| String Sextet [Conducteur] Theodore Presser Co.
Chamber Music Viola 1, Viola 2, Violin 1, Violin 2, Violoncello 1, Violoncello 2...(+)
Chamber Music Viola 1,
Viola 2, Violin 1, Violin
2, Violoncello 1,
Violoncello 2 SKU:
PR.11442131S Composed
by Peter Schickele. Full
score. Duration 26
minutes. Theodore Presser
Company #114-42131S.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.11442131S). UPC:
680160681006. A lot
of chamber music playing
went on in Fargo, North
Dakota during my teenage
years. The participants
included both high school
friend - my brother, who
plays viola, was an is an
inveterate chamber music
player - and members of
parents' generation. The
latter included not only
professional musicians
(the conductor of the
Fargo-Moorhead Community
Orchestra, who also
played cello and was my
first composition
teacher, his wife, who
was the orchestra's
concert mistress, and
others) but also people
from various other walks
of life. Although I don't
play a string instrument,
I was almost always in
attendance, with score in
hand. (One summer, all
the young cellists we
played with went to the
Interlochen Music Camp,
so I got to play the
cello parts on the
bassoon.) Mostly it was
string quartets that were
played, but one of the
larger pieces I remember
being done more than once
was the Brahms Sextet in
G Major, and I think that
the idea for utilizing
that combination had been
lurking in the back of my
mind since then. In the
middle 1980's, ideas for
a string sextet began
appearing in my
sketchbooks; one movement
(the fourth) was actually
completed in one of the
sketchbooks. But without
a deadline, it's hard for
me to finish a major
work, since there are
always other pieces (with
deadlines) waiting to be
completed. So when the
Composers Showcase at
Lincoln Center asked me
to put together a
retrospective of my work,
I knew I wanted to have a
premiere on the program,
and May 7, 1990 became
the deadline that I got
the piece done. The work
is in six movements, with
a symmetrical key
pattern; the movements
range from the very
dramatic to the very
easy-going. I had
contacted the Lark
Quartet, who had
commissioned my String
Quartet No.2, about
forming the core of the
sextet. Unfortunately,
one of the Larks had a
scheduling conflict, but
the other three rounded
up three more players,
and the six of them gave
the piece a rousing
performance, in spite of
the limited rehearsal
time. The players were
Eva Gruesser, Genovia
Cummins, Anna Kruger,
Mary Hamman, Astrid
Schween and Julia
Lichten. A lot of
chamber music playing
went on in Fargo, North
Dakota during my teenage
years. The participants
included both high school
friend – my
brother, who plays viola,
was an is an inveterate
chamber music player
– and members of
parents’
generation. The latter
included not only
professional musicians
(the conductor of the
Fargo-Moorhead Community
Orchestra, who also
played cello and was my
first composition
teacher, his wife, who
was the
orchestra’s
concert mistress, and
others) but also people
from various other walks
of life. Although I
don’t play a
string instrument, I was
almost always in
attendance, with score in
hand. (One summer, all
the young cellists we
played with went to the
Interlochen Music Camp,
so I got to play the
cello parts on the
bassoon.)Mostly it was
string quartets that were
played, but one of the
larger pieces I remember
being done more than once
was the Brahms Sextet in
G Major, and I think that
the idea for utilizing
that combination had been
lurking in the back of my
mind since then. In the
middle 1980’s,
ideas for a string sextet
began appearing in my
sketchbooks; one movement
(the fourth) was actually
completed in one of the
sketchbooks. But without
a deadline, it’s
hard for me to finish a
major work, since there
are always other pieces
(with deadlines) waiting
to be completed. So when
the Composers Showcase at
Lincoln Center asked me
to put together a
retrospective of my work,
I knew I wanted to have a
premiere on the program,
and May 7, 1990 became
the deadline that I got
the piece done.The work
is in six movements, with
a symmetrical key
pattern; the movements
range from the very
dramatic to the very
easy-going.I had
contacted the Lark
Quartet, who had
commissioned my String
Quartet No.2, about
forming the core of the
sextet. Unfortunately,
one of the Larks had a
scheduling conflict, but
the other three rounded
up three more players,
and the six of them gave
the piece a rousing
performance, in spite of
the limited rehearsal
time. The players were
Eva Gruesser, Genovia
Cummins, Anna Kruger,
Mary Hamman, Astrid
Schween and Julia
Lichten. $95.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| String Sextet Theodore Presser Co.
