| Tarantella Carl Fischer
Choral Double bass voice, Piano, Viola, Violin 1, Violin 2, SATB chorus SKU: ...(+)
Choral Double bass voice,
Piano, Viola, Violin 1,
Violin 2, SATB chorus
SKU: CF.CM9735
Jubilate Agno.
Composed by Z. Randall
Stroope. 16 pages.
Duration 0:03:05. Carl
Fischer Music #CM9735.
Published by Carl Fischer
Music (CF.CM9735).
ISBN 9781491161159.
UPC: 680160919741. Key: A
minor. Latin, English.
Christopher Smart and
ZRS. Origins of the
Tarantella The tarantella
is a popular southern
Italian dance with
origins in the 11th
century. (There is even
some mention of the
tarantella in ancient
Greek mythology.) Of the
possible sources of the
dance, the most popular
comes from the villages
of Tanto and Tarentum
(little spider), Italy.
During harvest, workers
in the field were
sometimes bitten by the
tarantula spider. To
combat the poison, the
afflicted workers went
into a frenetic, almost
musical exorcism to sweat
the venom out of their
pores. In the millennium
since, the very energetic
nature of the dance has
remained, although the
curative focus of the
dance has given way to
more enjoyable endeavors,
even stately courtship.
Origins of the Text
Christopher Smart
(1722-1771), also known
as Kit Smart or Jack
Smart, was born in Kent,
England and suffered from
what is now believed to
be acute asthma and other
health issues as a child.
As such, he did not work
in the fields, but spent
much time reading and
writing, a passion that
he nurtured for a
lifetime. Well known in
London literary circles,
his career as a writer
floundered due to
mounting debts and his
falling out of favor with
the literary
establishment: Sadly, he
was forced to confinement
at St. Luke's Hospital
for Lunatics, though this
was based on his mounting
debt, and not on
insanity. (Confinement,
or debtor's prison, was
common during this period
if one's debts could not
be paid.) During his
confinement, he worked on
two of his most famous
works, Jubilate Agno and
A Song of David. (Part of
Jubilate Agno [Rejoice in
the Lamb] was set to
music by English
composer, Benjamin
Britten.) Smart's writing
style (which, at times,
bordered on the absurd),
along with his many
obsessions, lead to
frequent misperceptions
of his work and his
lucidity. In this present
work, portions of Smart's
Jubilate Agno were used
in mm. 24-31, 103-110 and
149-156. The remaining
text was gathered by the
composer, including the
rapid, almost
patter-like, delivery of
words from A-Z in the
alphabet. (Christopher
Smart had a preoccupation
with the alphabet.) These
words both rhyme and
accentuate the frenetic
nature of the spider
dance: theraphosa
[teh-rah-fo-sa] a genus
of tarantula spiders
bellicose
[beh-lee-ko-sah] hostile;
aggressive odiosa
[o-dee-o-sa] hateful;
vexation tenebrosa
[teh-neh-bro-sa]
creeping; dark nemorosa
[neh-mo-ro-sa] wooded;
shady lapidosa
[lah-pee-do-sa] stony
area; gritty The
convergence, then, of the
medieval tarantella
(spider dance), the
writings of a brilliant
poet who bordered on the
absurd, and the infusion
of strong, descriptive
and otherwise random,
rhyming words,
synthesizes to make
dramatic lyrics for this
work. About the Composer
Z. Randall Stroope is an
American composer and
conductor. He has served
as Professor of Music at
three universities (an
Endowed Professor at
two), conducted 47
all-state choirs, and
directed over 40 times at
Carnegie Hall, among
other American venues.
Randall guest conducts
full-time, and composes
from his home studios on
Merritt Island, Florida
and in Sandia Park, New
Mexico. Performance Notes
Text: In Latin, the r is
flipped; use s instead of
z on endings such as
phosa, cosa, and so on;
the Latin o is a cross
between oh and aw; in the
transliteration above, I
chose to simply use an o
for consistency. The
director will blend the
oh and aw in the
rehearsals to his/her own
preference. Lastly,
tarantula is pronounced
tah-rah-n-too-lah (avoid
teh-ran-choo-luh) within
the confines of this
text. Stomp: This can be
done by the entire
chorus, or just the first
row. It is as much visual
as it is auditory. The
string quartet is
preferred over piano when
that option affords
itself. I created a piano
score that is a viable
option and included it in
the piano/vocal score if
a performance uses
chorus/piano. The
tarantella is a popular
southern Italian dance
with origins in the 11th
century. (There is even
some mention of the
tarantella in ancient
Greek mythology.) Of the
possible sources of the
dance, the most popular
comes from the villages
of Tanto and Tarentum
(“little
spiderâ€), Italy.
