SKU: HL.48182107
UPC: 888680849405. 6.25x8.25x0.341 inches.
Laszlo Lajtha: Symphonie No.9, Op.67 (Orchestra).
SKU: FH.FLE01
ISBN 978-1-55440-300-4.
Unparalleled in scope, Overtones offers all the music flutists want in one complete series! This progressive collection includes fundamental repertoire and supporting materials such as Studies, Compact Discs, Orchestral Excerpts, and Technique. The richness of music carefully selected for this compilation will resonate with teachers and students at every level of study.This compilation of standard orchestral passages for flute is an indispensable resource for the developing years and beyond. Teachers and students will find this unrivalled volume essential for examination or audition preparation.Slavonic Dances, op. 46, no. 1 Antonin Dvorak Symphony No. 100 in G Major (Military): II Franz Joseph Haydn Le carnaval des animaux: Aquarium Camille Saint-Saens HMS Pinafore: I'm Called Little Buttercup Arthur Sullivan La forza del destino: Overture Giuseppe Verdi Serse (Xerxes), HWV 40: Va godendo vezzoso e bello George Frideric Handel Symphony No. 100 in G Major (Military): III Franz Joseph Haydn Ma Vlast: II Bedrich Smetana HMS Pinafore: When I Was a Lad Arthur Sullivan Nutcracker Suite: Overture Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 6 (Pastoral): III Ludwig van Beethoven Symphony No. 9 in E Minor, op. 95 (New World): I Antonin Dvorak Faust: Soldier's Chorus Charles Gounod Peer Gynt Suite No. 1, op. 46: I Edvard Grieg Symphony No. 102 in B flat Major: I Franz Joseph Haydn Brandenburg Concerto No. 4, BWV 1049: III Johann Sebastian Bach Carmen: La garde montante Georges Bizet Petite suite: Ballet IV Claude Debussy Symphony No. 100 in G Major (Military): IV Franz Joseph Haydn Symphony No. 40 in G Minor, K 550: III Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Symphony No. 5: IV Ludwig van Beethoven Carmen: Act 1, Prelude Georges Bizet Faust Ballet Music: Danse antique Charles Gounod Symphony No. 102 in B flat Major: IV Franz Joseph Haydn Scheherazade, op. 35: IV Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov Symphony No. 6 (Pastoral): I, II Ludwig van Beethoven Symphonie fantastique: V Hector Berlioz Die Zauberfloete: Wie stark ist nicht dein Zauberton Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Bolero Maurice Ravel Scheherazade, op. 35: I Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov Brandenburg Concerto No. 4, BWV 1049: I Johann Sebastian Bach Symphonie fantastique: I Hector Berlioz Carmen: Entr'acte (Prelude) Georges Bizet Symphony No. 1 in C Minor: IV Johannes Brahms Die Zauberfloete: Overture Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Symphony No. 8 in G Major: IV Antonin Dvorak Leonore Overture No. 3, op. 72a Ludwig van BeethovenSymphony No. 4 in E Minor: IV Johannes BrahmsLa mer: I, II, III Claude DebussySymphony No. 4 (Italian): IV Felix Mendelssohn Symphony No. 1 (Classical): II Sergei Prokofiev Symphony No. 3 in E flat Major (Eroica): IV Ludwig van Beethoven Prelude a l'apres-midi d'un faune Claude Debussy Sinfonie Mathis der Maler: I, II Paul Hindemith Incidental Music to A Midsummer Night's Dream, op. 61: Scherzo Felix Mendelssohn Petroushka (1947 revision): Part 1 Igor Stravinsky Symphony No. 4 in F Minor: III Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky Capriccio espagnol, op. 34: IV Nicolai Rimsky-KorsakovSymphony No. 1 (Classical): IV Sergei Prokofiev Concerto for Orchestra: I, II, III, IV, V Bela Bartok Symphonic Metamorphosis after Themes by Carl Maria von Weber: II, III Paul Hindemith Das Lied von der Erde: VI Gustav Mahler Peter and the Wolf, op. 67 Sergei Prokofiev Le carnaval des animaux: 10. Voliere Camille Saint-Saens Daphnis et Chloe: Troisieme partie Maurice Ravel Guillaume Tell: Overture Gioachino Rossini Till Eulenspiegel's Merry Pranks Richard Strauss Firebird Suite (1919 version) Igor Stravinsky Symphony No. 9: IV Ludwig van Beethoven Concerto for Orchestra: III Bela Bartok Scheherezade, op. 35: IV Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov Semiramide: Overture Gioachino Rossini Symphony No. 5, op. 47: I, II Dmitri Shostakovich.
