Format : Sheet music
SKU: JK.01885
UPC: 093285018853. Ecclesiastes 3:1-2, Matthew 5:4, 1 Peter 5:7.
Thirty-one favorite funeral hymns arranged in a continuous medley for organ prelude/postlude. You can start anywhere in the book and end anywhere! Pedals are included within the staff. Songs included in this book: Comfort and Hope Be Still, My Soul The Lord is My Shepherd Nearer, My God, To Thee Where Can I Turn For Peace? Come unto Jesus Lead, Kindly Light Jesus Christ I Know That My Redeemer Lives Beautiful Savior I Believe in Christ I Stand All Amazed He Sent His Son How Great Thou Art The Love of God Our Savior's Love Love One Another My Heavenly Father Loves Me I Feel My Savior's Love Where Love Is Faith and Devotion Come, Follow Me I Need Thee Every Hour Because I Have Been Given Much Amazing Grace In the Garden Softly and Tenderly Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing Each Life That Touches Ours For Good Eternal Families Families Can Be Together Forever Love at Home Oh, What Songs of the Heart I Am a Child of God O My Father Closing God Be With You Till We Meet Again Abide with Me! Abide with Me, 'Tis Eventide Anthems Goin' home Consider the Lilies Holy Art Thou Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring Composer: Various Arranger: Brent Jorgensen Difficulty: Medium Reference: Ecclesiastes 3:1-2, Matthew 5:4, 1 Peter 5:7.
SKU: HL.14040983
French.
The Modal Column is a cycle of paired pieces for piano, starting from the classical structure- prelude-fugue - used by Bach in Das wohltemperierte Klavier. The modes that are being used have a relatively simple octavizing structure, hence an almost infinite variety of combinations that can generate a large number of pieces, impossible to exhaust by a composer. Therein lies the idea of a column, in the sense given by Brancusi, i.e. an endless succession of modules.
In the vision of the author, the mechanism of the mode is a secondary (ancillary) aspect, the primary goal is deciphering the ethos incorporated in it.
The prelude-fugue structure hypostatizesthe musical discourse at the two possible extremes. free-constructed. While Romanian music rules in free areas, like any old music with an (especially oral) tradition, the constructed pieces start from Dutch (Flemish) or Venetian polyphony, which precedes the idea of fugue, understood as a technology of the movement (dynamics) of sound, after the models of Giovanni Gabrieli or Ockeghem.
The Modal Column is first of all the presentation of a melodic world but, as the subtitle indicates, also an investigation into the ethos of Romanian music. The forms in which the pieces are thought are simple, non-ostentatious, the whole cycle being in fact a musical workshop, whose better parts may be worth including in ampler works. Before the succinct description of the six couples in Books I and II, a few observations, necessary from a musicological point of view: