| CD-SESSION C-Inst(Fl) MDS (Music Distribution Services) (+)
-
Dance Session
-
Easy Rock
-
Ocho Rios
(Reggae)
-
Shady Grove
-
Too Late to Run
-
Born to Blues
-
Boogie-Man
-
Bad Perception
(Rock)
-
Samba Modinha
-
On the Rebound
(Jazz-Waltz)
| | |
| CD-SESSION Bb-Inst MDS (Music Distribution Services) (+)
-
Dance Session
-
Easy Rock
-
Ocho Rios
(Reggae)
-
Shady Grove
-
Too Late to Run
-
Born to Blues
-
Boogie-Man
-
Bad Perception
(Rock)
-
Samba Modinha
-
On the Rebound
(Jazz-Waltz)
| | |
| CD-SESSION Eb-Inst MDS (Music Distribution Services) (+)
-
Dance Session
-
Easy Rock
-
Ocho Rios
(Reggae)
-
Shady Grove
-
Too Late to Run
-
Born to Blues
-
Boogie-Man
-
Bad Perception
(Rock)
-
Samba Modinha
-
On the Rebound
(Jazz-Waltz)
| | |
| Perceptions Chorale SATB Theodore Presser Co.
Choral SATB choir SKU: PR.342401440 Choral cycle on words of Walt Whit...(+)
Choral SATB choir SKU:
PR.342401440
Choral cycle on words
of Walt Whitman for Mixed
Voices, a cappella.
Composed by William
Schuman. SWS. Perceptions
Choral cycle on words of
Walt Whitman for Mixed
Voices, a cappella. The
first Performance of
Perceptions was given on
January 9, 1983 in
Greenwich Connecticut by
the Gregg Smith Singers
Gregg Smith Conducting.
Classical. Performance
Score. With Standard
notation. 16 pages.
Duration 13 minutes.
Theodore Presser Company
#342-40144. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.342401440). ISBN
9781598067675. UPC:
680160055203. Octavo
inches. Key: A major.
English. Text: Walt
Whitman. Walt
Whitman. $2.75 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| Absence of Time Orchestre Theodore Presser Co.
Orchestra SKU: PR.416416140 For Flute, Oboe, Clarinet in B-flat, Basso...(+)
Orchestra SKU:
PR.416416140 For
Flute, Oboe, Clarinet in
B-flat, Bassoon, and
Orchestra. Composed
by Narong Prangcharoen.
Full score. 53 pages.
Duration 17 minutes.
Theodore Presser Company
#416-41614. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.416416140). UPC:
680160642441. Time
is one of the main
factors impacting the
world and our lives.
Einstein saw time as the
relationship of the
motion of one object
relative to the position
of another object, as
measured through
observation. But can we
really measure time
objectively? Music, the
art which moves through
time, can affect our
perception of time, and
can affect each person's
perception of time
differently. Depending on
the emotion it
stimulates, music can
make time seem to pass
quickly or slowly. A
composer can use music to
convey time to an
audience and different
musical ideas can create
different sensations of
time. Absence of Time is
a concerto for woodwind
quartet and orchestra. It
has three main sections
(fast, slow, fast),
recalling traditional
concerto form, but it
does not use the solo
instruments in the
traditional way, i.e., as
soloists in contest with
the orchestra. Inspired
by the idea of
juxtaposing different
experiences of time, I
divided the instruments
into two groups: the four
soloists and the
orchestra. The orchestra
functions mostly as the
keeper of time (real
time) while the quartet
of soloists fluctuates
(in imaginary time or in
the absence of time)
around the orchestra's
time. While the quartet's
instruments do play
solos, they also play in
ensemble with the
orchestra. You could say
that they play in both
imaginary time (as
soloists) and in real
time (with the
orchestra). In addition
to this, the woodwind
section of the orchestra
plays in conversation
with the solo quartet,
calling it back to real
time. Fusion is achieved
at the end of the piece
through the use of
strong, driving rhythm.
Absence of Time was
commissioned by the
Pacific Symphony and was
first performed by the
Pacific Symphony and the
Pacific Symphony Woodwind
Quartet with Carl St.
Clair as conductor on
October 20, 2016. $39.99 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Black Light Orchestre d'harmonie - Intermédiaire Carl Fischer
Band Bass Clarinet, Bass Drum, Bassoon, Bells, Chimes, Clarinet 1, Clarinet 2, C...(+)
Band Bass Clarinet, Bass
Drum, Bassoon, Bells,
Chimes, Clarinet 1,
Clarinet 2, Clarinet 3,
Crash Cymbals, Euphonium,
Euphonium T.C., Flute 1,
Flute 2, Gong, Horn 1,
Horn 2, Mallet Percussion
1, Mallet Percussion 2,
Mallet Percussion 3 and
more. - Grade 3.5 SKU:
CF.CPS228F Composed
by George Sweet. Concert
Band (CPS). Full score.
With Standard notation.
28 pages. Carl Fischer
Music #CPS228F. Published
by Carl Fischer Music
(CF.CPS228F). ISBN
9781491153222. UPC:
680160910724. Black
light is defined as
infrared or ultraviolet
light which is invisible
to the naked eye. The
idea of an entire spectra
existing out of the range
of human perception was a
large influencing factor
for George Sweet in the
composition of this
piece. Richly scored
for the modern concert
band, Black Light is
written in a
post-minimalist style and
is also heavily
influenced by the work of
American composers Steve
Reich, John Adams, and
Philip Glass. Black
light is defined as
infrared or ultraviolet
light which is invisible
to the naked eye. The
idea of an entire spectra
existing out of the range
of human perception was
an influencing factor on
the composition of the
piece. Black Light is
written in a
post-minimalist style and
is also heavily
influenced by the work of
American composers Steve
Reich, John Adams, and
Philip Glass.This begins
with strict motor
accompaniment. Take care
to maintain equal balance
among the different
“moving
parts†so that they
blend to create a solid
whole both here and
throughout the piece. The
primary thematic material
is stated by the trumpets
and horns at m. 12. This
material is the basis for
much of the harmonic and
thematic material that
follows. A slightly
varied statement of the
main theme is presented
again at m. 26 with a
different type of motor
accompaniment. This leads
to a B-section at m. 44,
which is a bold
fanfare-like presentation
of the main material.
Another series of
variations on the main
theme begins at m. 50 and
incorporates many
different textural and
harmonic ideas in the
accompaniment. Once
again, be careful to not
let any one “moving
part†overwhelm
another and keep the
texture evenly balanced.
 A second, broader
presentation of the
B-section occurs at m. 90
and leads to a subdued
C-section at m. 100 with
new melodic material
presented in the trumpet.
A whimsical march-like
section pushes to the
return of the
introductory motor
material at m. 131. A
final heroic presentation
of the main thematic
material results in a
somewhat ambiguous coda,
which brings the piece to
a dramatic
conclusion. $14.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| San Pedro de Alcântara Orchestre d'harmonie - Avancé Molenaar Edition
Concert Band - Grade 5 SKU: ML.013780090 Composed by Valdemar Gomes. Full...(+)
Concert Band - Grade 5
SKU: ML.013780090
Composed by Valdemar
Gomes. Full set. Molenaar
Edition #013780090.
Published by Molenaar
Edition (ML.013780090).
The Spanish war
galleon with 64 cannons,
built in Cuba between
1770 and 1771 for an
English shipowner in the
service of the King of
Spain left Peru for Cadiz
in 1784 with a huge cargo
of copper, gold, silver
and other valuables on
board. There were also
more than 400 people on
board, including
passengers, crew and Inca
prisoners after a revolt.
The Atlantic crossing
went smoothly, passing
Portugal to take
advantage of favourable
winds. The shipwreck off
Peniche was the result of
human error, apparently
due to French maps with
dramatic errors in the
position of the islands
of Berlengas and
neighbouring islets. On 2
February 1786, the sea
was calm and the night
clear, but they hit the
rock formation Papoa and
the hull immediately
broke in two. The bottom
sank quickly, while the
deck remained afloat for
some time. 128 people
lost their lives,
including many Indians
who were trapped in the
basement. This shipwreck
is considered one of the
most important in
maritime
history.
What the
composer wants to convey,
and what can be felt as
one listens, is first of
all the sound of power,
of hope, of the glory of
conquest, of the
splendour of wealth. This
is followed by the
perception of the
maritime environment, the
harmony with the softness
of the ocean, the gliding
of the hull in the foam
of the sea on sunny, blue
days. But along with this
tranquillity, you soon
hear a rhythmic chain
that makes you feel a
representation of the
hustle and bustle, of the
busy crew, of the hard
work of a sailor, of the
desperation of an exotic
people imprisoned in a
dark, damp cellar. A
distinct rhythm that
reminds us of the salero
of Andalusia, with its
Arab influences and its
people, the soothing of
the resignation of others
who are forced to submit.
