophone et piano (1889). Elément du patrimoine historique du saxophoniste, cette pièce est typique des musiques légères et décontractées de l'époque. Léon Wettge (1844-1909) était chef de musique du 28e régiment d'artillerie de Versailles avant d'être chef de la Garde Républicaine. Nicolas Prost
28.40 EUR - vendu par Woodbrass Délais: En Stock | |
| Richard Wagner :
Siegfried [Blu-Ray]
[(+Booklet)] Video - Pas de partitions DVD Opéra et Ballets
R.Wagner (1833-1883) : Siegfried, drame musical en 3 actes. Deuxième jour de l'...(+)
R.Wagner (1833-1883) : Siegfried, drame musical en 3 actes. Deuxième jour de l'Anneau de Nibelungen. Théâtre national Allemand de Weimar, 2008 Michael Schulz, mise en scène Système FULL HD 1080i / Double Couche - Code région : 0 - 251 min
14.79 EUR - vendu par Amazon | |
| Tosca [Blu-Ray] [Import
Italien] Video - Pas de partitions DVD Opéra et Ballets
G.Puccini (1858-1924) : Tosca Hugo De Ana, mise en scène Les Arènes de Vérone...(+)
G.Puccini (1858-1924) : Tosca Hugo De Ana, mise en scène Les Arènes de Vérone, Juillet 2006
30.18 EUR - vendu par Amazon Délais: En Stock | |
| Adolphe Sax Album (PROST
NICOLAS) En Français Saxophone et Piano [Partition] Lemoine, Henry
Par PROST NICOLAS. Adolphe Sax, inventeur génial du saxophone (breveté en 1846...(+)
Par PROST NICOLAS. Adolphe Sax, inventeur génial du saxophone (breveté en 1846) est nommé au poste de Directeur de la Musique de Scène à l'Opéra de Paris entre 1847 et 1894. C'est la place idéale pour promouvoir et expérimenter ses instruments à l'orchestre - l'inventeur finit par imposer le saxophone dans certaines oeuvres lyriques, symphoniques, musiques de ballets et bien sûr les musiques régimentaires.
On recense de nombreuses apparitions de l'instrument, d'abord timidement mêlé à l'orchestre puis dans de véritables solos pittoresques.
Si l'intervention des saxophones dans la Corona d'Italia de G. Rossini, Tannhaüser de R. Wagner, la Damnation de Faust de H. Berlioz, Ondine et le pêcheur de P. Dukas, Hulda de C. Franck ou la 1re symphonie de A. Magnard demeure une tentative anecdotique, d'autres compositeurs comme G. Bizet, C. Saint-Saëns, A. Thomas, V. D'Indy, L. Delibes, G. Charpentier ou J. Massenet offrent à l'instrument de belles phrases chantées au sein même de l'orchestre.
On ne compte guère qu'une poignée d'oeuvres de musique de chambre mixte avant 1900. En revanche, la formule saxophone accompagné d'un piano (ou d'une fanfare) est d'usage courant. Les musiques sont écrites principalement par les amis de l'inventeur, souvent chefs de musiques régimentaires qui utilisent un style simple et classique pour les besoins du divertissement de plein air (thèmes et variations virtuoses loin des grands chefs d'oeuvre romantiques de l'époque).
Cette petite suite musicale retrace un parcours chronologique des solos de saxophone avant 1900, à découvrir avec une réduction de piano comme support harmonique.
Hector Berlioz (1803-1869), véritable défenseur des inventions de Sax, vante les mérites du saxophone dans son Traité d'instrumentation. C'est lui qui utilise la 1re fois l'instrument dans une oeuvre pour 6 instruments à vent afin de saluer avec enthousiasme les inventions du célèbre facteur belge. Hymne pour les instruments de Sax sera donné en public le 3 février 1844 à Paris salle Hertz, Adolphe Sax jouant lui-même la partie de saxophone basse en Mib. La partition demeurant malheureusement introuvable, on sait néanmoins que l'Hymne était une adaptation de son Chant sacré pour choeur composé quelques mois plus tôt. Le 1er solo présenté ici est une possible reconstitution du solo de saxophone.
La Berceuse, solo originellement joué au saxophone soprano, est extraite de Santa Claus Symphony (1853) de William Henry Fry (1813-1854). Le compositeur né américain était un fervent admirateur d'Adolphe Sax et le 1er compositeur américain à écrire pour grand orchestre. Ce solo est symbolique : il s'agirait de la première intégration du saxophone aux Etats-Unis, 50 ans avant le jazz dixieland.
Récit est une véritable cadence consacrée au saxophone alto sur un accompagnement de pizzicati de cordes et tenues de cuivres. Ce récit est extrait du récit et prologue du 2nd tableau de l'Acte II de l'opéra Hamlet (1868) de Ambroise Thomas (1811-1896). Les deux chants du Pérou (1865) sont originellement harmonisés habilement pour 3 saxophones d'après des chants joués par les Indiens sur 'la Quena', leur instrument national.
Orient est un solo de saxophone tiré de la grande marche militaire pour orchestre à vents Orient et Occident opus 25 (1869). Camille Saint-Saëns (1835-1921) a souvent utilisé le pupitre de saxophones, tant dans ses ouvrages symphoniques que lyriques.
L'Ouverture et l'Intermezzo de Georges Bizet (1838-1875) sont des solos de saxophone alto des plus remarquables. Ils sont extraits des suites pour orchestre de la musique de scène de l'Arlésienne (1872).
La Barcarolle de Léo Delibes (1836-1891) est tirée de son ballet séduisant Sylvia (1876). On y entend un solo très élégant au saxophone alto.
Jules Massenet (1842-1912) utilise le saxophone de nombreuses fois. On apprécie bien sûr la valse avec saxophone dans son opéra Le Roi de Lahore, mais c'est surtout grâce à son opéra Werther que le saxophone a été reconnu. Dans l'Air des larmes de Werther (1892), le saxophone dialogue superbement avec le personnage de Charlotte. Le solo de Vision est un chant au saxophone alto qui donne la réplique à Hérode dans l'opéra Hérodiade (1881).
La Fantaisie de ce recueil est un extrait de la Fantaisie variée pour saxophone et piano (1889). Elément du patrimoine historique du saxophoniste, cette pièce est typique des musiques légères et décontractées de l'époque. Léon Wettge (1844-1909) était chef de musique du 28e régiment d'artillerie de Versailles avant d'être chef de la Garde Républicaine. / classique / Répertoire / Saxophone et Piano
29.90 EUR - vendu par LMI-partitions Délais: En Stock | |
| Piano Treasury Of Easy
Classical Music Cd Piano seul [Partition + CD] Amsco Wise Publications
Compilation. The Piano Treasury of Easy Classical Music is designed to be the co...(+)
Compilation. The Piano Treasury of Easy Classical Music is designed to be the cornerstone of your personal music library. This tremendous piano collection contains 400 pages of great music literature, specially selected and edited for the pianist who loves classical music. No other single volume can provide the wealth of exquisite piano selections contained within these pages. Here you will find the world's favourite inventions, preludes, fugues, minuets, sonata movements, nocturnes, waltzes, mazurkas, intermezzos, romantic short pieces, impressionistic works, and light classics, as well as the most rewarding traditional arrangements of themes from the great symphonies, chamber works, operas, and ballets by the master composers of the past four centuries. / Niveau : Elémentaire / Rép Classique / Recueil / Piano
30.20 EUR - vendu par LMI-partitions Délais: 2-5 jours - En Stock Fournisseur | |
| Le Lac Des Cygnes
(Collection Anacrouse)
(Swan Lake) En Français Piano seul [Partition] EBR Editions Bourges
La collection ANACROUSE offre aux pianistes novices et confirmés un large choix...(+)
La collection ANACROUSE offre aux pianistes novices et confirmés un large choix d'oeuvres classiques, allant de la Renaissance à l'époque moderne.Proposer tout à la fois des 'incontournables' du répertoire classique et des pièces de compositeurs parfois oubliés, toutes d'une valeur pédagogique indéniable, tels sont les objectifs que nous nous sommes fixés. Chaque pièce, vendue à l'unité, a fait l'objet d'un travail éditorial attentif, tant sur le plan de l'établissement du texte musical que de sa gravure, afin de garantir aux musiciens les conditions indispensables aux plaisirs tirés du commerce fréquent de ces oeuvres.Les partitions sont proposées sous la forme d'ouvrages traditionnels (feuillets papier), et disponibles également par téléchargement.Le Lac des cygnes (Lebedinoje osero en russe) est un ballet en quatre actes, créé au Théâtre Bolchoï de Moscou en 1877. Piotr Ilitch Tchaïkovski en est le compositeur et Vladimir Begichev le librettiste (qui se basa sur une vieille légende allemande, le Voile dérobé, tiré des ' contes populaires des Allemands ').À l'époque, le public était peu habitué à une musique aussi ' symphonique ' pour un ballet : celui-ci connut une ' déconvenue humiliante ' (Piotr Ilitch Tchaïkovski).Après maintes modifications apportées autant sur la structure que la chorégraphie ou la partition, le Lac des cygnes (le deuxième acter seulement) fut représenté au Théâtre Impérial Mariinski à la mémoire du compositeur décédé le 6 novembre 1893?puis connu le succès qu'il méritait le 15 janvier 1895 dans une version presque définitive, sous l'influence du célèbre Petipa.Piotr Ilitch Tchaïkovski essaie de rassembler dans Le lac des cygnes les éléments traditionnels du ballet grâce à une musique qui porte en elle une narration puissante. Il évalue avec soin l'importance de ces différents éléments : l'action et les scènes narratives sont un exemple de ce qui est appelé sa ' manière symphonique ', les danses qui accompagnent l'action sont musicalement très riches, et les divertissements sont aussi légers qu'attrayants.Le Lac des cygnes est l'un des ballets les plus célèbres au monde. / Piano Solo
7.50 EUR - vendu par LMI-partitions Délais: 2-5 jours - En Stock Fournisseur | |
| The Library Of Romantic
Music Piano seul [Partition] - Intermédiaire/avancé Amsco Wise Publications
The Library Of Romantic Music is a comprehensive collection of the greatest work...(+)
The Library Of Romantic Music is a comprehensive collection of the greatest works of the Romantic period. Featuring composers like Frédéric Chopin, Claude Debussy and Gabriel Fauré, the works represented here truly some of the most beautiful ever composed. Now they're all in one conveniently spiral-bound volume, arranged for solo Piano for your sheer playing pleasure.Like the Baroque and Classical periods before it, Romantic music existed within a broader artistic, intellectual and literary movement. Emerging in the early 19th century it reflected a time of preoccupation with things mystical, spiritual, legendary and supernatural. This collection comprises fantastic original Piano works and beautiful arrangements from all the greatest composers of this era, including: Albéniz, Berlioz, Bizet, Brahms, Chopin, Dvorák, Debussy, Elgar, Fauré, Grieg, Mahler, Liszt, Mendelssohn, Puccini, Ravel and so many more.Spanning the 19th century, the Romantic movement was a reaction to what had come before. Music proved to be a particularly rich medium of expression for a new Zeitgeist that prized individualism and spirituality. Drawing together composers whose background was as diverse as the music they created, the period proved to be a very broad church indeed. This makes The Library Of Romantic Music particularly exciting, because the extraordinarily rich and expressive music is collected here in a single volume that is durable, convenient and is sure to be a mainstay of your music stand.For a simply stunning compendium of some incredible pieces of music composed by the masters, The Library Of Romantic Music is essential. The greatest compositions from such a fantastically rich period have been collected in this single volume, perfect for pianists looking for beautiful additions to their repertoire. / Piano
36.90 EUR - vendu par LMI-partitions Délais: 2-5 jours - En Stock Fournisseur | |
|
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| Classical Fake Book - 2nd Edition
Fake Book [Fake Book] - Facile Hal Leonard
(Over 850 Classical Themes and Melodies in the Original Keys) For C instrument. ...(+)
(Over 850 Classical
Themes and Melodies in
the Original Keys) For C
instrument. Format:
fakebook (spiral bound).