During harvest, workers
in the field were
sometimes bitten by the
tarantula spider. To
combat the
“poison,†the
afflicted workers went
into a frenetic, almost
musical exorcism to sweat
the venom out of their
pores. In the millennium
since, the very energetic
nature of the dance has
remained, although the
curative focus of the
dance has given way to
more enjoyable endeavors,
even stately
courtship.Christopher
Smart (1722-1771), also
known as “Kit
Smart†or
“Jack Smart,â€
was born in Kent, England
and suffered from what is
now believed to be acute
asthma and other health
issues as a child. As
such, he did not work in
the fields, but spent
much time reading and
writing, a passion that
he nurtured for a
lifetime. Well known in
London literary circles,
his career as a writer
floundered due to
mounting debts and his
falling out of favor with
the literary
establishment: Sadly, he
was forced to confinement
at St. Luke’s
Hospital for Lunatics,
though this was based on
his mounting debt, and
not on insanity.
(Confinement, or
debtor’s prison,
was common during this
period if one’s
debts could not be paid.)
During his confinement,
he worked on two of his
most famous works,
Jubilate Agno and A Song
of David. (Part of
Jubilate Agno
[“Rejoice in the
Lambâ€] was set to
music by English
composer, Benjamin
Britten.) Smart’s
writing style (which, at
times, bordered on the
absurd), along with his
many obsessions, lead to
frequent misperceptions
of his work and his
lucidity. In this present
work, portions of
Smart’s Jubilate
Agno were used in mm.
24-31, 103-110 and
149-156. The remaining
text was gathered by the
composer, including the
rapid, almost
patter-like, delivery of
words from A-Z in the
alphabet. (Christopher
Smart had a preoccupation
with the alphabet.) These
words both rhyme and
accentuate the frenetic
nature of the spider
dance:The convergence,
then, of the medieval
tarantella (spider
dance), the writings of a
brilliant poet who
bordered on the absurd,
and the infusion of
strong, descriptive and
otherwise random, rhyming
words, synthesizes to
make dramatic lyrics for
this work.Z. Randall
Stroope is an American
composer and conductor.
He has served as
Professor of Music at
three universities (an
Endowed Professor at
two), conducted 47
all-state choirs, and
directed over 40 times at
Carnegie Hall, among
other American venues.
Randall guest conducts
full-time, and composes
from his home studios on
Merritt Island, Florida
and in Sandia Park, New
Mexico. In Latin, the
“r†is
flipped; use
“s†instead
of “z†on
endings such as
“phosa,â€
“cosa,†and
so on; the Latin
“o†is a
cross between
“oh†and
“awâ€; in the
transliteration above, I
chose to simply use an
“o†for
consistency. The director
will blend the
“oh†and
“aw†in the
rehearsals to his/her own
preference. Lastly,
“tarantulaâ€
is pronounced
“tah-rah-n-too-lah
€ (avoid
“teh-ran-choo-luhâ
€) within the
confines of this
text.Stomp: This can be
done by the entire
chorus, or just the first
row. It is as much visual
as it is auditory. The
string quartet is
preferred over piano when
that option affords
itself. I created a piano
score that is a viable
option and included it in
the piano/vocal score if
a performance uses
chorus/piano. The
tarantella is a popular
southern Italian dance
with origins in the 11th
century. (There is even
some mention of the
tarantella in ancient
Greek mythology.) Of the
possible sources of the
dance, the most popular
comes from the villages
of Tanto and Tarentum
(“little
spiderâ€), Italy.
