| 3e Symphonie en ut mineur, op. 78 - Avancé Barenreiter
Orchestra, Organ (Fl1, Fl2 , Fl3(Fl-picc), 2 Ob, EnglHn, 2 clarinet, clarinet-B,...(+)
Orchestra, Organ (Fl1,
Fl2 , Fl3(Fl-picc), 2 Ob,
EnglHn, 2 clarinet,
clarinet-B, 2 bassoon,
bassoon-Co, Hn1, Hn2 ,
Hn3(chrom.), Hn4(chrom.),
3Trp, 3trombone, timpani,
Tr-Gr, Tri, Be, Org,
piano-4ms, 2 Violin,
Viola, Cello, Double
Bass) - Level 5 SKU:
BA.BA10303-01
Composed by Camille
Saint-Saens. Edited by
Michael Stegemann. This
edition: Edition of
selected works, Urtext
edition. Linen.
Saint-Saens, Camille.
Oevres instrumentales
completes I/3. Edition of
selected works, Score.
Opus 78. Duration 39
minutes. Baerenreiter
Verlag #BA10303_01.
Published by Baerenreiter
Verlag (BA.BA10303-01).
ISBN 9790006559503. 33
x 26 cm inches. Key: C
minor. Preface: Michael
Stegemann. The
third symphony by Camille
Saint-Saens, known as the
Organ Symphony, is the
first publication in a
complete
historical-critical
edition of the French
composer's instrumental
works.
I gave
everything I was able to
give in this work. [...]
What I have done here I
will never be able to do
again.Camille Saint-Saens
was rightly proud of his
third Symphony in C minor
Op.78, dedicated to the
memory of Franz Liszt.
Called theOrgan
Symphonybecause of its
novel scoring, the work
was a commission from the
Philharmonic Society in
London, as was
Beethoven's Ninth, and
was premiered there on 19
May 1886. The first
performance in Paris
followed on 9 January
1887 and confirmed the
composer's reputation
asprobably the most
significant, and
certainly the most
independent French
symphonistof his time, as
Ludwig Finscher wrote in
MGG. In fact the work
remains the only one in
the history of that genre
in France to the present
day, composed a good half
century after the
Symphonie fantastique by
Hector Berlioz and a good
half century before
Olivier Messiaen's
Turangalila
Symphonie.
You
would think that such a
famous, much-performed
and much recorded opus
could not hold any more
secrets, but far from it:
in the first
historical-critical
edition of the Symphony,
numerous inconsistencies
and mistakes in the
Durand edition in general
use until now, have been
uncovered and corrected.
An examination and
evaluation of the sources
ranged from two early
sketches, now preserved
in Paris and Washington
(in which the Symphony
was still in B minor!)
via the autograph
manuscript and a set of
proofs corrected by
Saint-Saens himself, to
the first and subsequent
editions of the full
score and parts. The
versions for piano duet
(by Leon Roques) and for
two pianos (by the
composer himself) were
also consulted. Further
crucial information was
finally found in his
extensive correspondence,
encompassing thousands of
previously unpublished
letters. The discoveries
made in producing this
edition include the fact
that at its London
premiere, the Symphony
probably looked quite
different from its
present appearance
...
No less
exciting than the work
itself is the history of
its composition and
reception, which are
described in an extensive
foreword. With his
Symphony, Saint-Saens
entered right into the
dispute which divided
French musical life into
pro and contra Wagner in
the 1880s and 1890s. At
the same time, the work
succeeded in preserving
the balance between
tradition and modernism
in masterly fashion, as a
contemporary critic
stated:The C minor
Symphony by Saint-Saens
creates a bridge from the
past into the future,
from immortal richness to
progress, from ideas to
their
implementation.