About Overtones
Unparalleled in scope, Overtones offers all the music flutists want in one complete series! This progressive collection includes fundamental Repertoire and supporting materials such as Etudes, Compact Discs, Orchestral Excerpts, and Technique. The richness of music carefully selected for this compilation will resonate with teachers and students at every level of study and is the official series for those using The Royal Conservatory Music Development program.
SKU: HL.49010056
ISBN 9783795767365. UPC: 841886003491. 5.25x7.5x0.12 inches.
With more than 1,200 titles from the orchestral and choral repertoire, from chamber music and musical theatre, Edition Eulenburg is the world's largest series of scores, covering large part of music history from the Baroque to the Classical era and looking back on a long tradition.
SKU: KN.10089
UPC: 822795100891.
Beethoven composed his Symphony No. 9 between 1822-24. The fourth movement is a theme and variations on Schiller's poem Ode To Joy and included solo voices and choir. This arrangement includes the opening presentation of the theme and several variations, capturing the spirit of the original work in an accessible grade 3 level for string orchestra. The parts are largely playable in first position, with some shifting to intermediate positions for 1st Violin, Cello and Bass. Duration 5:45.
SKU: HL.14041874
9.5x14.25x2.741 inches.
Carl Nielsen Collected Works Section II: Vol. 2.
SKU: TM.10555SC
Clothbound Score. Ed. by Sourek.
SKU: PR.114419070
ISBN 9781491113493. UPC: 680160671540. 9 x 12 inches.
Martin Amlin’s first recital work for Trumpet and Piano brings all the iridescent excitement that has intrigued other performers. Composed for his renowned colleague Terry Everson, Amlin’s sonata pours new wine into old bottles with its three movements titled: 1. Invention, 2. Chaconne, and 3. Moto Perpetuo. The publication provides solo parts for both C and E-flat Trumpet. Composer and pianist Martin Amlin has received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, Tanglewood Music Center, Massachusetts Cultural Council, Massachusetts Artists Foundation, St. Botolph Club Foundation, and the Massachusetts Council for the Arts. He was a recipient of an ASCAP Grant to Young Composers and has received many ASCAPlus Awards. He has been a resident at Yaddo, the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, and the MacDowell Colony, where he was named a Norlin Fellow.Much of Amlin’s music is characterized by a pungent tonality and energetic rhythms. His Sonata for Piccolo and Piano and Sonata No. 2 for Flute and Piano both won the National Flute Association’s Newly Published Music Competition. Concerto for Piccolo and Orchestra was premiered by the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra,and he has had performances of his music by the Pro Arte Chamber Orchestra, Tanglewood Festival Chorus, John Oliver Chorale, Back Bay Chorale, Webster Trio, and the American Vocal Arts Quintet. He has had commissions from the Seattle Flute Society, Pacific Serenades, the Chicago Flute Club, ALEA III, the James Pappoutsakis memorial flute competition, pianist Andrew Willis, and clarinetist Michael Webster.Martin Amlin is Chairman of the Department of Composition and Theory at Boston University and Director of the Young Artists Composition Program at the Boston University Tanglewood Institute. He is also recipient of Boston University’s Kahn Award for his Piano Sonata No. 7. He studied with Nadia Boulanger at the Ecoles d’Art Américaines in Fontainebleau and the Ecole Normale de Musique in Paris, and received masters and doctoral degrees as well as the Performer’s Certificate from the Eastman School of Music. Mr. Amlin has appeared as soloist with the Boston Pops Orchestra in performances of Mendelssohn’s Piano Concerto No. 1 and Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue, and has performed on the Boston Symphony Orchestra’s Prelude concerts at both Symphony Hall and Tanglewood. He has also appeared on the FleetBoston Celebrity Series and been pianist for the M.I.T. Experimental Music Studio and the New England Ragtime Ensemble. He has often been heard live on Boston’s WGBH radio station as both performer and composer, and has given world premieres of many new works.Martin Amlin has recordings on the Albany, Ashmont Music, Centaur, Crystal, Folkways, Hyperion, Koch International, Opus One, Titanic, and Wergo labels. .