Chamber Music Viola 1, Viola 2, Violin 1, Violin 2, Violoncello 1, Violoncello 2...(+)
Chamber Music Viola 1,
Viola 2, Violin 1, Violin
2, Violoncello 1,
Violoncello 2 SKU:
PR.114421310 Composed
by Peter Schickele. Set
of Score and Parts.
74+21+20+22+19+21+19
pages. Duration 26
minutes. Theodore Presser
Company #114-42131.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.114421310). UPC:
680160680993. A lot
of chamber music playing
went on in Fargo, North
Dakota during my teenage
years. The participants
included both high school
friend - my brother, who
plays viola, was an is an
inveterate chamber music
player - and members of
parents' generation. The
latter included not only
professional musicians
(the conductor of the
Fargo-Moorhead Community
Orchestra, who also
played cello and was my
first composition
teacher, his wife, who
was the orchestra's
concert mistress, and
others) but also people
from various other walks
of life. Although I don't
play a string instrument,
I was almost always in
attendance, with score in
hand. (One summer, all
the young cellists we
played with went to the
Interlochen Music Camp,
so I got to play the
cello parts on the
bassoon.) Mostly it was
string quartets that were
played, but one of the
larger pieces I remember
being done more than once
was the Brahms Sextet in
G Major, and I think that
the idea for utilizing
that combination had been
lurking in the back of my
mind since then. In the
middle 1980's, ideas for
a string sextet began
appearing in my
sketchbooks; one movement
(the fourth) was actually
completed in one of the
sketchbooks. But without
a deadline, it's hard for
me to finish a major
work, since there are
always other pieces (with
deadlines) waiting to be
completed. So when the
Composers Showcase at
Lincoln Center asked me
to put together a
retrospective of my work,
I knew I wanted to have a
premiere on the program,
and May 7, 1990 became
the deadline that I got
the piece done. The work
is in six movements, with
a symmetrical key
pattern; the movements
range from the very
dramatic to the very
easy-going. I had
contacted the Lark
Quartet, who had
commissioned my String
Quartet No.2, about
forming the core of the
sextet. Unfortunately,
one of the Larks had a
scheduling conflict, but
the other three rounded
up three more players,
and the six of them gave
the piece a rousing
performance, in spite of
the limited rehearsal
time. The players were
Eva Gruesser, Genovia
Cummins, Anna Kruger,
Mary Hamman, Astrid
Schween and Julia
Lichten. A lot of
chamber music playing
went on in Fargo, North
Dakota during my teenage
years. The participants
included both high school
friend – my
brother, who plays viola,
was an is an inveterate
chamber music player
– and members of
parents’
generation. The latter
included not only
professional musicians
(the conductor of the
Fargo-Moorhead Community
Orchestra, who also
played cello and was my
first composition
teacher, his wife, who
was the
orchestra’s
concert mistress, and
others) but also people
from various other walks
of life. Although I
don’t play a
string instrument, I was
almost always in
attendance, with score in
hand. (One summer, all
the young cellists we
played with went to the
Interlochen Music Camp,
so I got to play the
cello parts on the
bassoon.)Mostly it was
string quartets that were
played, but one of the
larger pieces I remember
being done more than once
was the Brahms Sextet in
G Major, and I think that
the idea for utilizing
that combination had been
lurking in the back of my
mind since then. In the
middle 1980’s,
ideas for a string sextet
began appearing in my
sketchbooks; one movement
(the fourth) was actually
completed in one of the
sketchbooks. But without
a deadline, it’s
hard for me to finish a
major work, since there
are always other pieces
(with deadlines) waiting
to be completed. So when
the Composers Showcase at
Lincoln Center asked me
to put together a
retrospective of my work,
I knew I wanted to have a
premiere on the program,
and May 7, 1990 became
the deadline that I got
the piece done.The work
is in six movements, with
a symmetrical key
pattern; the movements
range from the very
dramatic to the very
easy-going.I had
contacted the Lark
Quartet, who had
commissioned my String
Quartet No.2, about
forming the core of the
sextet. Unfortunately,
one of the Larks had a
scheduling conflict, but
the other three rounded
up three more players,
and the six of them gave
the piece a rousing
performance, in spite of
the limited rehearsal
time. The players were
Eva Gruesser, Genovia
Cummins, Anna Kruger,
Mary Hamman, Astrid
Schween and Julia
Lichten. $250.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| How To Train Your Dragon Orchestre
Orchestral Score. Composed by John Powell. This edition: Paperback/Softcover...(+)
Orchestral Score.