On
19 March 1886 Saint-Saens
wrote to the London
Philharmonic Society,
which commissioned the
work:
Work on the
symphony is in full
swing. But I warn you, it
will be terrible. Here is
the precise
instrumentation: 3 flutes
/ 2 oboes / 1 cor anglais
/ 2 clarinets / 1 bass
clarinet / 2 bassoons / 1
contrabassoon / 2 natural
horns / [3 trumpets /
Saint-Saens had forgotten
these in his listing.] 2
chromatic horns / 3
trombones / 1 tuba / 3
timpani / organ / 1 piano
duet and the strings, of
course. Fortunately,
there are no harps.
Unfortunately it will be
difficult. I am doing
what I can to mitigate
the
difficulties.
As
in my 4th Concerto [for
piano] and my [1st]
Violin Sonata [in D minor
Op.75] at first glance
there appear to be just
two parts: the first
Allegro and the Adagio,
the Scherzo and the
Finale, each attacca.
This fiendish symphony
has crept up by a
semitone; it did not want
to stay in B minor, and
is now in C
minor.
It would be
a pleasure for me to
conduct this symphony.
Whether it would be a
pleasure for others to
hear it? That is the
question. It is you who
wanted it, I wash my
hands of it. I will bring
the orchestral parts
carefully corrected with
me, and if anyone wants
to give me a nice
rehearsal for the
symphony after the full
rehearsal, everything
will be fine.
When
Saint-Saens hit upon the
idea of adding an organ
and a piano to the usual
orchestral scoring is not
known. The idea of adding
an organ part to a
secular orchestral work
intended for the concert
hall was thoroughly novel
- and not without
controversy. On the other
hand, Franz Liszt, whose
music Saint-Saens'
Symphony is so close to,
had already demonstrated
that the organ could
easily be an orchestral
instrument in his
symphonic poem
Hunnenschlacht (1856/57).
There was also a model
for the piano duet part
which Saint-Saens knew
and may possibly have
used quite consciously as
an exemplar: theFantaisie
sur la Tempetefrom the
lyrical monodrama Lelio,
ou le retour a la Vie op.
14bis (1831) by Berlioz.
The name of the organist
at the premiere ist
unknown, as,
incidentally, was also
the case with many of the
later performances; the
organ part is indeed not
soloistic, but should be
understood as part of the
orchestral
texture.
In fact
the subsequent success of
the symphony seems to
have represented a kind
of breakthrough for the
composer, who was then
over 50 years of age.My
dear composer of a famous
symphony, wrote
Saint-Saens' friend and
pupil Gabriel Faure:You
will never be able to
imagine what a pleasure I
had last Sunday [at the
second performance on 16
January 1887]! And I had
the score and did not
miss a single note of
this Symphony, which will
endure much longer than
we two, even if we were
to join together our two
lifespans!
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
$566.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Wynwood Walls [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Avancé Doberman
Guitar and string quartet - Advanced SKU: DY.DO-1526 Composed by Stephen ...(+)
Guitar and string quartet
- Advanced SKU:
DY.DO-1526 Composed
by Stephen Goss. Score
and parts. Les Editions
Doberman-Yppan #DO 1526.
Published by Les Editions
Doberman-Yppan
(DY.DO-1526). ISBN
9782897963064. Wynw
ood Walls draws on 9
artworks which lend their
titles to the 9 connected
sections of the quintet.
The music reflects and
amplifies my own
subjective responses to
the artworks.
The
movements are organised
in pairs, circling out
from a still centre –
No Woman, No Cry. The
title for this
centrepiece comes from
Chris Ofili’s moving
portrait of Doreen
Lawrence, the mother of a
teenager murdered in an
unprovoked racist attack.
As well as this specific
reference, the artist
intended the painting to
be read as a universal
portrayal of melancholy,
solace, and grief. The
two segments flanking No
Woman, No Cry complete
the central triptych.
Edward Hopper’s
Nighthawks explores
loneliness and isolation,
while Grayson Perry’s
#Lamentation is a
meditation on remembrance
and the transience of
life. In contrast to the
rest of Wynwood Walls,
the music here is dark
and
introspective.
I
want my time with you is
a giant neon sign
designed by Tracey Emin
for St. Pancras Station,
London. Selfie with
Sunflowers is an essay
written by Julian Barnes
about our
over-familiarisation with
Van Gogh’s iconic
sunflower paintings. The
music is sentimental,
bordering on schmaltz and
kitsch. Sunflower Seeds
and Infinity Room are a
pair of moto perpetuo
scherzos inspired by the
minimalist installations
of Ai Weiwei and Yayoi
Kusama respectively. The
opening section, Bathers
at Asnières, suggests
Seurat’s iconic
painting, while the
finale, Seurat’s
Bathers, evokes Howard
Hodgkin’s reworking of
the Seurat using a blaze
of vivid
colours.
The title
of the quintet is
borrowed from the Wynwood
art district of Miami –
an area characterised by
the hundreds of colourful
street murals which
decorate the walls of old
warehouses in the
neighbourhood. In
performance, the artworks
can be projected onto a
screen behind the
ensemble.
Wynwood
Walls s'appuient sur 9
œuvres d'art dont les
titres prêtent leurs
noms aux 9 sections
connectées du quintette.
La musique reflète et
amplifie mes propres
réponses subjectives aux
œuvres d'art.
Les
mouvements sont
organisés par paires,
émergeant d'un centre
immobile - No Woman, No
Cry. Le titre de cette
pièce maîtresse
provient du portrait
émouvant de Chris Ofili
de Doreen Lawrence, la
mère d'un adolescent
assassiné lors d'une
attaque raciste gratuite.
En plus de cette
référence spécifique,
l'artiste a voulu que le
tableau soit perçu comme
une représentation
universelle de la
mélancolie, du
réconfort et du chagrin.
Les deux segments
flanquant No Woman, No
Cry complètent le
triptyque central.
Nighthawks d'Edward
Hopper explore la
solitude et l'isolement,
tandis que #Lamentation
de Grayson Perry est une
méditation sur le
souvenir et la fugacité
de la vie. Contrairement
au reste des Wynwood
Walls, la musique ici est
sombre et
introspective.
I
want my time with you est
un immense panneau néon
conçu par Tracey Emin
pour la gare de St.
Pancras, à Londres.
Selfie with Sunflowers
est un essai écrit par
Julian Barnes sur notre
sur-familiarisation avec
les peintures
emblématiques de
tournesols de Van Gogh.
La musique est
sentimentale, frôlant le
kitsch et le
sentimentalisme.
Sunflower Seeds et
Infinity Room sont une
paire de scherzos moto
perpetuo inspirés des
installations
minimalistes d'Ai Weiwei
et de Yayoi Kusama
respectivement. La
section d'ouverture,
Bathers at Asnières,
suggère le tableau
emblématique de Seurat,
tandis que le finale,
Seurat’s Bathers,
évoque la
réinterprétation de
Seurat par Howard Hodgkin
en utilisant une
explosion de couleurs
vives.
Le titre du
quintette est emprunté
au quartier artistique de
Wynwood à Miami - une
zone caractérisée par
les centaines de fresques
murales colorées qui
ornent les murs des vieux
entrepôts du quartier.
En performance, les
œuvres d'art peuvent
être projetées sur un
écran derrière
l'ensemble. $38.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| A Love Supreme Big band [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Avancé Jazz Lines Publications
Recorded by the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra. Arranged by Wynton Marsali...(+)
Recorded by the
Lincoln Center Jazz
Orchestra. Arranged
by Wynton Marsalis. Jazz,
Swing. Score and parts.
Published by Jazz Lines
Publications
(JL.JLP-7420).