SKU: FH.VA7
ISBN 978-1-55440-569-5.
This groundbreaking series for viola offers a sound and progressive collection of Repertoire, Recordings, Etudes, Technique, and Orchestral Excerpts for the aspiring virtuoso. Representing all major style periods and a variety of genres, Viola Series, 2013 Edition offers all the music and tools needed to support a comprehensive course of study from the beginner to advanced levels. A rich and varied selection of music in each of these nine progressive volumes of repertoire appeals to violists of all ages. From the Preparatory Level through Level 8, students will be exposed to quality selections originally written for viola, fun arrangements of traditional fiddle and folk tunes, as well as contemporary pieces by notable composers such as Violet Archer, Carey Cheney, and Fritz Kriesler.Level 7:Holberg Suite, op. 40: I,V - Grieg, EdvardSymphony No. 5, op. 67: II - Beethoven, Ludwig vanSymphony No. 4 (Italian), op. 90: II - Mendelssohn, FelixBrandenburg Concerto No. 3, BWV 1048: I - Bach, Johann SebastianSymphony No. 35 (Haffner), K 385: I - Mozart, Wolfgang AmadeusLevel 8:Ruslan and Ludmilla: Overture - Glinka, MikhailSymphony No. 35 (Haffner), K 385: IV - Mozart, Wolfgang AmadeusSymphony No. 6 (Pathetique), op. 75: I - Tchaikovsky, Pyotr Il'yichSymphony No. 9, op. 125: IV - Beethoven, Ludwig vanSymphony No. 3 (Eroica), op. 55: IV - Beethoven, Ludwig vanSymphony No. 1, op. 68: I - Brahms, JohannesSymphony No. 9 (New World), op. 95: IV - Dvorak, AntoninLevel 9:Symphony No. 5, op. 67: III - Beethoven, Ludwig vanDie Zauberfloete, K 620: Overture - Mozart, Wolfgang AmadeusThe Hebrides, op. 26: Overture - Mendelssohn, FelixVariations on a Theme by Haydn, op. 56a - Brahms, JohannesLe carnaval romain - Berlioz, HectorSymphony No. 8, op. 88: I - Dvorak, AntoninSymphony NO. 4 (Romantic): II - Bruckner, AntonLevel 10:Symphony No. 4 (Italian), op. 90: I,IV - Mendelssohn, FelixSymphony No. 4, op. 98: II,IV - Brahms, JohannesPeer Gynt Suite No. 1, op. 46: I - Grieg, EdvardConcerto for Orchestra: IV,V - Bartok, BelaSymphony No. 40, K 550: I,IV - Mozart, Wolfgang AmadeusSerenade for Strings, op. 48: I,II - Tchaikovsly, Pyotr Il'yichSymphony No. 5, op. 47: I - Shostakovich, DmitriAssociate:Group 1: Ochestral Tutti Parts (Viola):Daphnis et Chloe: III - Ravel, MauriceDon Juan, op. 20 - Strauss, RichardSymphony No. 9, op. 125: II,IV - Beethoven, Ludwig vanIncidental Music to A Midsummer Night's Dream, op. 61: Scherzo - Mendelssohn, FelixThe Bartered Bride: Overture - Smetana, Bed_ichGroup 2: Viola Solos:Don Quixote, op. 35 - Strauss, RichardHarold en Italie: I - Berlioz, Hector.