Composed by
John Powell. This
edition:
Paperback/Softcover.
Sheet
music. Study score.
Composed
2010. 412 pages. Omni
Music
Publishers #OMNI 50792.
Published by Omni Music
Publishers
$106.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 4 to 6 weeks | | |
| Gran Torso Quatuor à cordes: 2 violons, alto, violoncelle Breitkopf & Härtel
String Quartet (2vl,va,vc) SKU: BR.KM-2261 Music for String Quartet(+)
String Quartet
(2vl,va,vc) SKU:
BR.KM-2261 Music
for String Quartet.
Composed by Helmut
Lachenmann. This edition:
2 Violins, Viola, Cello.
Chamber music; Folder.
Kammermusik-Bibliothek
(Chamber Music Library).
World premiere: Bremen
(pro musica nova), May 6,
1972Have a look into KM
2261. Music post-1945;
New music (post-2000).
Set of parts. Composed
1971/78/88. 112 pages.
Duration 23'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #KM 2261.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.KM-2261).
ISBN 9790004501658.
16.5 x 11.5
inches. Gran Torso,
for string quartet, was
composed in 1971 and
revised in 1978. It
belongs to a series of
works, including Air,
Kontrakadenz, Pression
and Klangschatten, whose
concept of material
attempts to free itself
from convention. That is,
instead of using the
sound itself as a point
of departure, structural
and formal hierarchies
are derived from the
mechanical and physical
conditions present during
the process of sound
production. It is clear
that such a radical break
with tradition is not
easily achieved: the
instrument, the given
means, the resonating
body itself (as the
embodiment of convention)
all work against such
attempts (with the
extended performance
techniques representing
only the tip of the
iceberg of deep-seated
contradictions where the
bourgeois artist is
concerned). Implicit in
such a challenge,
however, is a claim to
aesthetic pregnance: an
offer, if one would have
it, of uncomprosing
beauty.(Helmut
Lachenmann,
1978)CDs/LPs:Berner
StreichquartettCD col
legno 0647 277Berner
StreichquartettLP col
legno 5504Societa
Cameristica ItalianaLP
ABT ERZ 1003Arditti
String QuartetCD KAIROS,
0012662KAIstadler
quartettCD NEOS 10806The
JACK QuartetCD mode
267Stadler Quartett, Rg.
Caroline SiegersDVD NEOS
51001Bibliography:Alberma
n, David: Abnormal
Playing Techniques in the
String Quartets of Helmut
Lachenmann, in: Helmut
Lachenmann Music with
matches, hrsg. von Dan
Albertson, Contemporary
Music Review 24 (2005),
Vol. 1, pp.
39-51.Dulaney, Maxwell:
Continuing the Tradition
Untraditionally: Helmut
Lachenmann's
Restructuring of Musical
Dialectic through an
Analysis of his Three
String Quartets, and an
Original Composition,
Harmonic Concerto, Diss.
Brandeis University, MI
2013.Egger, Elisabeth:
Kontinuitat, Verdichtung,
Synchronizitat. Zu den
grossformalen Funktionen
des gepressten
Bogenstrichs in Helmut
Lachenmanns
Streichquartetten, in:
Musik als
Wahrnehmungskunst.
Untersuchungen zu
Kompositionsmethodik und
Horasthetik bei Helmut
Lachenmann, hrsg. von
Christian Utz und Clemens
Gadenstatter (=
musik.theorien der
gegenwart 2),
Saarbrucken: Pfau 2008,
pp. 155-171.Hermann,
Matthias: Helmut
Lachenmann - Gran Torso,
in: Analyse Musik XX.
Jahrhundert (2).
Postserielle Konzepte
Klangflachen Aleatorik (=
Materialien zur
Musiktheorie 4),
Saarbrucken: Pfau 2002,
pp. 134-152.Hiekel, Jorn
Peter: Die
Streichquartett Gran
Torso und Grido von
Helmut Lachenmann, in:
Lucerne Festival, Sommer
2005 Neuland,
Konzertprogramm 6, pp.