$150.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Lua para o Epilogo de Verão (Août) [Conducteur] - Avancé Productions OZ
Guitar solo - Advanced SKU: DZ.DZ-4088 Composed by Louis Trépanier. Scor...(+)
Guitar solo - Advanced
SKU: DZ.DZ-4088
Composed by Louis
Trépanier. Score. Les
Productions d'OZ #DZ
4088. Published by Les
Productions d'OZ
(DZ.DZ-4088). ISBN
9782898522055. Augu
st nights can be tinged
with a bit of melancholy
because the end of the
summer approaches. The
moon softly glows with
nostalgia for a season
passing us by. This mood
seems to me folded into
the Brazilian Bossa Nova,
and the Brazilians’
term ‘saudade’; in
this piece I offer up my
tribute to one of my
favourite composers,
Radamés Gnattali
(1906-1988), who wrote
for every musical
situation in his era in
Brazil – from the
concert stage to the back
alley, and everything in
between. Lua para Epilogo
de Verão, is dedicated
to the Brazilian
guitarist Fabio Zanon,
who is both a great
friend and a tremendous
inspiration. This
étude tackles solid
chords and contrary
motion in the left hand,
and, like all the études
in this collection, voice
separation and phrasing.
In measure 24 the
guitarist must execute a
diagonal barré, where
the first finger covers
position IV at the first
string, and position V at
the fifth string, hence
the V/IV indication after
the barré symbol. The
practicalities of
navigating through the
different chord shapes
and rhythms in the piece
mean that not all notes
can be held for their
full, written value. Such
discrepancies between the
text and the playing are
common in this style of
music.
Les nuits
du mois d’août peuvent
contenir une douce
mélancolie, à savoir
que la fin de l’été
approche. La lune luit
alors avec une nostalgie
pour la saison qui est
déjà en train de
passer. Cette saveur me
semble parfaitement
miroitée dans les
couleurs de la bossa nova
brésilienne et le terme
brésilien « saudade »
; dans cette pièce je
vous offre mon hommage au
style d’un de mes
compositeurs préféré,
Radamés Gnattali
(1906-1988), qui a su
créer des musiques pour
tous les différents
musiciens de ses années
au Brésil, de la salle
de concert, jusqu’à la
ruelle. Lua para Epilogo
de Verão est dédié au
guitariste brésilien
Fabio Zanon, un bon ami,
et une grande
inspiration. Cette
étude travaille les
accords plaqués et
divers mouvements
contraires à la main
gauche, et, comme toutes
les études de cette
collection, la
séparation de voix et le
phrasé. À la mesure 24,
on doit exécuter un
barré en diagonal, où
le premier doigt un est
à la position IV à la
première corde, et à la
position V à la
cinquième corde, d’où
l’indication V/IV
suivant le symbole du
barré. Pour des raisons
pratiques à naviguer les
accords et les rythmes de
cette pièce, vous verrez
qu’il n’est pas
toujours possible de
tenir toutes les notes
pour leur durée
complète. Ces
différences entre
l’écriture et
l’exécution sont
courantes dans ce style
de musique. $6.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Suite No. 1 Guitare Guitare classique [Conducteur] - Avancé Productions OZ
Guitar solo - Advanced SKU: DZ.DZ-4308 Composed by Giorgio Mirto. Score. ...(+)
Guitar solo - Advanced
SKU: DZ.DZ-4308
Composed by Giorgio
Mirto. Score. Les
Productions d'OZ #DZ
4308. Published by Les
Productions d'OZ
(DZ.DZ-4308). ISBN
9782898522253. Foll
owing a recent experience
on the jury of a guitar
competition, I noted with
great pleasure that
Giorgio Mirto, with whom
I had shared the role of
juror, wanted to
celebrate the experience
of the competition -
during from which we
discovered that we had
had a great affinity of
thought - with something
which could endure over
time and not evaporate as
often happens in short
and occasional meetings
between musicians. He did
it as a true composer,
which he is, and
dedicated to me a very
beautifully crafted Suite
to which I allowed myself
to collaborate at least
formally, by suggesting
titles for the four
movements. This is how
Suite n.1 was born, a
piece that does not
strictly respect the
formal rules of the
Baroque era, but
reinterprets and reuses
them in a new key. The
work's obvious late
Baroque inspiration led
me to find titles that
invited the performer to
delve deeper into the
work's aesthetic
inspiration. So I
suggested to Giorgio that
he title the four
movements with something
that linked their content
to four greats of the
18th century. German
masters. The prelude has
thus become from Eisenach
because of its sometimes
improvised Bach-like
atmosphere, the second
movement, vaguely
toccata, speaks an organ
language in the manner of
Buxtehude (who lived in
Lübeck), the slow
movement has a Handelian
quality - and Handel was
born in Halle - and the
last movement, far from
being a true Chaconne,
undoubtedly has the
latter's taste for
variation and ostinato,
typical traits of
Telemann who lived in
Magdeburg. The cities
that appear in the titles
are therefore indelible
to the authors cited.