With vocal melody
(excerpts) and chord
names. Lassical. Series:
Hal Leonard Fake Books.
646 pages. 9x12 inches.
Published by Hal Leonard.
(8)$49.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| The Real Little Classical Fake Book - 2nd Edition Piano seul - Intermédiaire Hal Leonard
Composed by Various. For Piano/Keyboard. Hal Leonard Fake Books. Classical. Diff...(+)
Composed by Various. For
Piano/Keyboard. Hal
Leonard Fake Books.
Classical. Difficulty:
medium to
medium-difficult.
Fakebook. Melody line,
chord names and lyrics
(on some songs). 413
pages. Published by Hal
Leonard
$27.50 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Gustave Vogt's Musical Album of Autographs Cor anglais, Piano Carl Fischer
Chamber Music English Horn, Oboe SKU: CF.WF229 15 Pieces for Oboe and ...(+)
Chamber Music English
Horn, Oboe SKU:
CF.WF229 15 Pieces
for Oboe and English
Horn. Composed by
Gustave Vogt. Edited by
Kristin Jean Leitterman.
Collection - Performance.
32+8 pages. Carl Fischer
Music #WF229. Published
by Carl Fischer Music
(CF.WF229). ISBN
9781491153789. UPC:
680160911288. Intro
duction Gustave Vogt's
Musical Paris Gustave
Vogt (1781-1870) was born
into the Age of
Enlightenment, at the
apex of the
Enlightenment's outreach.
During his lifetime he
would observe its effect
on the world. Over the
course of his life he
lived through many
changes in musical style.
When he was born,
composers such as Mozart
and Haydn were still
writing masterworks
revered today, and
eighty-nine years later,
as he departed the world,
the new realm of
Romanticism was beginning
to emerge with Mahler,
Richard Strauss and
Debussy, who were soon to
make their respective
marks on the musical
world. Vogt himself left
a huge mark on the
musical world, with
critics referring to him
as the grandfather of the
modern oboe and the
premier oboist of Europe.
Through his eighty-nine
years, Vogt would live
through what was perhaps
the most turbulent period
of French history. He
witnessed the French
Revolution of 1789,
followed by the many
newly established
governments, only to die
just months before the
establishment of the
Third Republic in 1870,
which would be the
longest lasting
government since the
beginning of the
revolution. He also
witnessed the
transformation of the
French musical world from
one in which opera
reigned supreme, to one
in which virtuosi,
chamber music, and
symphonic music ruled.
Additionally, he
experienced the
development of the oboe
right before his eyes.
When he began playing in
the late eighteenth
century, the standard
oboe had two keys (E and
Eb) and at the time of
his death in 1870, the
System Six Triebert oboe
(the instrument adopted
by Conservatoire
professor, Georges
Gillet, in 1882) was only
five years from being
developed. Vogt was born
March 18, 1781 in the
ancient town of
Strasbourg, part of the
Alsace region along the
German border. At the
time of his birth,
Strasbourg had been
annexed by Louis XIV, and
while heavily influenced
by Germanic culture, had
been loosely governed by
the French for a hundred
years. Although it is
unclear when Vogt began
studying the oboe and
when his family made its
move to the French
capital, the Vogts may
have fled Strasbourg in
1792 after much of the
city was destroyed during
the French Revolution. He
was without question
living in Paris by 1798,
as he enrolled on June 8
at the newly established
Conservatoire national de
Musique to study oboe
with the school's first
oboe professor,
Alexandre-Antoine
Sallantin (1775-1830).
Vogt's relationship with
the Conservatoire would
span over half a century,
moving seamlessly from
the role of student to
professor. In 1799, just
a year after enrolling,
he was awarded the
premier prix, becoming
the fourth oboist to
achieve this award. By
1802 he had been
appointed repetiteur,
which involved teaching
the younger students and
filling in for Sallantin
in exchange for a free
education. He maintained
this rank until 1809,
when he was promoted to
professor adjoint and
finally to professor
titulaire in 1816 when
Sallantin retired. This
was a position he held
for thirty-seven years,
retiring in 1853, making
him the longest serving
oboe professor in the
school's history. During
his tenure, he became the
most influential oboist
in France, teaching
eighty-nine students,
plus sixteen he taught
while he was professor
adjoint and professor
titulaire. Many of these
students went on to be
famous in their own
right, such as Henri Brod
(1799-1839), Apollon
Marie-Rose Barret
(1804-1879), Charles
Triebert (1810-1867),
Stanislas Verroust
(1814-1863), and Charles
Colin (1832-1881). His
influence stretches from
French to American oboe
playing in a direct line
from Charles Colin to
Georges Gillet
(1854-1920), and then to
Marcel Tabuteau
(1887-1966), the oboist
Americans lovingly
describe as the father of
American oboe playing.
Opera was an important
part of Vogt's life. His
first performing position
was with the
Theatre-Montansier while
he was still studying at
the Conservatoire.
Shortly after, he moved
to the Ambigu-Comique
and, in 1801 was
appointed as first oboist
with the Theatre-Italien
in Paris. He had been in
this position for only a
year, when he began
playing first oboe at the
Opera-Comique. He
remained there until
1814, when he succeeded
his teacher,
Alexandre-Antoine
Sallantin, as soloist
with the Paris Opera, the
top orchestra in Paris at
the time. He played with
the Paris Opera until
1834, all the while
bringing in his current
and past students to fill
out the section. In this
position, he began to
make a name for himself;
so much so that specific
performances were
immortalized in memoirs
and letters. One comes
from a young Hector
Berlioz (1803-1865) after
having just arrived in
Paris in 1822 and
attended the Paris
Opera's performance of
Mehul's Stratonice and
Persuis' ballet Nina. It
was in response to the
song Quand le bien-amie
reviendra that Berlioz
wrote: I find it
difficult to believe that
that song as sung by her
could ever have made as
true and touching an
effect as the combination
of Vogt's instrument...
Shortly after this,
Berlioz gave up studying
medicine and focused on
music. Vogt frequently
made solo and chamber
appearances throughout
Europe. His busiest
period of solo work was
during the 1820s. In 1825
and 1828 he went to
London to perform as a
soloist with the London
Philharmonic Society.
Vogt also traveled to
Northern France in 1826
for concerts, and then in
1830 traveled to Munich
and Stuttgart, visiting
his hometown of
Strasbourg on the way.
While on tour, Vogt
performed Luigi
Cherubini's (1760-1842)
Ave Maria, with soprano
Anna (Nanette) Schechner
(1806-1860), and a
Concertino, presumably
written by himself. As a
virtuoso performer in
pursuit of repertoire to
play, Vogt found himself
writing much of his own
music. His catalog
includes chamber music,
variation sets, vocal
music, concerted works,
religious music, wind
band arrangements, and
pedagogical material. He
most frequently performed
his variation sets, which
were largely based on
themes from popular
operas he had, presumably
played while he was at
the Opera. He made his
final tour in 1839,
traveling to Tours and
Bordeaux. During this
tour he appeared with the
singer Caroline Naldi,
Countess de Sparre, and
the violinist Joseph
Artot (1815-1845). This
ended his active career
as a soloist. His
performance was described
in the Revue et gazette
musicale de Paris as
having lost none of his
superiority over the
oboe.... It's always the
same grace, the same
sweetness. We made a trip
to Switzerland, just by
closing your eyes and
listening to Vogt's oboe.