65-69.Houben, Eva-Maria:
Helmut Lachenmann: Gran
Torso ..., in: dies.,
Musikalische Praxis als
Lebensform (= Musik und
Klangkultur 27),
Bielefeld: Transcript
2018, S. 208-212Lehmann,
Harry: Erhabenheit -
Ereignis - Ambivalenz.
Zur Asthetik der Neuen
Musik, in: Neue
Zeitschrift fur Musik 176
(2015), Heft 5, pp.
22-27.Mosch, Ulrich:
Kunst als Medium der
Ungeborgenheit.
Streichquartette und
soziale Funktion des
Komponierens bei Helmut
Lachenmann, in:
Positionen 81 (November
2009), pp. 37-39.ders.:
Was heisst Interpretation
bei Helmut Lachenmanns
Streichquartett ,,Gran
Torso?, in: Wessen
Klange? Uber Autorschaft
in neue Musik, hrsg. Von
Hermann Danuser und
Matthias Kassel (=
Veroffentlichungen der
Paul Sacher Stiftung 12),
Mainz u.a.: Schott 2017,
S. 163-186Nonnenmann,
Rainer: Werke als
Schlussel zu Werken? Zur
umstrittenen Kategorie
,,Schlusselwerke der
neuen Musik, in:
MusikTexte, Heft 147
(November 2015), pp.
35-46.Stork, Astrid:
Materialbegriff und
Strukturdenken.
Untersuchungen zu den
Streichquartetten von
Helmut Lachenmann,
Magisterarbeit
Ruhr-Universitat Bochum
1992Tsao, Ming: Helmut
Lachenmann's Sound Types,
in: Perspectives of New
Music 52 (2014), Heft 1,
pp. 217-238.Velazquez,
Rossana Lara: Composicion
y escucha burguesa:
Principios de continuidad
y ruptura en el cuarteto
Gran Torso de Helmut
Lachenmann, Diss.
Universidad Nacional
Autonoma de Mexico
2011.Zenck, Martin: Die
mehrfache Codierung der
Figur: Ihr defigurativer
und torsohafter Modus bei
Johann Sebastian Bach,
Helmut Lachenmann und
Auguste Rodin, in: de
figura. Rhetorik Bewegung
Gestalt, Text und Bild,
hrsg. von Gabriele
Brandstetter und Sibylle
Peters, Munchen 2003, pp.
265-288.
World
premiere: Bremen (pro
musica nova), May 6,
1972. $132.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 3 to 4 weeks | | |
| Långstrump Samba Fanfare [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Facile De Haske Publications
Fanfare Band - Grade 3 SKU: BT.DHP-1012904-020 Composed by Jan Johansson....(+)
Fanfare Band - Grade 3
SKU:
BT.DHP-1012904-020
Composed by Jan
Johansson. Arranged by
John Blanken. Applause
Series. Original Light
Music. Set (Score &
Parts). Composed 2001. De
Haske Publications #DHP
1012904-020. Published by
De Haske Publications
(BT.DHP-1012904-020).
The popular
Swedish children's series
Pippi LÃ¥ngstrump
(Pippi Longstocking) is
about an exceedingly
strong and strong-willed
little girl with red
braids - who is the
brainchild of Astrid
Lindgren. This series has
been broadcasted in many
countries. I arranged its
cheerful theme tune in
samba style. Even with
the new rhythm, the
original song is still
very recognizable. In the
exuberant samba style,
the percussion plays an
important role. Within
the LÃ¥ngstrump Samba,
this is especially clear
in the ad libitum
percussion solo halfway
through the arrangement.
The solo can go on as
long as desired, and
offers plenty of freedom
because of the free
choice of the instruments
used.
Pippi
Langstrumpf, das ebenso
starke wie eigenwillige
Mädchen mit den roten
Zöpfen, hat in
Büchern, Filmen und
Fernsehserien die Herzen
der Kinder und jung
Gebliebenen auf der
ganzen Welt erobert.
Untrennbar mit der
Fernsehserie verknüpft
ist die fröhliche
Titelmelodie, die von
John Blanken in ein
temperamentvolles
Samba-Gewand gesteckt
wurde. Auch in diesem
neuen Rhythmus ist das
Originallied noch klar zu
erkennen. Das Schlagzeug
spielt eine wichtige
Rolle, ganz besonders im
ad libitum spielbaren
Schlagzeugsolo, dessen
Dauer und
Instrumentenwahl frei
wählbar sind.
Ausgelassen und
temperamentvoll! $98.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
Plus de résultats boutique >> |