Furthermore, one should
not think that the style
of the work is in any way
German, given that
Giorgio Mirto expresses
himself in a very joyful
language that synthesizes
modality with minimalism,
all seasoned with a a nod
to Pink's progressive
rock Floyd. or a Mike
Oldfield... The result of
this mixture of ideas,
inspirations and styles
is a work that personally
I never tire of reading
and rereading, for the
freshness that emanates
from it and for the
climate expressive which
rises, nourishing itself
with full efficiency. We
ultimately cannot ignore
that the note B, the one
which marks in a minor
way some of the most
expressive works of the
guitar repertoire, from
the study of Sor which
made generations of
students fall in love
with the guitar, until to
that of Frank Martin's
Four Pieces via La
Catedral di Barrios, is
the modal fulcrum of the
entire Suite: it is true
that the Prelude begins
with a clear chord in E
minor and lingers on an
open ending in A minor ,
but it almost seems that
the initial E serves as a
launching pad for a
continuation of the work
in which the dominant,
that is to say the B, is
the true musical North,
the pole star which
guides us in the other
three movements until the
end of the Chaconne de
Magdebourg. I wish
Giorgio and our Suite
great longevity and a
favorable destiny in the
complex and complex world
of contemporary guitar
composition. And I thank
him again, flattered by
his very kind
dedication.
FRANCE
SCO BIRAGHI
Au
lendemain d'une
récente
expérience au sein
du jury d'un concours de
guitare, j'ai
constaté avec
grand plaisir que Giorgio
Mirto, avec qui j'avais
partagé le
rôle de
juré, souhaitait
célébrer
l'expérience du
concours - au cours de
laquelle nous avons
découvert que nous
avions eu un grand
affinité de
pensée - avec
quelque chose qui
pourrait perdurer dans le
temps et ne pas
s'évaporer comme
cela arrive souvent lors
de rencontres courtes et
occasionnelles entre
musiciens. Il l'a fait en
véritable
compositeur, ce qu'il
est, et m'a
dédié une
Suite d'une très
belle facture ÃÂ
laquelle je me suis
permis de collaborer au
moins formellement, en
suggérant des
titres pour les quatre
mouvements. C'est ainsi
qu'est née la
Suite n.1, une
pièce qui ne
respecte pas strictement
les règles
formelles de
l'époque baroque,
mais les
réinterprèt
e et les réutilise
dans une nouvelle
tonalité.
L'inspiration
évidente du
baroque tardif de
l'Ã
Âuvre m'a
amené ÃÂ
trouver des titres qui
invitaient
l'interprète
ÃÂ approfondir
l'inspiration
esthétique de
l'Ã
Âuvre. J'ai donc
suggéré
ÃÂ Giorgio de
titrer les quatre
mouvements avec quelque
chose qui reliait leur
contenu ÃÂ quatre
grands du XVIIIe
siècle.
Maîtres allemands.