Vogt was also active
performing in Paris as a
chamber and orchestral
musician. He was one of
the founding members of
the Societe des Concerts
du Conservatoire, a group
established in 1828 by
violinist and conductor
Francois-Antoine Habeneck
(1781-1849). The group
featured faculty and
students performing
alongside each other and
works such as Beethoven
symphonies, which had
never been heard in
France. He also premiered
the groundbreaking
woodwind quintets of
Antonin Reicha
(1770-1836). After his
retirement from the Opera
in 1834 and from the
Societe des Concerts du
Conservatoire in 1842,
Vogt began to slow down.
His final known
performance was of
Cherubini's Ave Maria on
English horn with tenor
Alexis Dupont (1796-1874)
in 1843. He then began to
reflect on his life and
the people he had known.
When he reached his 60s,
he began gathering
entries for his Musical
Album of Autographs.
Autograph Albums Vogt's
Musical Album of
Autographs is part of a
larger practice of
keeping autograph albums,
also commonly known as
Stammbuch or Album
Amicorum (meaning book of
friendship or friendship
book), which date back to
the time of the
Reformation and the
University of Wittenberg.
It was during the
mid-sixteenth century
that students at the
University of Wittenberg
began passing around
bibles for their fellow
students and professors
to sign, leaving messages
to remember them by as
they moved on to the next
part of their lives. The
things people wrote were
mottos, quotes, and even
drawings of their family
coat of arms or some
other scene that meant
something to the owner.
These albums became the
way these young students
remembered their school
family once they had
moved on to another
school or town. It was
also common for the
entrants to comment on
other entries and for the
owner to amend entries
when they learned of
important life details
such as marriage or
death. As the practice
continued, bibles were
set aside for emblem
books, which was a
popular book genre that
featured allegorical
illustrations (emblems)
in a tripartite form:
image, motto, epigram.
The first emblem book
used for autographs was
published in 1531 by
Andrea Alciato
(1492-1550), a collection
of 212 Latin emblem
poems. In 1558, the first
book conceived for the
purpose of the album
amicorum was published by
Lyon de Tournes
(1504-1564) called the
Thesaurus Amicorum. These
books continued to
evolve, and spread to
wider circles away from
universities. Albums
could be found being kept
by noblemen, physicians,
lawyers, teachers,
painters, musicians, and
artisans. The albums
eventually became more
specialized, leading to
Musical Autograph Albums
(or Notestammbucher).
Before this
specialization, musicians
contributed in one form
or another, but our
knowledge of them in
these albums is mostly
limited to individual
people or events. Some
would simply sign their
name while others would
insert a fragment of
music, usually a canon
(titled fuga) with text
in Latin. Canons were
popular because they
displayed the
craftsmanship of the
composer in a limited
space. Composers
well-known today,
including J. S. Bach,
Telemann, Mozart,
Beethoven, Dowland, and
Brahms, all participated
in the practice, with
Beethoven being the first
to indicate an interest
in creating an album only
of music. This interest
came around 1815. In an
1845 letter from Johann
Friedrich Naue to
Heinrich Carl
Breidenstein, Naue
recalled an 1813 visit
with Beethoven, who
presented a book
suggesting Naue to
collect entries from
celebrated musicians as
he traveled. Shortly
after we find Louis Spohr
speaking about leaving on
his grand tour through
Europe in 1815 and of his
desire to carry an album
with entries from the
many artists he would
come across. He wrote in
his autobiography that
his most valuable
contribution came from
Beethoven in 1815.
Spohr's Notenstammbuch,
comprised only of musical
entries, is
groundbreaking because it
was coupled with a
concert tour, allowing
him to reach beyond the
Germanic world, where the
creation of these books
had been nearly
exclusive. Spohr brought
the practice of
Notenstammbucher to
France, and in turn
indirectly inspired Vogt
to create a book of his
own some fifteen years
later. Vogt's Musical
Album of Autographs
Vogt's Musical Album of
Autographs acts as a form
of a memoir, displaying
mementos of musicians who
held special meaning in
his life as well as
showing those with whom
he was enamored from the
younger generation. The
anonymous Pie Jesu
submitted to Vogt in 1831
marks the beginning of an
album that would span
nearly three decades by
the time the final entry,
an excerpt from Charles
Gounod's (1818-1893)
Faust, which premiered in
1859, was submitted.
Within this album we find
sixty-two entries from
musicians whom he must
have known very well
because they were
colleagues at the
Conservatoire, or
composers of opera whose
works he was performing
with the Paris Opera.
Other entries came from
performers with whom he
had performed and some
who were simply passing
through Paris, such as
Joseph Joachim
(1831-1907). Of the
sixty-three total
entries, some are
original, unpublished
works, while others came
from well-known existing
works. Nineteen of these
works are for solo piano,
sixteen utilize the oboe
or English horn, thirteen
feature the voice (in
many different
combinations, including
vocal solos with piano,
and small choral settings
up to one with double
choir), two feature
violin as a solo
instrument, and one even
features the now obscure
ophicleide. The
connections among the
sixty-two contributors to
Vogt's album are
virtually never-ending.
All were acquainted with
Vogt in some capacity,
from long-time
friendships to
relationships that were
created when Vogt
requested their entry.
Thus, while Vogt is the
person who is central to
each of these musicians,
the web can be greatly
expanded. In general, the
connections are centered
around the Conservatoire,
teacher lineages, the
Opera, and performing
circles. The
relationships between all
the contributors in the
album parallel the
current musical world, as
many of these kinds of
relationships still
exist, and permit us to
fantasize who might be
found in an album created
today by a musician of
the same standing. Also
important, is what sort
of entries the
contributors chose to
pen. The sixty-three
entries are varied, but
can be divided into
published and unpublished
works. Within the
published works, we find
opera excerpts, symphony
excerpts, mass excerpts,
and canons, while the
unpublished works include
music for solo piano,
oboe or English horn,
string instruments
(violin and cello), and
voice (voice with piano
and choral). The music
for oboe and English horn
works largely belong in
the unpublished works of
the album. These entries
were most likely written
to honor Vogt. Seven are
for oboe and piano and
were contributed by
Joseph Joachim, Pauline
Garcia Viardot
(1821-1910), Joseph
Artot, Anton Bohrer
(1783-1852), Georges
Onslow (1784-1853),
Desire Beaulieu
(1791-1863), and Narcisse
Girard (1797-1860). The
common thread between
these entries is the
simplicity of the melody
and structure. Many are
repetitive, especially
Beaulieu's entry, which
features a two-note
ostinato throughout the
work, which he even
included in his
signature. Two composers
contributed pieces for
English horn and piano,
and like the previous
oboe entries, are simple
and repetitive. These
were written by Michele
Carafa (1787-1872) and
Louis Clapisson
(1808-1866). There are
two other entries that
were unpublished works
and are chamber music.
One is an oboe trio by
Jacques Halevy
(1799-1862) and the other
is for oboe and strings
(string trio) by J. B.
Cramer (1771-1858). There
are five published works
in the album for oboe and
English horn. There are
three from operas and the
other two from symphonic
works. Ambroise Thomas
(1811-1896) contributed
an excerpt from the
Entr'acte of his opera La
Guerillero, and was
likely chosen because the
oboe was featured at this
moment. Hippolyte Chelard
(1789-1861) also chose to
honor Vogt by writing for
English horn. His entry,
for English horn and
piano, is taken from his
biggest success, Macbeth.
The English horn part was
actually taken from Lady
Macbeth's solo in the
sleepwalking scene.
Vogt's own entry also
falls into this category,
as he entered an excerpt
from Donizetti's Maria di
Rohan. The excerpt he
chose is a duet between
soprano and English horn.
There are two entries
featuring oboe that are
excerpted from symphonic
repertoire. One is a
familiar oboe melody from
Beethoven's Pastoral
Symphony entered by his
first biographer, Anton
Schindler (1796-1864).
The other is an excerpt
from Berlioz's choral
symphony, Romeo et
Juliette. He entered an
oboe solo from the Grand
Fete section of the
piece. Pedagogical
benefit All of these
works are lovely, and fit
within the album
wonderfully, but these
works also are great oboe
and English horn music
for young students. The
common thread between
these entries is the
simplicity of the melody
and structure. Many are
repetitive, especially
Beaulieu's entry, which
features a two-note
ostinato throughout the
work in the piano. This
repetitive structure is
beneficial for young
students for searching
for a short solo to
present at a studio
recital, or simply to
learn. They also work
many technical issues a
young player may
encounter, such as
mastering the rolling
finger to uncover and
recover the half hole.
This is true of Bealieu's
Pensee as well as
Onslow's Andantino.
Berlioz's entry from
Romeo et Juliette
features very long
phrases, which helps with
endurance and helps keep
the air spinning through
the oboe. Some of the
pieces also use various
levels of ornamentation,
from trills to grace
notes, and short
cadenzas. This allows the
student to learn
appropriate ways to
phrase with these added
notes. The chamber music
is a valuable way to
start younger students
with chamber music,
especially the short
quartet by Cramer for
oboe and string trio. All
of these pieces will not
tax the student to learn
a work that is more
advanced, as well as give
them a full piece that
they can work on from
beginning to end in a
couple weeks, instead of
months. Editorial Policy
The works found in this
edition are based on the
manuscript housed at the
Morgan Library in New
York City (call number
Cary 348, V886. A3). When
possible, published
scores were consulted and
compared to clarify pitch
and text. The general
difficulties in creating
an edition of these works
stem from entries that
appear to be hastily
written, and thus omit
complete articulations
and dynamic indications
for all passages and
parts. The manuscript has
been modernized into a
performance edition. The
score order from the
manuscript has been
retained. If an entry
also exists in a
published work, and this
was not indicated on the
manuscript, appropriate
titles and subtitles have
been added tacitly. For
entries that were
untitled, the beginning
tempo marking or
expressive directive has
been added as its title
tacitly. Part names have
been changed from the
original language to
English. If no part name
was present, it was added
tacitly. All scores are
transposing where
applicable. Measure
numbers have been added
at the beginning of every
system. Written
directives have been
retained in the original
language and are placed
relative to where they
appear in the manuscript.
