Partitions numériques
Non classifié 210 867

Vents
Saxophone (partie séparée) 26 514
Flûte traversière 22 685
Clarinette 20 314
Saxophone 18 240
Clarinette (partie séparée) 14 982
Cuivres
Trompette 18 720
Trombone (partie séparée) 18 496
Trompette (partie séparée) 18 008
Trombone 15 512
Quintette de Cuivres: 2 trompettes, Cor, trombone, tuba 10 428
Cordes
Quatuor à cordes: 2 violons, alto, violoncelle 33 586
Violon 23 515
Violon et Piano 19 177
Violoncelle 15 592
Alto seul 12 974

Imprimer aprés achat
Accueil
Meilleures Ventes
Nouveautés

PARTITIONS GRATUITES
  189 000+ partitions
BOUTIQUE PARTITIONS
  1 500 000+ acheter et livraison
PARTITIONS NUMÉRIQUES
  2 000 000+ acheter et imprimer
MATERIEL DE MUSIQUE
  Accessoires & Instruments
Partitions Numériques, Accès après l'Achat


Tri et filtres :
 
 

Partitions à imprimer

Calibrating the Moon - Tuba and Piano
Calibrating the Moon - Tuba and Piano #Tuba et Piano #AVANCÉ #Contemporain #Kyle Vanderburg #Calibrating the Moon - Tuba an #NoteForge #SheetMusicPlus
Piano,Tuba - Level 5 - SKU: A0.1002836 Composed by Kyle Vanderburg. Contemporary. Score and part. 33 pages. NoteForge #6113517. Published by NoteForge (A0.1002836). I spent New Year's Eve 2018 in Nye, Montana, visiting family and friends. One of those friends is an imaging specialist who regaled us with an explanation of his most recent project, which he described as calibrating the moon. Specifically, he was talking about the NASA ARCSTONE mission to calibrate the moon's reflectance to use as an accurate reference, primarily in climate science. The idea is that we have all this data about global warming and atmospheric changes, and a lot of that data uses the brightness of the moon as a control variable, but we don't actually have a precise definition of how bright the moon is. Ever since I was a part of that conversation, I knew that I wanted calibrating the moon as a title, and everything that came after that plays with the idea of moon themes or of doing big impossible-sounding things. When Connor Challey approached me about writing for tuba, Calibrating the Moon was an obvious choice.The work opens with Syzygy, a term describing the straight line between the sun, moon, and Earth that occurs every new and full moon. The movement starts dark and brooding, moves to an energetic middle section, and returns to being mysterious, kind of like a lunar cycle. Fun fact: This movement's theme is actually a tuba setting of the phrase Calibrating the moon.The Second movement, Spectral Reflectance, is slow and shiny. NDSU was fortunate to have portfolio tubist (and Connor's mentor) Sam Pilafian as a visiting guest artist for several years, and I finished Syzygy around the time of his passing. I spent a lot of time thinking about Sam while putting the second movement together, and I quoted a couple of his favorite tuba concerti.The work ends with Libration. If you were to watch a time-lapse video of a lunar cycle, you'd notice that the moon not only transitions from new to full to new, but also sort of oscillates or wags. That's Libration. The movement is likewise off-kilter, playing with the listener's sense of time through alternating time signatures.https://kylevanderburg.com/music/calibrating-the-moon/





Partitions Gratuites
Acheter des Partitions Musicales
Acheter des Partitions Numériques à Imprimer
Acheter des Instruments de Musique