During harvest, workers
in the field were
sometimes bitten by the
tarantula spider. To
combat the
“poison,†the
afflicted workers went
into a frenetic, almost
musical exorcism to sweat
the venom out of their
pores. In the millennium
since, the very energetic
nature of the dance has
remained, although the
curative focus of the
dance has given way to
more enjoyable endeavors,
even stately
courtship.Christopher
Smart (1722-1771), also
known as “Kit
Smart†or
“Jack Smart,â€
was born in Kent, England
and suffered from what is
now believed to be acute
asthma and other health
issues as a child. As
such, he did not work in
the fields, but spent
much time reading and
writing, a passion that
he nurtured for a
lifetime. Well known in
London literary circles,
his career as a writer
floundered due to
mounting debts and his
falling out of favor with
the literary
establishment: Sadly, he
was forced to confinement
at St. Luke’s
Hospital for Lunatics,
though this was based on
his mounting debt, and
not on insanity.
(Confinement, or
debtor’s prison,
was common during this
period if one’s
debts could not be paid.)
During his confinement,
he worked on two of his
most famous works,
Jubilate Agno and A Song
of David. (Part of
Jubilate Agno
[“Rejoice in the
Lambâ€] was set to
music by English
composer, Benjamin
Britten.) Smart’s
writing style (which, at
times, bordered on the
absurd), along with his
many obsessions, lead to
frequent misperceptions
of his work and his
lucidity. In this present
work, portions of
Smart’s Jubilate
Agno were used in mm.
24-31, 103-110 and
149-156. The remaining
text was gathered by the
composer, including the
rapid, almost
patter-like, delivery of
words from A-Z in the
alphabet. (Christopher
Smart had a preoccupation
with the alphabet.) These
words both rhyme and
accentuate the frenetic
nature of the spider
dance:The convergence,
then, of the medieval
tarantella (spider
dance), the writings of a
brilliant poet who
bordered on the absurd,
and the infusion of
strong, descriptive and
otherwise random, rhyming
words, synthesizes to
make dramatic lyrics for
this work.Z. Randall
Stroope is an American
composer and conductor.
He has served as
Professor of Music at
three universities (an
Endowed Professor at
two), conducted 47
all-state choirs, and
directed over 40 times at
Carnegie Hall, among
other American venues.
Randall guest conducts
full-time, and composes
from his home studios on
Merritt Island, Florida
and in Sandia Park, New
Mexico.In Latin, the
“r†is
flipped; use
“s†instead
of “z†on
endings such as
“phosa,â€
“cosa,†and
so on; the Latin
“o†is a
cross between
“oh†and
“awâ€; in the
transliteration above, I
chose to simply use an
“o†for
consistency. The director
will blend the
“oh†and
“aw†in the
rehearsals to his/her own
preference. Lastly,
“tarantulaâ€
is pronounced
“tah-rah-n-too-lah
€ (avoid
“teh-ran-choo-luhâ
€) within the
confines of this
text.Stomp: This can be
done by the entire
chorus, or just the first
row. It is as much visual
as it is auditory. The
string quartet is
preferred over piano when
that option affords
itself. I created a piano
score that is a viable
option and included it in
the piano/vocal score if
a performance uses
chorus/piano. $2.75 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Herrmann: Portrait Of Hitch (Study Score) Orchestre Music Sales
Orchestra SKU: HL.14025900 Composed by Bernard Herrmann. Music Sales Amer...(+)
Orchestra SKU:
HL.14025900 Composed
by Bernard Herrmann.
Music Sales America.
Classical. Studyscore.
Music Sales #NOV750028.
Published by Music Sales
(HL.14025900). 0.453
inches. Herrmann
wanted to write a musical
portrait of his friend
and colleague Alfred
Hitchcok, so choose
motifs from the movie The
Trouble With Harry, one
of Hitchcock's more
personal and humorous
films. This
single-movement work for
Orchestra employs some of
the more familiar
elements of Herrmann's
compositional style:
short musical phrases
repeated and then
repeated again in other
positions, sharp use of
dynamics among them. From
the first note, the
creepiness begins.Bernard
Herrmann was among the
very greatest of all
composers of music for
cinema and there are many
who avow that he was the
greatest of all. A very
short list of the films
for which this
award-winning
composercreated
soundtracks includes
Citizen Kane, The Man Who
Knew Too Much, Vertigo,
Jason and Argonauts,
Fahrenheit 451, Obsession
and Taxi Driver. He had a
long and fertile
association with Alfred
Hitchcock during the most
productive period of
Hitchcock's career and
with Orson Welles from
the time of the Mercury
Theatre on the Air. In
addition to his
conducting and composing
work for the
entertainment world,
Herrmann wrote concert
pieces, including a
symphony, opera and
cantata. $44.50 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Fantasy-Variations Merion Music
Chamber Music Cello, Piano, Violin SKU: PR.144402290 Composed by James Pr...(+)
Chamber Music Cello,
Piano, Violin SKU:
PR.144402290 Composed
by James Primosch. Set of
Score and Parts. With
Standard notation. 17+9+9
pages. Duration 16
minutes, 30 seconds.