Tempo markings from the
manuscript have been
retained, even if they
were abbreviated, i.e.,
Andte. The barlines,
braces, brackets, and
clefs are modernized. The
beaming and stem
direction has been
modernized. Key
signatures have been
modernized as some of the
flats/sharps do not
appear on the correct
lines or spaces. Time
signatures have been
modernized. In a few
cases, when a time
signature was missing in
the manuscript, it has
been added tacitly.
Triplet and rhythmic
groupings have been
modernized. Slurs, ties,
and articulations
(staccato and accent)
have been modernized.
Slurs, ties, and
articulations have been
added to parallel
passages tacitly.
Courtesy accidentals
found in the manuscript
have been removed, unless
it appeared to be helpful
to the performer. Dynamic
indications from the
manuscript have been
retained, except where
noted. --Kristin
Leitterman. Introducti
onGustave Vogt’s
Musical ParisGustave Vogt
(1781–1870) was
born into the “Age
of Enlightenment,â€
at the apex of the
Enlightenment’s
outreach. During his
lifetime he would observe
its effect on the world.
Over the course of his
life he lived through
many changes in musical
style. When he was born,
composers such as Mozart
and Haydn were still
writing masterworks
revered today, and
eighty-nine years later,
as he departed the world,
the new realm of
Romanticism was beginning
to emerge with Mahler,
Richard Strauss and
Debussy, who were soon to
make their respective
marks on the musical
world. Vogt himself left
a huge mark on the
musical world, with
critics referring to him
as the “grandfather
of the modern oboeâ€
and the “premier
oboist of
Europe.â€Through his
eighty-nine years, Vogt
would live through what
was perhaps the most
turbulent period of
French history. He
witnessed the French
Revolution of 1789,
followed by the many
newly established
governments, only to die
just months before the
establishment of the
Third Republic in 1870,
which would be the
longest lasting
government since the
beginning of the
revolution. He also
witnessed the
transformation of the
French musical world from
one in which opera
reigned supreme, to one
in which virtuosi,
chamber music, and
symphonic music ruled.
Additionally, he
experienced the
development of the oboe
right before his eyes.
When he began playing in
the late eighteenth
century, the standard
oboe had two keys (E and
Eb) and at the time of
his death in 1870, the
“System Sixâ€
Triébert oboe (the
instrument adopted by
Conservatoire professor,
Georges Gillet, in 1882)
was only five years from
being developed.Vogt was
born March 18, 1781 in
the ancient town of
Strasbourg, part of the
Alsace region along the
German border. At the
time of his birth,
Strasbourg had been
annexed by Louis XIV, and
while heavily influenced
by Germanic culture, had
been loosely governed by
the French for a hundred
years. Although it is
unclear when Vogt began
studying the oboe and
when his family made its
move to the French
capital, the Vogts may
have fled Strasbourg in
1792 after much of the
city was destroyed during
the French Revolution. He
was without question
living in Paris by 1798,
as he enrolled on June 8
at the newly established
Conservatoire national de
Musique to study oboe
with the school’s
first oboe professor,
Alexandre-Antoine
Sallantin
(1775–1830).Vogtâ
€™s relationship with
the Conservatoire would
span over half a century,
moving seamlessly from
the role of student to
professor. In 1799, just
a year after enrolling,
he was awarded the
premier prix, becoming
the fourth oboist to
achieve this award. By
1802 he had been
appointed
répétiteur, which
involved teaching the
younger students and
filling in for Sallantin
in exchange for a free
education. He maintained
this rank until 1809,
when he was promoted to
professor adjoint and
finally to professor
titulaire in 1816 when
Sallantin retired. This
was a position he held
for thirty-seven years,
retiring in 1853, making
him the longest serving
oboe professor in the
school’s history.
During his tenure, he
became the most
influential oboist in
France, teaching
eighty-nine students,
plus sixteen he taught
while he was professor
adjoint and professor
titulaire. Many of these
students went on to be
famous in their own
right, such as Henri Brod
(1799–1839),
Apollon Marie-Rose Barret
(1804–1879),
Charles Triebert
(1810–1867),
Stanislas Verroust
(1814–1863), and
Charles Colin
(1832–1881). His
influence stretches from
French to American oboe
playing in a direct line
from Charles Colin to
Georges Gillet
(1854–1920), and
then to Marcel Tabuteau
(1887–1966), the
oboist Americans lovingly
describe as the
“father of American
oboe playing.â€Opera
was an important part of
Vogt’s life. His
first performing position
was with the
Théâtre-Montansier
while he was still
studying at the
Conservatoire. Shortly
after, he moved to the
Ambigu-Comique and, in
1801 was appointed as
first oboist with the
Théâtre-Italien in
Paris. He had been in
this position for only a
year, when he began
playing first oboe at the
Opéra-Comique. He
remained there until
1814, when he succeeded
his teacher,
Alexandre-Antoine
Sallantin, as soloist
with the Paris Opéra,
the top orchestra in
Paris at the time. He
played with the Paris
Opéra until 1834, all
the while bringing in his
current and past students
to fill out the section.
In this position, he
began to make a name for
himself; so much so that
specific performances
were immortalized in
memoirs and letters. One
comes from a young Hector
Berlioz
(1803–1865) after
having just arrived in
Paris in 1822 and
attended the Paris
Opéra’s
performance of
Mehul’s Stratonice
and Persuis’
ballet Nina. It was in
response to the song
Quand le bien-amié
reviendra that Berlioz
wrote: “I find it
difficult to believe that
that song as sung by her
could ever have made as
true and touching an
effect as the combination
of Vogt’s
instrument…â€
Shortly after this,
Berlioz gave up studying
medicine and focused on
music.Vogt frequently
made solo and chamber
appearances throughout
Europe. His busiest
period of solo work was
during the 1820s. In 1825
and 1828 he went to
London to perform as a
soloist with the London
Philharmonic Society.
Vogt also traveled to
Northern France in 1826
for concerts, and then in
1830 traveled to Munich
and Stuttgart, visiting
his hometown of
Strasbourg on the way.
While on tour, Vogt
performed Luigi
Cherubini’s
(1760–1842) Ave
Maria, with soprano Anna
(Nanette) Schechner
(1806–1860), and a
Concertino, presumably
written by himself. As a
virtuoso performer in
pursuit of repertoire to
play, Vogt found himself
writing much of his own
music. His catalog
includes chamber music,
variation sets, vocal
music, concerted works,
religious music, wind
band arrangements, and
pedagogical material. He
most frequently performed
his variation sets, which
were largely based on
themes from popular
operas he had, presumably
played while he was at
the Opéra.He made his
final tour in 1839,
traveling to Tours and
Bordeaux. During this
tour he appeared with the
singer Caroline Naldi,
Countess de Sparre, and
the violinist Joseph
Artôt
(1815–1845). This
ended his active career
as a soloist. His
performance was described
in the Revue et gazette
musicale de Paris as
having “lost none
of his superiority over
the oboe….
It’s always the
same grace, the same
sweetness. We made a trip
to Switzerland, just by
closing your eyes and
listening to
Vogt’s
oboe.â€Vogt was also
active performing in
Paris as a chamber and
orchestral musician. He
was one of the founding
members of the
Société des
Concerts du
Conservatoire, a group
established in 1828 by
violinist and conductor
François-Antoine
Habeneck
(1781–1849). The
group featured faculty
and students performing
alongside each other and
works such as Beethoven
symphonies, which had
never been heard in
France. He also premiered
the groundbreaking
woodwind quintets of
Antonin Reicha
(1770–1836).After
his retirement from the
Opéra in 1834 and from
the Société des
Concerts du Conservatoire
in 1842, Vogt began to
slow down. His final
known performance was of
Cherubini’s Ave
Maria on English horn
with tenor Alexis Dupont
(1796–1874) in
1843. He then began to
reflect on his life and
the people he had known.
When he reached his 60s,
he began gathering
entries for his Musical
Album of
Autographs.Autograph
AlbumsVogt’s
Musical Album of
Autographs is part of a
larger practice of
keeping autograph albums,
also commonly known as
Stammbuch or Album
Amicorum (meaning book of
friendship or friendship
book), which date back to
the time of the
Reformation and the
University of Wittenberg.
It was during the
mid-sixteenth century
that students at the
University of Wittenberg
began passing around
bibles for their fellow
students and professors
to sign, leaving messages
to remember them by as
they moved on to the next
part of their lives. The
things people wrote were
mottos, quotes, and even
drawings of their family
coat of arms or some
other scene that meant
something to the owner.
These albums became the
way these young students
remembered their school
family once they had
moved on to another
school or town. It was
also common for the
entrants to comment on
other entries and for the
owner to amend entries
when they learned of
important life details
such as marriage or
death.As the practice
continued, bibles were
set aside for emblem
books, which was a
popular book genre that
featured allegorical
illustrations (emblems)
in a tripartite form:
image, motto, epigram.
The first emblem book
used for autographs was
published in 1531 by
Andrea Alciato
(1492–1550), a
collection of 212 Latin
emblem poems. In 1558,
the first book conceived
for the purpose of the
album amicorum was
published by Lyon de
Tournes
(1504–1564) called
the Thesaurus Amicorum.
These books continued to
evolve, and spread to
wider circles away from
universities. Albums
could be found being kept
by noblemen, physicians,
lawyers, teachers,
painters, musicians, and
artisans.The albums
eventually became more
specialized, leading to
Musical Autograph Albums
(or Notestammbücher).
