Page d'accueil
Parcourir Free-scores.com
Hardebeck, Carl G.
Irlande
(1869 - 1945)
2 partitions
SUIVRE
1
Ses partitions:
LISTE & CRITÈRES
2
COMPOSITIONS A-Z
2
INSTRUMENTATIONS
Autres artistes irlandais
Partitions Gratuites
Instruments
ACCORDEON
ALTO
AUTRES INST…
BALALAIKA
BANJO
BASSE
BASSON
BATTERIE
BOUZOUKI
BUGLE
CHANT - CHO…
CHARANGO
CITHARE
CLAIRON
CLARINETTE
CLAVECIN
CLOCHES
CONTREBASSE
COR
COR ANGLAIS
CORNEMUSE
CORNET
DOBRO - GUI…
DULCIMER
EUPHONIUM
FANFARE - B…
FLUTE
FLUTE A BEC
FLUTE A DIX…
FLUTE DE PA…
FORMATION M…
GUITARE
GUITARE PED…
HARMONICA
HARPE
HAUTBOIS
LIVRES
LUTH, THEOR…
MANDOLINE
MARIMBA
ORCHESTRE
ORGUE
OUD
PARTITIONS …
PAS DE PART…
PERCU. ORCH…
PERCUSSION
PIANO
SAXOPHONE
SYNTHE
TROMBONE
TROMPETTE
TUBA
UKULELE
VIBRAPHONE
VIELLE A RO…
VIOLE DE GA…
VIOLON
VIOLONCELLE
XYLOPHONE
CRITÈRES :
Niveaux de difficulté
Non définis (évaluez!)
2
Débutant (0)
Facile (0)
Intermédiaire (0)
Avancé (0)
Expert (0)
Compositeur
Carl G. Hardebeck
Arrangeur
Compositeurs
Instrumentations
Top Téléchargements
Nouveautés
Partitions de Noël
Genres Musicaux
Genres Musicaux
Achats pour Musiciens
Partitions Numériques
Librairie Musicale
Matériel de musique
Idées cadeaux
Autres Services
Autres Services
Top 100
Annuaire Web
Portées musicales
Metronome
A propos de free-scores.com
"Depuis 25 ans nous vous fournissons un service gratuit et légal de téléchargement de partitions gratuites.
Si vous utilisez et appréciez Free-scores.com, merci d'envisager un don de soutien."
€
€
EUR €
USD $
GBP £
CAD $
CNY ¥
English
Partitions Gratuite
Partitions Numériques
Librairie Musicale
Matériel de Musique
Carl G. Hardebeck
(1869 - 1945)
Irlande
Carl Gilbert Hardebeck (Carl G. Hardebec) (10 December 1869 – 10 February 1945) was an Irish composer and arranger of traditional music.
Hardebeck, whose father was German and mother was Welsh, was born in Clerkenwell, London. He lost his sight when he was a baby. He attended the Royal Normal School for the Blind in London (1880–1892) where, under his teacher Frederick Corder (a professor from the Royal Academy of Music), he showed a marked aptitude for music.
In 1893, at the age of t
wenty-four, he moved to Belfast, where he opened a music store, but the venture failed and he became the organist of a small parish in the city, the Holy Family Church, Wellington Place.[2] He entered an anthem, O God of My Salvation for contralto and chorus for the 1897 Dublin Feis Ceoil, and won; on this occasion he heard folk song arrangements of Charles Villiers Stanford and others for the first time.[3] At the 1901 Feis Ceoil, he again won a prize, this time for a large cantata, The Red Hand of Ulster. In 1919, he was to become the director of the music school in Cork and became the first professor of Irish music at University College Cork in 1922.[4] Ill-suited for administrative tasks, he relinquished the post after one year and returned to Belfast, which after the Irish Civil War had become the capital of Northern Ireland. In 1932, he finally settled in Dublin, where he worked for An Gúm, the Irish government publisher, as arranger of Irish traditional songs for piano and choirs, many of which became teaching material at schools in the nascent Republic of Ireland. He also taught Irish and traditional music in the Dublin Municipal School of Music for two years. On many occasions he acted as adjudicator in singing and musical competitions across Ireland.
Despite his mixed German/Welsh/English background, the events of the 1913 Dublin Lock-out, the outbreak of World War I, and the 1916 Easter Rising radicalised him, turning him into an Irish nationalist. He was quoted as saying 'I believe in God, Beethoven and Patrick Pearse'.[5] He studied the Irish language and collected folk songs from around the country, making some unique arrangements that bridged the gap between traditional and art song.
When Hardebeck died in 1945, a Radio Éireann-sponsored symphony concert, held in the Capitol Theatre in Dublin, began with a sympathetic performance of his orchestral variations upon Seoithín Seó. A state funeral was held in Saint Joseph's Church, Berkeley Road, Dublin. The church was packed; various government ministers, the Lord Mayor and representatives of the President and of Éamon de Valera were there. Hardebeck's own Kyrie and Agnus Dei were performed at the requiem mass. He was interred in Glasnevin Cemetery, where a Benedictus was chanted by the clergy present. A vote of sympathy was issued by the Irish National League of the Blind to Hardebeck's widow and relatives, in which the hope was expressed 'that the nation as a whole would not be unmindful of the important contribution which the late Dr Hardebeck had made to Irish culture, music and art'.
(Retracter)
...
(lire la suite)
Source de l'extrait biographique :
Wikipedia
Artistes
⮞
Moderne
⮞
Carl G. Hardebeck
PARTITIONS GRATUITES
20EME SIECLE
← CRITÈRES Carl G. Hardebeck
FILTRES
FILTRES
Médias
(Tous)
avec MP3
avec VIDEO
avec MIDI
avec Play-along (MP3)
Interpretées (MP3)
Tout niveau
Débutant
Facile
Intermédiaire
Avancé
Expert
Non évaluées
Type d'oeuvre
(Tous)
Compositions de membres
Classiques & Arrangements
Critères actifs:
Carl-G-Hardebeck
20eme siecle
Partitions numériques (guide d'achat)
Recherche#Carl-G-Hardebeck #20eme siecle
Aucun résultat
Shop des partitions numériques
"Depuis 25 ans nous vous fournissons un service gratuit et légal de téléchargement de partitions gratuites.
Si vous utilisez et appréciez Free-scores.com, merci d'envisager un don de soutien."
A propos & Témoignages de membres