Then we clearly hear a
crescendo that makes us
imagine the agony of the
collision that precedes
the shipwreck. The
breaking of the hull, the
water flooding
everything, the despair,
the clash of bodies on
the rocks, the tragedy to
come. Before the grand
finale, in which the
return of musical
softness reminds us that
the story is over. The
supremacy of nature over
human greed. The waves,
though gentle, sweep the
wreckage, the lives and
the treasures of the New
World to the bottom of
the sea.
Het
Spaans oorlogsgaljoen met
64 kanonnen, gebouwd in
Cuba tussen 1770 en 1771
voor een Engelse reder in
dienst van de koning van
Spanje vertrok in 1784
vanuit Peru naar Cádiz
met een enorme lading
koper, goud, zilver en
andere kostbaarheden aan
boord. Er waren ook meer
dan 400 mensen aan boord,
waaronder passagiers,
bemanning en Inca
gevangenen na een
opstand. De oversteek van
de Atlantische Oceaan
verliep vlot, waarbij
Portugal werd gepasseerd
om te profiteren van
gunstige winden. De
schipbreuk bij Peniche
was het resultaat van een
menselijke fout,
blijkbaar te wijten aan
Franse kaarten met
dramatische fouten in de
positie van de eilanden
Berlengas en naburige
eilandjes. Op 2 februari
1786 was de zee kalm en
de nacht helder, maar ze
raakten de rotsformatie
Papoa en de romp brak
onmiddellijk in tweeën.
De bodem zonk snel,
terwijl het dek nog enige
tijd bleef drijven. 128
mensen verloren het
leven, waaronder veel
indianen die vastzaten in
de kelder. Dit
scheepswrak wordt
beschouwd als een van de
belangrijkste in de
maritieme
geschiedenis.
Wat
de componist wil
overbrengen, en wat men
kan voelen als men
luistert, is allereerst
het geluid van macht, van
hoop, van de glorie van
verovering, van de pracht
van rijkdom. Dit wordt
gevolgd door de perceptie
van de maritieme
omgeving, de harmonie met
de zachtheid van de
oceaan, het glijden van
de romp in het schuim van
de zee op zonnige, blauwe
dagen. Maar samen met
deze rust hoor je al snel
een ritmische ketting die
je een voorstelling geeft
van de drukte, van de
drukke bemanning, van het
harde werk van een
zeeman, van de wanhoop
van een exotisch volk dat
gevangen zit in een
donkere, vochtige kelder.
Een duidelijk ritme dat
ons doet denken aan de
salero van Andalusië,
met zijn Arabische
invloeden en zijn mensen,
het sussen van de
berusting van anderen die
gedwongen worden zich te
onderwerpen. Dan horen we
duidelijk een crescendo
dat ons de lijdensweg
doet voorstellen van de
aanvaring die voorafgaat
aan de schipbreuk. Het
breken van de romp, het
water dat alles
overspoelt, de wanhoop,
het botsen van lichamen
op de rotsen, de tragedie
die komen gaat. Vóór de
grote finale, waarin de
terugkeer van de muzikale
zachtheid ons eraan
herinnert dat het verhaal
voorbij is. De overmacht
van de natuur over de
hebzucht van de mens. De
golven, hoewel zacht,
vegen het wrak, de levens
en de schatten van de
Nieuwe Wereld naar de
bodem van de
zee.
Le galion de
guerre espagnol de 64
canons, construit à Cuba
entre 1770 et 1771 pour
un armateur anglais au
service du roi d'Espagne,
a quitté le Pérou pour
Cadix en 1784 avec à son
bord une énorme
cargaison de cuivre,
d'or, d'argent et
d'autres objets de
valeur. Il y avait
également plus de 400
personnes à bord, dont
des passagers, des
membres d'équipage et
des prisonniers incas à
la suite d'une révolte.
La traversée de
l'Atlantique s'est
déroulée sans encombre,
en passant par le
Portugal pour profiter
des vents favorables. Le
naufrage au large de
Peniche est le résultat
d'une erreur humaine,
apparemment due à des
cartes françaises
comportant des erreurs
dramatiques dans la
position des îles de
Berlengas et des îlots
voisins. Le 2 février
1786, alors que la mer
est calme et la nuit
claire, le navire heurte
la formation rocheuse de
Papoa et la coque se
brise immédiatement en
deux. Le fond coule
rapidement, tandis que le
pont reste à flot
pendant un certain temps.
128 personnes ont perdu
la vie, dont de nombreux
Indiens qui étaient
coincés dans les
sous-sols. Ce naufrage
est considéré comme
l'un des plus importants
de l'histoire
maritime.