Before this
specialization, musicians
contributed in one form
or another, but our
knowledge of them in
these albums is mostly
limited to individual
people or events. Some
would simply sign their
name while others would
insert a fragment of
music, usually a canon
(titled fuga) with text
in Latin. Canons were
popular because they
displayed the
craftsmanship of the
composer in a limited
space. Composers
well-known today,
including J. S. Bach,
Telemann, Mozart,
Beethoven, Dowland, and
Brahms, all participated
in the practice, with
Beethoven being the first
to indicate an interest
in creating an album only
of music.This interest
came around 1815. In an
1845 letter from Johann
Friedrich Naue to
Heinrich Carl
Breidenstein, Naue
recalled an 1813 visit
with Beethoven, who
presented a book
suggesting Naue to
collect entries from
celebrated musicians as
he traveled. Shortly
after we find Louis Spohr
speaking about leaving on
his “grand
tour†through
Europe in 1815 and of his
desire to carry an album
with entries from the
many artists he would
come across. He wrote in
his autobiography that
his “most valuable
contribution†came
from Beethoven in 1815.
Spohr’s
Notenstammbuch, comprised
only of musical entries,
is groundbreaking because
it was coupled with a
concert tour, allowing
him to reach beyond the
Germanic world, where the
creation of these books
had been nearly
exclusive. Spohr brought
the practice of
Notenstammbücher to
France, and in turn
indirectly inspired Vogt
to create a book of his
own some fifteen years
later.Vogt’s
Musical Album of
AutographsVogt’s
Musical Album of
Autographs acts as a form
of a memoir, displaying
mementos of musicians who
held special meaning in
his life as well as
showing those with whom
he was enamored from the
younger generation. The
anonymous Pie Jesu
submitted to Vogt in 1831
marks the beginning of an
album that would span
nearly three decades by
the time the final entry,
an excerpt from Charles
Gounod’s
(1818–1893) Faust,
which premiered in 1859,
was submitted.Within this
album ... $16.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Eugen Onegin Op. 24 Deutscher Verlag für Musik
Chorus (with soloists) and piano (solos: SMezMez(A)ATTBarBBB - choir: SSAATTBB -...(+)
Chorus (with soloists)
and piano (solos:
SMezMez(A)ATTBarBBB -
choir: SSAATTBB -
picc.2.2.2.2. - 4.2.3.0.
- timp - hp - str)
SKU: BR.DV-6081
Lyrical Opera in 3
Acts. Composed by
Pjotr Iljitsch
Tschaikowsky. Edited by
Manfred Koerth / Wo
Ebermann. Arranged by M.
Koerth and W. Ebermann.
Choir; Softbound.
Deutscher Verlag. Opera;
Music theatre; Romantic.
Piano/Vocal Score. 300
pages. Deutscher Verlag
fur Musik #DV 6081.
Published by Deutscher
Verlag fur Musik
(BR.DV-6081). ISBN
9790200460032. 9.5 x 12
inches. Duration:
full evening
Translation
: German (W. Ebermann/M.
Koerth), Engl. (D.
Llyod-Jones), French (M.
Delines) Place and
time: Partly on the
estate, partly in
Petersburg, in 20ies of
the 19th
Century
Characters
: Larina, Owner of the
Estate (mezzo-soprano) -
Tatiana (soprano) and
Olga (alto), her
Daughters - Filipjewna,
Wet Nurse
(mezzo-soprano/alto) -
Eugen Onegin (baritone) -
Lenskij (tenor) - Prince
Gremin (bass) - A
Commander (bass) -
Saretzkij (bass) -
Triquet, a French Man
(tenor) - Guillot, a
Valet (silent part) -
Country Folk, Ball
Guests, Squire, Officers
(chorus) - Waltz,
mazurka, polonaise and
Russian dance (Ballet
)
There is an
interesting parallel
between the subject of
the opera and
Tchaikovsky's life during
the year he wrote the
work (1877): in each
case, a letter provokes
fateful developments in
the lives of the
protagonists. In the
opera, Tatyana's love
letter to Eugene sets off
the tragedy, whereas in
real life, the love
letter of a pupil led the
composer into a marriage,
which lasted all of ...
three months. Tchaikovsky
took this doomed decision
without love, solely
because the circumstances
want it and because I
cannot act differently.
Certain allusions made,
for example, in a letter
of January 1878 to
Taneyev suggest that the
composer's personal
situation also flowed
into the work: I did not
want anything to do with
the so-called 'grand
opera.' I am looking for
an intimate but powerful
drama which is built on
the conflict of
circumstances which I
myself have seen and
experienced, a conflict
which truly moves me.
Partly for this reason
the composer decided to
call the work not an
opera but lyrical
scenes.Eugene Onegin,
conceived by Tchaikovsky
for limited resources and
a small stage, is the
most frequently performed
Russian opera today along
with Mussorgsky's Boris
Godunov, which represents
a completely contrary
aesthetic stance.
Tschaikowskys
letzte Oper - auf ein
Libretto seines Bruders
Modest nach der
Dramenvorlage des
danischen Schriftstellers
Henrik Hertz - lebt von
den poetischen Momenten
und den symbolbeladenen
Charakterportrats der
Hauptfiguren: Die junge
blinde Jolanthe wird von
ihrem Vater aus Sorge um
ihren Makel und zum
Schutz ihrer
Jungfraulichkeit und vor
den Widrigkeiten der Welt
in einen paradiesischen
Garten gesperrt. Er
befielt zu ihrem Schutz
sie um ihre Blindheit
unwissend zu lassen. Ein
Arzt warnt sehen werde
sie nur konnen wenn sie
es selbst wolle gleich
welche Angste aus der
vollstandigen Erkenntnis
der Welt erwachsen. Als
der junge Vaudemont in
ihre Abgeschiedenheit
einbricht und sich beide
ineinander verlieben
befreit er sie von ihrer
Unwissenheit erklart was
Farbe und Licht bedeuten.
Erst die Liebe zu ihm
macht sie sehend.
Die dunkle Welt
der Jolanthe zeichnet
Tschaikowsky zu Beginn
musikalisch durch eine
Introduktion
ausschliesslich fur
Blaser. Erst mit dem
Eintritt in die
unbekannte Welt der Liebe
und des Sehens verwendet
Tschaikowsky einen warmen
Streicherklang. Gerade
dadurch stiess die Oper
wohl bei Zeitgenossen auf
Verstorung. Tschaikowskys
,,Jolanthe nimmt in
seinem Opernschaffen eine
Sonderstellung ein: neben
dem glucklichen Ende
einer Apotheose des
Lichts und der Liebe mit
einem religios gepragten
Schlusschoral ist es
eines der wenigen
Buhnenwerke Tschaikowskys
ohne Bezug zur russischen
Geschichte. Der
ausgepragte Lyrismus des
Werks verweist
stattdessen auf
Tschaikowskys Nahe zur
franzosischen Kultur die
im 19. Jahrhundert einen
starken Einfluss auf
Russland hatte. Die Oper
wurde 1892 am
Mariinsky-Theater in
Sankt Petersburg als
Auftragswerk zusammen mit
seinem Ballett ,,Der
Nussknacker
uraufgefuhrt.
Nebe
n der Produktion des
Munchner
Rundfunkorchesters wurde
,,Jolanthe szenisch
erfolgreich bei den
Festspielen Baden-Baden
mit Anna Netrebko und
Piotr Beczala als
Liebespaar rehabilitiert.
Ausserhalb Deutschlands
lief die Opernraritat in
Toulouse Tokyo San
Sebastian und Monte
Carlo. Zuletzt erneut die
,,Suddeutsche Zeitung:
,,Jolanthe ist eine
Opernausgrabung die
,,wirklich zu Unrecht
vergessen ist.
Tchaikovsky's last opera
- on a libretto by the
composer's brother Modest
based on the drama by the
Danish author Henrik
Hertz - derives its
life-blood from its
poetic moments and the
symbol-laden portraits of
the leading characters:
the blind young Yolanta
is kept prisoner in a
paradisiacal garden by
her father who fears for
her purity and her
virginity and seeks to
protect her from the
adversities of the world.
To do so he orders
everyone to keep her
ignorant of the fact that
she is blind. A doctor
warns that she will only
be able to see when she
is ready to do so herself
no matter what fears
might result from a
complete experience of
the world. When the young
Vaudemont breaks into her
secluded world and the
two fall in love he frees
her from her ignorance
and explains the
significance of color and
light. It is through her
love for him that she is
finally able to see. At
the beginning of the work
Tchaikovsky depicts
Yolanta's dark world with
an introduction scored
exclusively for winds. It
is not until her
discovery of the unknown
world of love and sight
that Tchaikovsky uses a
warm string sound. This
is what many of the
composer's contemporaries
found disturbing about
the
opera.
Tchaikovsky
's Yolanta occupies a
special place in the
composer's operatic
oeuvre: for one it has a
happy ending an
apotheosis of light and
love with a religiously
stamped closing chorale;
for another it is one of
Tchaikovsky's few stage
works without any
reference to Russian
history. Instead the
work's pronounced
lyricism points to the
composer's closeness to
French culture. which
exerted a strong
influence on Russia in
the 19th
century.
The opera
was given its world
premiere at the Mariinsky
Theater in St. Petersburg
in 1892. It had been
commissioned along with
the ballet The
Nutcracker. Next to the
production by the
Munchner
Rundfunkorchester Yolanta
was also successfully
rehabilitated in a recent
staged production at the
Baden-Baden Festival with
Anna Netrebko and Piotr
Beczala as the lovers.
Outside of Germany the
operatic rarity was
performed in Toulouse
Tokyo San Sebastian and
Monte Carlo.