Merion Music #144-40229.
Published by Merion Music
(PR.144402290). UPC:
680160027316. The
theme that opens my
Fantasy-Variations
permeates the harmonic
and melodic life of the
24 short episodes and
coda that follow.
However, in a few
sections the
relationships with the
theme are more hidden
than explicit; the
fanciful connections
between these portions
and the opening theme
suggested the work's
hybrid title. Yet even in
these more wide-ranging
variations the opening
theme is usually still
hovering nearby, often as
a quiet presence
contrasting with more
animated gestures. The
piece may be understood
as a kind of dream
journal: a chain of brief
entries that seem to vary
greatly, yet rotate about
a fixed constellation of
types and obsessions,
speaking a language of
images at once logical
and impossible, familiar
and mysterious. I wrote
the Fantasy-Variations
for the Leonardo trio in
1991 with the support of
a National Endowment for
the Arts Fellowship in
composition. The theme
that opens my
Fantasy-Variations
permeates the harmonic
and melodic life of the
24 short episodes and
coda that follow.Â
However, in a few
sections the
relationships with the
theme are more hidden
than explicit; the
fanciful connections
between these portions
and the opening theme
suggested the
work’s hybrid
title. Yet even in
these more wide-ranging
variations the opening
theme is usually still
hovering nearby, often as
a quiet presence
contrasting with more
animated gestures.The
piece may be understood
as a kind of dream
journal: a chain of brief
entries that seem to vary
greatly, yet rotate about
a fixed constellation of
types and obsessions,
speaking a language of
images at once logical
and impossible, familiar
and mysterious.I wrote
the Fantasy-Variations
for the Leonardo trio in
1991 with the support of
a National Endowment for
the Arts Fellowship in
composition. $63.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Fantasy-Variations [Conducteur] Merion Music
Chamber Music Cello, Piano, Violin SKU: PR.14440229S Composed by James Pr...(+)
Chamber Music Cello,
Piano, Violin SKU:
PR.14440229S Composed
by James Primosch. Full
score. With Standard
notation. Duration 16
minutes, 30 seconds.
Merion Music #144-40229S.
Published by Merion Music
(PR.14440229S). UPC:
680160027330. The
theme that opens my
Fantasy-Variations
permeates the harmonic
and melodic life of the
24 short episodes and
coda that follow.
However, in a few
sections the
relationships with the
theme are more hidden
than explicit; the
fanciful connections
between these portions
and the opening theme
suggested the work's
hybrid title. Yet even in
these more wide-ranging
variations the opening
theme is usually still
hovering nearby, often as
a quiet presence
contrasting with more
animated gestures. The
piece may be understood
as a kind of dream
journal: a chain of brief
entries that seem to vary
greatly, yet rotate about
a fixed constellation of
types and obsessions,
speaking a language of
images at once logical
and impossible, familiar
and mysterious. I wrote
the Fantasy-Variations
for the Leonardo trio in
1991 with the support of
a National Endowment for
the Arts Fellowship in
composition. The theme
that opens my
Fantasy-Variations
permeates the harmonic
and melodic life of the
24 short episodes and
coda that follow.Â
However, in a few
sections the
relationships with the
theme are more hidden
than explicit; the
fanciful connections
between these portions
and the opening theme
suggested the
work’s hybrid
title. Yet even in
these more wide-ranging
variations the opening
theme is usually still
hovering nearby, often as
a quiet presence
contrasting with more
animated gestures.The
piece may be understood
as a kind of dream
journal: a chain of brief
entries that seem to vary
greatly, yet rotate about
a fixed constellation of
types and obsessions,
speaking a language of
images at once logical
and impossible, familiar
and mysterious.I wrote
the Fantasy-Variations
for the Leonardo trio in
1991 with the support of
a National Endowment for
the Arts Fellowship in
composition. $29.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Dance Monkey Chorale 3 parties SAB A Cappella Alfred Publishing
Composed by Toni Watson. Arranged by Bryan Sharpe. Performance Music Ensemble;...(+)
Composed by Toni Watson.