Ce que
le compositeur veut
transmettre, et ce que
l'on ressent à
l'écoute, c'est d'abord
le son de la puissance,
de l'espoir, de la gloire
de la conquête, de la
splendeur de la richesse.
C'est ensuite la
perception de
l'environnement maritime,
l'harmonie avec la
douceur de l'océan, le
glissement de la coque
dans l'écume de la mer
par des journées bleues
et ensoleillées. Mais à
côté de cette
tranquillité, on entend
bientôt une chaîne
rythmique qui nous fait
ressentir une
représentation de
l'agitation, de
l'équipage affairé, du
dur labeur d'un marin, du
désespoir d'un peuple
exotique emprisonné dans
une cave sombre et
humide. Un rythme
distinct qui nous
rappelle le salero
d'Andalousie, avec ses
influences arabes et son
peuple, l'apaisement de
la résignation des
autres qui sont obligés
de se soumettre. Puis on
entend clairement un
crescendo qui nous fait
imaginer l'agonie de la
collision qui précède
le naufrage. La rupture
de la coque, l'eau qui
envahit tout, le
désespoir, le choc des
corps sur les rochers, la
tragédie à venir. Avant
le grand final, où le
retour de la douceur
musicale nous rappelle
que l'histoire est
terminée. La suprématie
de la nature sur la
cupidité humaine. Les
vagues, bien que douces,
emportent les épaves,
les vies et les trésors
du Nouveau Monde au fond
de la mer.
Die
spanische Kriegsgaleone
mit 64 Kanonen, die
zwischen 1770 und 1771
auf Kuba für einen
englischen Reeder im
Dienste des spanischen
Königs gebaut wurde,
verließ Peru 1784 in
Richtung Cádiz mit einer
riesigen Ladung Kupfer,
Gold, Silber und anderen
Wertgegenständen an
Bord. An Bord befanden
sich auch mehr als 400
Menschen, darunter
Passagiere,
Besatzungsmitglieder und
Inka-Gefangene nach einem
Aufstand. Die
Atlantiküberquerung
verlief reibungslos,
wobei Portugal passiert
wurde, um die günstigen
Winde zu nutzen. Der
Schiffbruch vor Peniche
war das Ergebnis
menschlichen Versagens,
das offenbar auf
französische Karten
zurückzuführen war, die
in Bezug auf die Position
der Inseln Berlengas und
der benachbarten Eilande
dramatische Fehler
enthielten. Am 2. Februar
1786 stießen sie bei
ruhiger See und klarer
Nacht auf die
Felsformation Papoa und
der Rumpf brach sofort
entzwei. Der Boden sank
schnell, während das
Deck noch einige Zeit
über Wasser blieb. 128
Menschen kamen ums Leben,
darunter viele Indianer,
die im Keller
eingeschlossen waren.
Dieses Schiffswrack gilt
als eines der
bedeutendsten
Was
der Komponist vermitteln
will und was man beim
Zuhören spürt, ist
zunächst der Klang der
Macht, der Hoffnung, des
Ruhms der Eroberung, des
Glanzes des Reichtums. Es
folgt die Wahrnehmung der
maritimen Umgebung, die
Harmonie mit der
Sanftheit des Meeres, das
Gleiten des
Schiffsrumpfes im Schaum
des Meeres an sonnigen,
blauen Tagen. Doch neben
dieser Ruhe hört man
bald eine rhythmische
Kette, die die Hektik,
die geschäftige
Mannschaft, die harte
Arbeit eines Seemanns,
die Verzweiflung eines
exotischen Volkes, das in
einem dunklen, feuchten
Keller gefangen ist,
wiedergibt. Ein
ausgeprägter Rhythmus,
der an den Salero
Andalusiens erinnert, mit
seinen arabischen
Einflüssen und seinen
Menschen, der die
Resignation der anderen
besänftigt, die
gezwungen sind, sich zu
fügen. Dann hören wir
deutlich ein Crescendo,
das uns die Qualen des
Zusammenstoßes, der dem
Schiffbruch vorausgeht,
erahnen lässt. Das
Zerbrechen des Rumpfes,
das Wasser, das alles
überflutet, die
Verzweiflung, das
Aufeinanderprallen der
Körper auf den Felsen,
die bevorstehende
Tragödie. Vor dem
großen Finale, in dem
die Rückkehr der
musikalischen Sanftheit
uns daran erinnert, dass
die Geschichte zu Ende
ist. Die Vorherrschaft
der Natur über die
menschliche Gier. Die
Wellen, so sanft sie auch
sein mögen, spülen die
Trümmer, das Leben und
die Schätze der Neuen
Welt auf den Grund des
Meeres. $209.95 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 4 to 6 weeks | | |
| Colonnade Theodore Presser Co.