In
closing another quote
from the Suddeutsche
Zeitung: 'Yolanta' is an
operatic rediscovery of a
work that was truly
'wrongly forgotten'. $76.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 4 weeks | | |
| Schubert's "Winter Journey" Piano, Voix Breitkopf & Härtel
Voice and piano (solo: T - 2(picc.A-fl).2(ob.d'am[ad lib.].cor ang.muha).2(B-cla...(+)
Voice and piano (solo: T
-
2(picc.A-fl).2(ob.d'am[ad
lib.].cor
ang.muha).2(B-clar.S-sax.
muha).2(kfg.muha) -
1.1(corn [ad lib.]).1.0 -
timp.perc(3) -
acc(windmachine
I).hp(rainmaker.windmachi
ne
II).guit(rainmaker.windma
chine III) - str:
1.1.2.1.1) SKU:
BR.EB-9394 A
Composed
Interpretation.
Composed by Hans Zender.
Voice; Softbound. Edition
Breitkopf. World
premiere: Frankfurt am
Main, September 21, 1993.
Song; Music post-1945.
Piano/Vocal Score.
Composed 1993. 120 pages.
Duration 85'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #EB 9394.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.EB-9394).
ISBN 9790004188682. 9
x 12 inches. My
lecture of the
Winterreise does not
demand a new expressive
interpretation, but
instead systematically
exercises the freedom
which all interpreters
allow themselves
intuitively, such as:
instrumental dilation i.
e. acceleration of the
pace, transposition into
other keys and
elaboration of
characteristic color
timbres. In addition,
there are further ways of
reading; the music;
jumping around in the
text, repeating certain
lines, interrupting the
continuity, comparing
different expressions of
the same phrase ... All
these new possibilities
are subjected to my
compositional discipline
and form autonomous
formal processes which
are imposed on Schuberts
original. The
transformation of the
piano tones into a
multifaceted orchestra
full of resonance is only
one of many aspects.(Hans
Zender)CDs:Hans Peter
Blochwitz (Tenor),
Ensemble Modern,
Conductor: Hans Zender CD
BMG 9026-68067-2
Christoph Pregardien
(Tenor), Klangforum Wien,
Conductor: Sylvain
Cambreling CD Kairos
0012002KAIJulien
Pregardien (Tenor),
Deutsche Radio
Philharmonie
Kaiserslautern,
Conductor: Robert Reimer2
CD's P.RHEI
(2016)Bibliography:Adam-S
chmidmeier, Eva-Maria
von: Schubert
interpretieren. Hans
Zender: Schuberts
Winterreise. Eine
komponierte
Interpretation im
Unterricht, in: Musik und
Unterricht Heft 96
(2009), pp. 50-56.Gruhn,
Wilfried: Wider die
asthetische Routine. Hans
Zenders Version von
Schuberts Winterreise,
in: Neue Zeitschrift fur
Musik 1/1997.Hebling,
Harald: Kompositorische
Schubertrezeption im 20.
Jahrhundert,
Magisterarbeit
Universitat Wien 2003,
especially pp.
148-157.Nonnenmann,
Rainer: Vom Nutzen und
Nachteil der
Musikhistorie fur das
Musikleben. Zur Kritik
aktualisierender
Interpretation am
Beispiel von Hans Zenders
Schuberts ,Winterreise,
in: Musik und Asthetik 7,
Heft 26 (April 2003), pp.
65-90.ders.: Schuberts
,Winterreise .
Komponierte
Interpretation von Hans
Zender / Ballett von John
Neumeier, in:
Osterreichische
Musikzeitung 60 (2005),
Heft 3, p. 42f.ders.:
Fremd bin ich eingezogen,
fremd zieh ich wieder
aus. Versuch zur Rettung
der Vergangenheit
Schuberts Winterreise.
Eine komponierte
Interpretation fur Tenor
und kleines Orchester
(1993) von Hans Zender,
in ders.: Winterreisen.
Komponierte Wege von und
zu Franz Schuberts
Liederzyklus aus zwei
Jahrhunderten, 2 Bande (=
Taschenbucher zur
Musikwissenschaft, Band
150/151), Wilhelmshaven:
Florian Noetzel 2006, pp.
143-205.Petersen, Birger:
Neue Musik. Analysen,
Berlin: Simon Verlag fur
Bibliothekswissen 2013,
pp. 11-24.Revers, Peter:
... Schnee, du weisst von
meinem Sehnen. Aspekte
der Schubert-Rezeption in
Hans Zenders Winterreise
(1993), in: Dialekt ohne
Erde. Franz Schubert und
das 20. Jahrhundert,
hrsg. von Otto
Kolleritsch, Wien-Graz
1998 (Studien zur
Wertungsforschung, Band
34), pp.
98-120.Schafer-Lembeck,
Hans-Ulrich:
Gegenstrebige Fugungen.
Hans Zenders Musik und
seine komponierte
Interpretation von
Schuberts Winterreise,
in: Neue Musik
vermitteln. Analysen
Interpretationen -
Unterricht, hrsg. von
Hans Bassler, Ortwin
Nimczik und Peter W.
Schatt, Mainz: Schott,
2004, pp.
295-307.Stahmer, Klaus
Hinrich: Bearbeitung als
Interpretation - Zur
Schubertrezeption Gustav
Mahlers, Hans Zenders und
Friedhelm Dohls, in:
Franz Schubert und Gustav
Mahler in der Musik der
Gegenwart, Mainz
1998.Zender, Hans: warum
wieder die Winterreise?
Hartmut Regitz im
Gesprach mit dem
Komponisten, in:
ballet.tanz -
international.aktuell,
Heft 12 (2001), p.
18.
World
premiere: Frankfurt am
Main, September 21,
1993. $102.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Unterhaltung zweier Schlagzeuger Percussion [Conducteur] Deutscher Verlag für Musik
Percussion solo SKU: BR.DV-8173 Composed by Karl Ottomar Treibmann. Solo ...(+)
Percussion solo SKU:
BR.DV-8173 Composed
by Karl Ottomar
Treibmann. Solo
instruments; Softcover.
Deutscher Verlag. World
premiere Leipzig, 1980.
Music post-1945. Score.
Composed 1979. 30 pages.
Duration 10'. Deutscher
Verlag fur Musik #DV
8173. Published by
Deutscher Verlag fur
Musik (BR.DV-8173).
ISBN 9790200480832. 9
x 12 inches. World
premiere Leipzig, 1980
Tschaikowskys
letzte Oper - auf ein
Libretto seines Bruders
Modest nach der
Dramenvorlage des
danischen Schriftstellers
Henrik Hertz - lebt von
den poetischen Momenten
und den symbolbeladenen
Charakterportrats der
Hauptfiguren: Die junge
blinde Jolanthe wird von
ihrem Vater aus Sorge um
ihren Makel und zum
Schutz ihrer
Jungfraulichkeit und vor
den Widrigkeiten der Welt
in einen paradiesischen
Garten gesperrt. Er
befielt zu ihrem Schutz
sie um ihre Blindheit
unwissend zu lassen. Ein
Arzt warnt sehen werde
sie nur konnen wenn sie
es selbst wolle gleich
welche Angste aus der
vollstandigen Erkenntnis
der Welt erwachsen. Als
der junge Vaudemont in
ihre Abgeschiedenheit
einbricht und sich beide
ineinander verlieben
befreit er sie von ihrer
Unwissenheit erklart was
Farbe und Licht bedeuten.
Erst die Liebe zu ihm
macht sie sehend.
Die dunkle Welt
der Jolanthe zeichnet
Tschaikowsky zu Beginn
musikalisch durch eine
Introduktion
ausschliesslich fur
Blaser. Erst mit dem
Eintritt in die
unbekannte Welt der Liebe
und des Sehens verwendet
Tschaikowsky einen warmen
Streicherklang. Gerade
dadurch stiess die Oper
wohl bei Zeitgenossen auf
Verstorung. Tschaikowskys
,,Jolanthe nimmt in
seinem Opernschaffen eine
Sonderstellung ein: neben
dem glucklichen Ende
einer Apotheose des
Lichts und der Liebe mit
einem religios gepragten
Schlusschoral ist es
eines der wenigen
Buhnenwerke Tschaikowskys
ohne Bezug zur russischen
Geschichte. Der
ausgepragte Lyrismus des
Werks verweist
stattdessen auf
Tschaikowskys Nahe zur
franzosischen Kultur die
im 19. Jahrhundert einen
starken Einfluss auf
Russland hatte. Die Oper
wurde 1892 am
Mariinsky-Theater in
Sankt Petersburg als
Auftragswerk zusammen mit
seinem Ballett ,,Der
Nussknacker
uraufgefuhrt.
Nebe
n der Produktion des
Munchner
Rundfunkorchesters wurde
,,Jolanthe szenisch
erfolgreich bei den
Festspielen Baden-Baden
mit Anna Netrebko und
Piotr Beczala als
Liebespaar rehabilitiert.
Ausserhalb Deutschlands
lief die Opernraritat in
Toulouse Tokyo San
Sebastian und Monte
Carlo. Zuletzt erneut die
,,Suddeutsche Zeitung:
,,Jolanthe ist eine
Opernausgrabung die
,,wirklich zu Unrecht
vergessen ist.
Tchaikovsky's last opera
- on a libretto by the
composer's brother Modest
based on the drama by the
Danish author Henrik
Hertz - derives its
life-blood from its
poetic moments and the
symbol-laden portraits of
the leading characters:
the blind young Yolanta
is kept prisoner in a
paradisiacal garden by
her father who fears for
her purity and her
virginity and seeks to
protect her from the
adversities of the world.