Le prélude est
ainsi devenu d'Eisenach
en raison de son
atmosphère parfois
improvisée
ÃÂ la Bach, le
deuxième
mouvement, vaguement
toccata, parle un langage
d'orgue ÃÂ la
manière de
Buxtehude (qui vivait
àLübeck),
le mouvement lent a un
Qualité
haendélienne - et
Haendel est né
ÃÂ Halle - et le
dernier mouvement, loin
d'être une
véritable
Chaconne, a sans doute le
goût de cette
dernière pour la
variation et l'ostinato,
traits typiques de
Telemann qui vivait
ÃÂ Magdebourg. Les
villes qui apparaissent
dans les titres sont donc
indélébiles
aux auteurs cités.
De plus, il ne faut pas
penser que le style de
l'Ã
Âuvre soit en
aucune façon
allemand, étant
donné que Giorgio
Mirto s'exprime dans un
langage très
joyeux qui
synthétise la
modalité avec le
minimalisme, le tout
assaisonné d'un
clin d'Ã
Âil au rock
progressif Floyd de Pink.
ou un Mike Oldfield... Le
résultat de ce
mélange
d'idées,
d'inspirations et de
styles est un ouvrage que
personnellement je ne me
lasse pas de lire et de
relire, pour la
fraîcheur qui s'en
dégage et pour le
climat expressif qui
monte, se nourrissant de
plein efficacité.
On ne peut finalement pas
ignorer que la note B,
celle qui marque de
manière mineure
certaines des
Ã
Âuvres les plus
expressives du
répertoire de
guitare, depuis
l'étude de Sor qui
a fait tomber amoureux de
la guitare des
générations
d'étudiants,
jusqu'ÃÂ celle de
Frank Martin Quatre
Pièces via La
Catedral di Barrios, est
le point d'appui modal de
toute la Suite : il est
vrai que le
Prélude commence
par un accord clair en mi
mineur et s'attarde sur
une fin ouverte en la
mineur, mais il semble
presque que le mi initial
sert de une rampe de
lancement pour une suite
de l'Ã
Âuvre dans
laquelle la dominante,
c'est-ÃÂ -dire le B,
est le véritable
Nord musical,
l'étoile polaire
qui nous guide dans les
trois autres mouvements
jusqu'ÃÂ la fin de
la Chaconne de
Magdebourg. Je souhaite
ÃÂ Giorgio et
àë notre
û Suite une grande
longévité
et un destin favorable
dans le monde complexe et
complexe de la
composition contemporaine
pour guitare. Et je le
remercie encore,
flatté de son
très aimable
dévouement.
FRANCESCO BIRAGHI. $12.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Vicente Amigo - Un Momento En El Sonido - 6 - Silia Y El Tiempo Guitare notes et tablatures - Avancé
Composed by Vicente Amigo. Arranged by Adrian Teodorov. World, Pop. Lead She...(+)
Composed by Vicente
Amigo.
Arranged by Adrian
Teodorov.
World, Pop. Lead Sheet.
21
pages. Published by
Adrian
Teodorov
$35.00 - Voir plus => Acheter | | |
| Vicente Amigo - Memoria De Los Sentidos - 1 - Amorali Guitare notes et tablatures - Avancé
Composed by Vicente Amigo. Arranged by Adrian Teodorov. Latin Jazz, Latin. L...(+)
Composed by Vicente
Amigo.
Arranged by Adrian
Teodorov.
Latin Jazz, Latin. Lead
Sheet. 11 pages.
Published by
Adrian Teodorov
$35.00 - Voir plus => Acheter | | |
| Popular Performer -- Great American Songbook Complete Piano seul - Avancé Alfred Publishing
(The Best Hits from Timeless Songwriters). Arranged by Dan Coates. For Piano. ...(+)
(The Best Hits from
Timeless
Songwriters). Arranged by
Dan Coates. For Piano.
Book;
Piano Collection; Piano
Supplemental. Popular
Performer Series. Great
American Songbook;
Standard.
Advanced. 116 pages.
Published by Alfred Music
$19.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
Plus de résultats boutique >> |