Orchestra Bassoon, Cello, Clarinet, Contrabass, Flute, Harp, Horn, Marimba, Oboe...(+)
Orchestra Bassoon, Cello,
Clarinet, Contrabass,
Flute, Harp, Horn,
Marimba, Oboe,
Vibraphone, Viola, Violin
1, Violin 2 SKU:
PR.416414230 For
Chamber Orchestra.
Composed by James
Matheson. This edition:
Version 6/10/10. Sws.
Contemporary. Full score.
With Standard notation.
Composed February 13
2003. 84 pages. Duration
18 minutes. Theodore
Presser Company
#416-41423. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.416414230). ISBN
9781598066630. UPC:
680160602087. 9x12
inches. Colonnade
is James
Matheson’s
intriguing response to
the Albany
Symphony’s
commission to create a
work inspired by the NY
State Board of Education
Building, designed by the
renowned architect Rafael
Guastavino. Matheson
explains that “A
colonnade acts as a
metaphor for the tension
between knowledge and
perception. The columns
are the same height and
equidistant from each
other; while the mind
understands this fully,
there exists no place
from which one can
perceive this –
the columns always appear
to be of uneven height
and spacing. If one then
adds motion to
perspective, identical
columns acquire
elasticity, and begin to
change kaleidoscopically
– they shrink,
grow, become closer, and
then further
apart.†This
structural paradox is
given musical life in the
outer sections of
Colonnade, while the
long, arching middle
section is inspired by
the vaulted ceiling of
one of the
building’s largest
rooms, enhancing the
structure’s
spacious openness and
lightness. Colonnade
is inspired by
Albany’s majestic
New York State Board of
Education Building, and
written on a commission
from the Albany Symphony
Orchestra. It was an
intriguing task, in part
because in order to
accept the commission I
had to agree to write a
work “inspired
by†a building I
had not yet seen.
Thisproblem was
compounded by the fact
that, for me, the very
notion of extra-musical
inspiration is a complex
one, particularly with
respect to literary or
visual sources. I
generally find ideas and
abstracted notions more
generative of musical
ideas than specific ones
(a poem, an experience, a
painting). So when I went
to seeand tour the
building, I sought to
identify fundamental
formal aspects of the
building which I could
process into musical
ideas, and would then be
linked to the building
through a sense of formal
relationship. In theend,
two characteristics of
the building stood out as
noteworthy and
undiminished by time
(compared with, for
instance, the
building’s
rotunda, which contains a
series of quaintly
outdated allegorical
paintings): theexterior
colonnade and a beautiful
interior vaulted ceiling,
designed by Rafael
Guastavino.For me, a
colonnade acts as a
metaphor for the tension
between knowledge and
perception. We all know,
for instance, that the
columns are of the same
height and are
equidistant from each
other. Nevertheless,
while the mind
understands this fully,
it is also the case that
there exists no place
– no standpoint or
viewpoint –
anywhere in the universe
– from which one
can perceive this; the
columns always appear to
be of uneven height and
spacing. If one then adds
motion to perspective
– a walk along the
colonnade, for instance
– the fixed, even,
rigidly identical columns
acquire elasticity, and
begin to change
kaleidoscopically
– they shrink,
grow, become closer, and
then further apart.
Further, the detail of
the building’s
façade behind the
colonnadeshifts into and
out of visibility, with
different portions
obscured by the columns
from each vantage point.
These considerations
underlie the outer
sections of Colonnade, in
which a continuously
repeated, continuously
varied rising figure
– suggestive of a
column –
dominates. The iterations
of this elastic,
evolvingfigure are
interspersed with other
music – suggestive
of the building’s
façade. The second
feature of the building
that caught my attention
was the vaulted ceiling,
designed by Guastavino,of
one of the
building’s largest
rooms. The ceiling
enhances the spaciousness
of the room, giving it an
openness and lightness
that is quite
captivating. The middle
section of Colonnade has
this openness at its
core, and is dominated by
long, arching lines that,
to me, suggest the
refined beauty of this
ceiling.World premiere
March 8, 2003; Albany
Symphony Orchestra
conducted by David Alan
Miller. $50.00 - Voir plus => AcheterDélais: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
Plus de résultats boutique >> |