To do so he orders
everyone to keep her
ignorant of the fact that
she is blind. A doctor
warns that she will only
be able to see when she
is ready to do so herself
no matter what fears
might result from a
complete experience of
the world. When the young
Vaudemont breaks into her
secluded world and the
two fall in love he frees
her from her ignorance
and explains the
significance of color and
light. It is through her
love for him that she is
finally able to see. At
the beginning of the work
Tchaikovsky depicts
Yolanta's dark world with
an introduction scored
exclusively for winds. It
is not until her
discovery of the unknown
world of love and sight
that Tchaikovsky uses a
warm string sound. This
is what many of the
composer's contemporaries
found disturbing about
the
opera.
Tchaikovsky
's Yolanta occupies a
special place in the
composer's operatic
oeuvre: for one it has a
happy ending an
apotheosis of light and
love with a religiously
stamped closing chorale;
for another it is one of
Tchaikovsky's few stage
works without any
reference to Russian
history. Instead the
work's pronounced
lyricism points to the
composer's closeness to
French culture. which
exerted a strong
influence on Russia in
the 19th
century.
The opera
was given its world
premiere at the Mariinsky
Theater in St. Petersburg
in 1892. It had been
commissioned along with
the ballet The
Nutcracker. Next to the
production by the
Munchner
Rundfunkorchester Yolanta
was also successfully
rehabilitated in a recent
staged production at the
Baden-Baden Festival with
Anna Netrebko and Piotr
Beczala as the lovers.
Outside of Germany the
operatic rarity was
performed in Toulouse
Tokyo San Sebastian and
Monte Carlo.
In
closing another quote
from the Suddeutsche
Zeitung: 'Yolanta' is an
operatic rediscovery of a
work that was truly
'wrongly forgotten'. $35.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 4 weeks | | |
| Butz R/magolt H Floetenzirkus - Débutant Schott
Soprano recorder (BFL) - very easy SKU: HL.49033119 Die Blockflotensch...(+)
Soprano recorder (BFL) -
very easy SKU:
HL.49033119 Die
Blockflotenschule fur
Kinder ab funf
Jahren. Composed by
Rainer Butz. This
edition: Ring/Spiral
binding. Sheet music.
Edition Schott. 80 pages.
Schott Music #ED 9491.
Published by Schott Music
(HL.49033119). ISBN
9783795756123.
7.25x10.75x0.492 inches.
German. Bernhard Mark;
Karin
Schliehe. Hereinspa
ziert und willkommen im
lustigen Flotenzirkus!
Mit dieser neuen Schule
fur Sopran-Blockfloten in
drei Banden lernen Kinder
ab funf Jahren die ersten
Flotentone spielend
leicht. Uber neunzig
Lieder mit vielen Texten
rund um die Themen
Marchen, Theater und
Zirkus ermuntern die
Kinder zu kreativem
Vergnugen mit Musik,
Spiel und Tanz. Darunter
sind auch bekannte
Kinderlieder von Hanschen
klein bis zum
Pumuckl-Lied sowie Lieder
zu den Jahreszeiten und
zu besonderen Anlassen.
Viele lustige Bilder
regen die Phantasie zum
Ausmalen an. Einfache
Ubungen machen mit der
Notenschrift vertraut.
Bei dem Tonumfang von c'
bis d'' wurde bewusst auf
Tone mit Vorzeichen sowie
auf das Uberblasen
verzichtet. Die
Einfuhrung der Tone folgt
didaktischen
Gesichtspunkten. Der
Lernfortschritt wird
durch Belohnungspunkte
und Das grosse
Zirkus-Bilderratsel
sichtbar. Die
ausklappbare Grifftabelle
erleichtert das Einpragen
der Griffbilder. Die
Schule ist sowohl fur die
barocke als auch fur die
deutsche Griffweise
geeignet. Der
Flotenzirkus bietet sich
dank der bewahrten
Methode von Rainer Butz
auch fur den
Gruppenunterricht in der
Grundschule, im
Kindergarten oder in der
musikalischen
Fruherziehung an. $15.99 - Voir plus => Acheter | | |
| Henze Hw Disperazioni Signor Pulcinella Orchestre Schott
Orchestra (SGST/ORCH() SKU: HL.49013033 (Tanzstunden I) Tanzschauspiel...(+)
Orchestra (SGST/ORCH()
SKU: HL.49013033
(Tanzstunden I)
Tanzschauspiel. Libretto
frei nach Moliere.
Composed by Hans Werner
Henze. This edition:
Paperback/Soft Cover.
Sheet music. Edition
Schott. Classical. Study
Score. Composed
1949/1995. 172 pages.
Duration 35'. Schott
Music #ED 9456. Published
by Schott Music
(HL.49013033). ISBN
9790001131919.
8.25x11.75x0.462
inches. Bei der
Neuschrift des Stucks im
Winter 1995-96, funfzig
Jahre nach seiner
Entstehung (als
Buhnenmusik zu Molieres
Comedie ballet Georges
Dandin, aus der
anschliessend ein Ballett
wurde mit dem englischen
Clown Jack Pudding in der
Titelrolle), ist es mir
darum gegangen, den alten
Notentext auszulosen und
sein thematisches und
harmonisches Material
nach Kriterien zu ordnen
und zu entwickeln, die
mir seinerzeit noch nicht
zur Verfugung standen,
und die recht
skizzenhafte Anlage des
Urtexts in eine Klangwelt
heruberzutragen, die
meinen heutigen
Vorstellungen und
Wertbegriffen von Theater
und Musik entspricht und
die gleichzeitig das
heutige kulturelle Klima
Neapels widerspiegelt und
damit eine besondere Art
von Wirklichkeit, die
mich einmal so sehr
gefangengenommen,
bezaubert und beeinflusst
hat.- Hans Werner
Henze
: 1 (auch
Picc.) * 1 * 1 * 1 - 1 *
1 * 1 * 0 - P. S. (3
Trgl. * Crot. * Rohrengl.
* Trinidad steel drum * 3
hg. Beck. * 3 Tamt. * 3
Tomt. * Schellentr. * kl.
Tr. * gr. Tr. [m. u. o.
Beck.] * Bongo * Guiro *
Kast. * Ratsche *
Peitsche * Lotosfl. *
Cuica * Mar. * Putipu
[neap. Brummtopf]*
Scetavajasse [neap.
Schrapstock mit Schellen]
* Flex. * Vibr. *
Marimba) (3 Spieler) -
Klav. (auch Cel. und Akk.
ad lib.) - Str. $63.00 - Voir plus => Acheter | | |
| Friedensmarsch Orchestre d'harmonie [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Facile De Haske Publications
Concert Band/Harmonie - Grade 3 SKU: BT.DHP-1064021-010 From Rienzi(+)
Concert Band/Harmonie -
Grade 3 SKU:
BT.DHP-1064021-010
From Rienzi.
Composed by Richard
Wagner. Arranged by Wil
van der Beek. The Great
Classics. Transcription.
Set (Score & Parts).
Composed 2006. De Haske
Publications #DHP
1064021-010. Published by
De Haske Publications
(BT.DHP-1064021-010).
9x12 inches.
English-German-French-Dut
ch. Rienzi remains
one of the most popular
works from the ?master of
romantic opera?, Richard
Wagner. The
Friedensmarsch from the
fourth act (scene 2) of
Rienzi is subdued and
solemn in character: in
the sounds of this march,
Rienzi strides to a
stately church service.
This is sure to be a very
popular addition to any
performance and is one
not to be missed.
Rienzi is
een vroeg werk van
Wagner: deze opera
behoort zeker niet tot
zijn bekendste werken.
Rienzi, der Letzte der
Tribunen - zoals de
volledige titel luidt -
werd door tijdgenoten
enthousiast ontvangen. Er
zijn inde partituur
voldoende elementen te
vinden die dit kunnen
verklaren: processies,
marsen, gevechten,
lofzangen, goed in het
gehoor liggende
ensembles, een
grootschalig ballet,
klokgelui, veelvuldige
trompetsignalen,
enzovoort.
DeFriedensmarsch uit de
vierde akte (scène 2)
van Rienzi is
ingetogen, statig en
gedragen van karakter:
Rienzi schrijdt op de
klanken van deze mars
naar een plechtige dienst
in de
kerk.
Entdecken
Sie Wagner neu mit
Rienzi, der Letzte der
Tribunen, einer Oper,
die heute nicht mehr zu
den bekanntesten Werken
Richard Wagners zählt,
aber seinerzeit sehr gut
beim Publikum ankam. Das
war auf zahlreiche
Elemente des Werkes
zurückzuführen:
Prozessionen, Märsche,
Schlachten, Hymnen, ein
großes Ballett,
Glockengeläut,
Trompetensignale und
vieles mehr. Wil van der
Beek wählte sich den
eher gedämpften,
ruhigen
Friedensmarsch aus
dem vierten Akt von
Rienzi für
diese attraktive
Blasorchesterbearbeitung
aus.
Richard
Wagner est un compositeur
unique dans
l’histoire. Il
enrichit
l’harmonie
d’agrégations
jusqu’alors
inusitées, ses
orchestrations sont
différentes de celles
de ses contemporains, ses
mélodies semblent
infinies, les leitmotiv
naissent avec fluidité
et ses thèmes
d’opéras sont
en rupture avec les
courants de
l’époque.
Rienzi (1840) est
une oeuvre de jeunesse
qui contient en germe
tous ces éléments
innovateurs.
Friedensmarsch est
une marche la fois sombre
et majestueuse extraite
de l’Acte IV,
scène 2 de
l’opéra.
Richard Wagner è un
compositore unico:
arricchisce
l’armonia di
aggregazioni fino ad
allora non utilizzate, le
sue orchestrazioni sono
diverse da quelle dei
suoi contemporanei, le
sue melodie sembrano
infinite, i leitmotif
nascono con fluidit e i
temi delle sue opere sono
in rottura con le
correnti
dell’epoca.
Rienzi (1840) è
un’opera che
contiene tutti questi
elementi innovatori.