Arranged by Bryan Sharpe.
Performance Music
Ensemble;
Single Titles. Alfred Pop
Choral Series.
Contemporary A
Cappella; Pop; Radio;
Secular. Choral Octavo.
16
pages. Alfred Music #00-
48961. Published by
Alfred
Music
$2.25 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Improvisation Games for Classical Musicians - Volume 2 Formation musicale - Solfège GIA Publications
642 More Creative Musical Games for Students, Teachers, and Performers. C...(+)
642 More Creative
Musical Games for
Students, Teachers, and
Performers. Composed
by Jeffrey Agrell. Music
Education. 386 pages.
Published by GIA
Publications (GI.G-9174).
$40.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| String Quartet No. 8 Quatuor à cordes: 2 violons, alto, violoncelle Merion Music
Chamber Music String Quartet SKU: PR.144407270 Composed by Sydney F. Hodk...(+)
Chamber Music String
Quartet SKU:
PR.144407270 Composed
by Sydney F. Hodkinson.
Sws. Set of Score and
Parts. 44+16+16+16+16
pages. Duration 22
minutes. Merion Music
#144-40727. Published by
Merion Music
(PR.144407270). UPC:
680160681891. 9 x 12
inches. My Eighth
and Ninth String
Quartets, begun in late
2017, are sonic cousins.
Akin to real cousins,
each piece exhibits
differing natures. They
were requested by two
ensembles that have
become asecond familiesa
to me: The Jupiter
Quartet of Urbana,
Illinois and the Amernet
Quartet based in Miami,
Florida. Their collective
dedication to, and care
for, our art remains a
personal and constant
are-fuelinga for me. The
quartets were
commissioned by, and
dedicated to, Margaret
and Philip Verleger of
Denver, Colorado.
Additional financial
support was provided by
the School of Music at
Stetson University,
Timothy Peter, Dean.
Quartet No.8 is laid out
in a classical
four-movement design. The
work does break somewhat
from conventional
tradition by often
placing quartet members
into soloistic roles as
the movement titles note.
individual The opening
piece presents at the
outset a three-note motto
which is turned over,
tumbled, and
energetically discussed,
primarily by a violin
duet. It is a duel. The
two players part company
only infrequently during
the movement's progress,
pausing briefly for other
commentary by their
alower cohortsa, the
Viola and Cello do not
argue, but abet their
friends' aeffortsa. The
piece's overall character
is fairly bright and
dancelike, closing in an
unresolvedastandoffa. not
Two principal
asound-objectsa stitch
the second movement
scherzo together: sliding
hands (glissandos) and a
plucked ashufflea
(pizzicato) - both
instigated by the (solo)
cellist. The others are
influenced - or are not -
by their aleadera, and
follow - or interrupt -
the cello throughout
their four-voiced
conversation. The third
movement (longest of the
set) is an elegy
dedicated to the memory
of a close personal
friend, the American
composer David Maslanka
(1943 - 2017). Its'
genesis is a simple
5-note melody derived
from my own name
(SaC/DaC/EaC/H). This
line commences in the
(solo) viola and is
obsessively uttered
without relief during the
movement's lamentations.
The closing movement
revisits much of that
opening three-note
material, but now dressed
up for the full quartet
to view. It is a slowly
accelerating romp which -
twice - cannot avoid a
nod to the Amernet and
Jupiter performers by
offering a humble bow to
the 4th movement of
Gustav Holst's PLANETS -
Jupiter: The Bringer of
Jollity. My quartet
serves as an honouring
salute of thanks for the
talent, respect, and
friendship of these two
young quartets. STRING
QUARTET No. 8 is roughly
22 minutes in duration.
It was written as an
homage to Franz Joseph
Haydn, my
adesert-island-composera,
and completed in Holly
Hill, Florida in early
April of 2019. S.H. $70.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
Plus de résultats boutique >> |