Friedensmarsch
è una marcia cupa, ma
allo stesso tempo
maestosa, estratta
dall’Atto IV,
scena 2
dell’opera. $137.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| At the Ballet Shawnee Press
Choral (Studiotrax CD) SKU: HL.35031445 Composed by Marvin Hamlisch. Arra...(+)
Choral (Studiotrax CD)
SKU: HL.35031445
Composed by Marvin
Hamlisch. Arranged by
Pete Schmutte. Shawnee
Press. Broadway. CD.
Published by Shawnee
Press (HL.35031445).
ISBN 9781495088728.
UPC: 888680666880.
5.0x5.0x0.165
inches. From the
musical, A Chorus Line,
and most recently
recorded by Barbra
Streisand on her album
Encore: Movie Partners
Sing Broadway, this
poignant song is one that
composer Marvin Hamlisch
said set the tone for all
the music in the show.
The dancers explain their
experiences with
attending dance school
and no matter how dark
the rest of their world
seems, they always feel
happy at the ballet.. $26.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| At the Ballet Chorale 3 parties SSA Shawnee Press
Choral (SSA Choir) SKU: HL.35031443 Composed by Marvin Hamlisch. Arranged...(+)
Choral (SSA Choir)
SKU: HL.35031443
Composed by Marvin
Hamlisch. Arranged by
Pete Schmutte. Shawnee
Press. Broadway. Octavo.
16 pages. Published by
Shawnee Press
(HL.35031443). ISBN
9781495088704. UPC:
888680666866. 6.75x10.5
inches. From the
musical, A Chorus
Line, and most
recently recorded by
Barbra Streisand on her
album Encore: Movie
Partners Sing
Broadway, this
poignant song is one that
composer Marvin Hamlisch
said “set the
tone” for all the
music in the show. The
dancers explain their
experiences with
attending dance school
and no matter how dark
the rest of their world
seems, they always feel
happy “at the
ballet.&rdquo. $2.25 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Ballet Music Orchestre Barenreiter
Orchestra SKU: BA.BA05822-01 Composed by Christoph Willibald Von Gluck. E...(+)
Orchestra SKU:
BA.BA05822-01
Composed by Christoph
Willibald Von Gluck.
Edited by Irene
Brandenburg. Arranged by
Carlo Bernardi and
Gasparo Angiolini. This
edition: complete
edition, urtext edition.
Linen. Complete edition,
Score. Baerenreiter
Verlag #BA05822-01.
Published by Baerenreiter
Verlag (BA.BA05822-01).
ISBN 9790006567454. 33
x 26 cm inches. Preface:
Brown, Bruce
Alan. To conclude
Series II (Dance Dramas)
from the Gluck Complete
Edition (GGA), this
volume of Christoph
Willibald Gluck's
earliest contributions to
the genre comprises six
ballet scores from 1759
(La Promenade, Les
Jardiniers, Les Turcs,
Les Savoiards, Les Amours
de Flore et Zphire, and
Le Suisse) as well as the
ballet music for Les
Vendanges, which dates
from 1761. These works
belong to the
compositions â also
called Krumau ballets
because of their musical
transmission â which
Gluck created in Vienna
between 1759 and 1765 for
the court theatres in
Laxenburg and
Schönbrunn as well as
the
Kärntnertortheater,
and which are to be
attributed to him as a
ballet composer around
the middle of the 18th
century in Viennese
theatre life based on the
considerations presented
in the general
preface.
Together
with volumes II/3 to
II/5, ballet music by
Gluck is available whose
sources come from the
former Schwarzenberg
court archive in Ceský
Krumlov, Czech Republic,
and which until the
Velvet Revolution of
1989, lay behind the Iron
Curtain remaining largely
inaccessible and
unexplored by Western
scholars. These volumes
reflect two fundamental
developments in Gluck
research: on the one
hand, they provide a
significantly expanded,
historically more
accurate idea of what it
meant to compose for the
ballet in the 18th
century; on the other
hand, they bring to light
an immense treasure trove
of sources formerly of
Viennese
provenance.
In
addition to the detailed
introduction by this
volumeâs editor on
the ballet choreographies
of Gasparo Angiolini and
Carlo Bernardi, on the
formation of the ballet
troupes of the Viennese
theatres in Gluck's early
years there, on ballet
types and genres, as well
as a detailed account of
the individual titles,
the volume includes a
general preface to
volumes II/3 through II/5
by Bruce Alan Brown,
which discusses Gluck's
ballet music in Vienna in
general as well as the
development of research
into this genre.
Extensive illustrations
(partly from the
so-called Durazzo
Collection) with
reference to the
choreographies enrich the
discussions. The ballet
works, which have
survived in only one
source each, appear in
print for the first time
in this volume of the
Gluck Complete
Edition.
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
$535.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Gymnopedie No. 1 Saxophone Alto et Piano Schott
Alto Saxophone and Piano Alto Saxophone; Piano Accompaniment (Score and Solo Par...(+)
Alto Saxophone and Piano
Alto Saxophone; Piano
Accompaniment (Score and
Solo Part) SKU:
HL.49044150
Arranged for Alto
Saxophone and Piano.
Composed by Erik Satie.
Arranged by Wolfgang
Birtel. This edition:
Saddle stitching. Sheet
music. Woodwind.
Classical. Softcover.
Composed 1888. 4 pages.
Schott Music #ED09953.
Published by Schott Music
(HL.49044150). ISBN
9790001181679. UPC:
841886018457.
9.0x12.0x0.058
inches. Mit einem
Paukenschlag wurde die
Musikwelt auf Erik Satie
(1866-1925) aufmerksam:
Als am 18. Mai 1817 sein
Ballett 'Parade'
uraufgefuhrt wurde, kam
es zum Skandal. Die
Produktion, an der auch
Sergei Djagilew mit
seinen 'Ballets Russes',
Pablo Picasso (Buhnenbild
und Kostume), Jean
Cocteau (Handlung) sowie
Leonide Massine
(Choreographie) beteiligt
waren, entzweite die
Pariser Musikwelt, machte
den Komponisten aber
weithin bekannt. Satie,
der kaum eine fundierte
musikalische Ausbildung
genossen hatte und fast
zeit seines Lebens in
Paris lebte, entwickelte
einen neuen musikalischen
Stil, in bewusster Abkehr
vom 'Wagnerisme' seiner
Zeit. Klassische
Formmodelle, neue
Harmonik, Leichtigkeit im
Stil, Meditatives und
Clowneskes verschmolzen
originell. Zum
Musterbeispiel dafur sind
seine '3 Gymnopedies' von
1888 geworden, deren
erste hier fur ein
Soloinstrument mit
Klavierbegleitung
arrangiert wurde: Das
Musizieren dieser
beruhmtesten Miniatur von
Satie wird damit auch
Nicht-Pianisten
ermoglichst - die
einfache Spielbarkeit
erlaubt den Einsatz auch
fur padagogische
Zwecke. $6.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Friedensmarsch Orchestre d'harmonie [Conducteur] - Facile De Haske Publications
Concert Band/Harmonie - Grade 3 SKU: BT.DHP-1064021-140 From Rienzi(+)
Concert Band/Harmonie -
Grade 3 SKU:
BT.DHP-1064021-140
From Rienzi.
Composed by Richard
Wagner. Arranged by Wil
van der Beek. The Great
Classics. Transcription.
Score Only. Composed
2006. De Haske
Publications #DHP
1064021-140. Published by
De Haske Publications
(BT.DHP-1064021-140).
9x12 inches.
English-German-French-Dut
ch. Rienzi remains
one of the most popular
works from the ?master of
romantic opera?, Richard
Wagner. The
Friedensmarsch from the
fourth act (scene 2) of
Rienzi is subdued and
solemn in character: in
the sounds of this march,
Rienzi strides to a
stately church service.
This is sure to be a very
popular addition to any
performance and is one
not to be missed.
Entdecken Sie
Wagner neu mit Rienzi,
der Letzte der
Tribunen, einer Oper,
die heute nicht mehr zu
den bekanntesten Werken
Richard Wagners zählt,
aber seinerzeit sehr gut
beim Publikum ankam. Das
war auf zahlreiche
Elemente des Werkes
zurückzuführen:
Prozessionen, Märsche,
Schlachten, Hymnen, ein
großes Ballett,
Glockengeläut,
Trompetensignale und
vieles mehr. Wil van der
Beek wählte sich den
eher gedämpften,
ruhigen
Friedensmarsch aus
dem vierten Akt von
Rienzi für
diese attraktive
Blasorchesterbearbeitung
aus.
Richard
Wagner est un compositeur
unique dans
l’histoire. Il
enrichit
l’harmonie
d’agrégations
jusqu’alors
inusitées, ses
orchestrations sont
différentes de celles
de ses contemporains, ses
mélodies semblent
infinies, les leitmotiv
naissent avec fluidité
et ses thèmes
d’opéras sont
en rupture avec les
courants de
l’époque.
Rienzi (1840) est
une oeuvre de jeunesse
qui contient en germe
tous ces éléments
innovateurs.
Friedensmarsch est
une marche la fois sombre
et majestueuse extraite
de l’Acte IV,
scène 2 de
l’opéra.
Richard Wagner è un
compositore unico:
arricchisce
l’armonia di
aggregazioni fino ad
allora non utilizzate, le
sue orchestrazioni sono
diverse da quelle dei
suoi contemporanei, le
sue melodie sembrano
infinite, i leitmotif
nascono con fluidit e i
temi delle sue opere sono
in rottura con le
correnti
dell’epoca.
Rienzi (1840) è
un’opera che
contiene tutti questi
elementi innovatori.
Friedensmarsch
è una marcia cupa, ma
allo stesso tempo
maestosa, estratta
dall’Atto IV,
scena 2
dell’opera. $17.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
|
|