SKU: HL.49018407
ISBN 9790001175678. UPC: 841886016385. 9.0x12.0x0.067 inches.
A 'Last Night of the Proms' without this march - unthinkable! 'Pomp and Circumstance Military March No. 1' with its middle section, the hymn-like 'Land of Hope and Glory' by Edward Elgar (1857-1934), belongs to the finale of the London music event like the Radetzky March usually played as last piece to the New Year's Concert of the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra. The fame and popularity of the other four military marches composed by Elgar between 1901 and 1907 fade in comparison to this secret national anthem of Great Britain (although strongly rivalled by 'Rule, Britannia!'). It is, indeed, an equally rousing and catchy piece of music, and the catchy tune in the middle has just become a classical 'hit'. Thanks to the present edition, all those who do not have a large symphony orchestra at home can now play this rousing march by themselves.
SKU: OU.9780193519671
ISBN 9780193519671. 12 x 9 inches.
Described by Walton as the 'greatest symphony since Beethoven', Vaughan Williams's fourth symphony is noted for its abrasively dissonant harmonic language. This new scholarly edition, edited by David Matthews, will replace the existing OUP edition from 1935. The preliminary text will include a preface, sources and editorial method, and detailed textual notes.
SKU: PR.165001000
ISBN 9781491129241. UPC: 680160669776. 9 x 12 inches.
Commissioned for a consortium of high school and college bands in the north Dallas region, FOR THEMYSTIC HARMONY is a 10-minute inspirational work in homage to Norwood and Elizabeth Dixon,patrons of the Fort Worth Symphony and the Van Cliburn Competition. Welcher draws melodic flavorfrom five American hymns, spirituals, and folk tunes of the 19th century. The last of these sources toappear is the hymn tune For the Beauty of the Earth, whose third stanza is the quatrain: “For the joy of earand eye, For the heart and mind’s delight, For the mystic harmony, Linking sense to sound and sight,â€giving rise to the work’s title.This work, commissioned for a consortium of high school bands in the north Dallas area, is my fifteenth maturework for wind ensemble (not counting transcriptions). When I asked Todd Dixon, the band director whospearheaded this project, what kind of a work he most wanted, he first said “something that’s basically slow,†butwanted to leave the details to me. During a long subsequent conversation, he mentioned that his grandparents,Norwood and Elizabeth Dixon, were prime supporters of the Fort Worth Symphony, going so far as to purchase anumber of high quality instruments for that orchestra. This intrigued me, so I asked more about his grandparentsand was provided an 80-page biographical sketch. Reading that article, including a long section about theirdevotion to supporting a young man through the rigors of the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition fora number of years, moved me very much. Norwood and Elizabeth Dixon weren’t just supporters of the arts; theywere passionate lovers of music and musicians. I determined to make this work a testament to that love, and tothe religious faith that sustained them both. The idea of using extant hymns was also suggested by Todd Dixon,and this 10-minute work is the result.I have employed existing melodies in several works, delving into certain kinds of religious music more than a fewtimes. In seeking new sounds, new ways of harmonizing old tunes, and the contrapuntal overlaying of one tunewith another, I was able to make works like ZION (using 19th-century Revivalist hymns) and LABORING SONGS(using Shaker melodies) reflect the spirit of the composers who created these melodies, without sounding likepastiches or medleys. I determined to do the same with this new work, with the added problem of employingmelodies that were more familiar. I chose five tunes from the 19th century: hymns, spirituals, and folk-tunes.Some of these are known by differing titles, but they all appear in hymnals of various Christian denominations(with various titles and texts). My idea was to employ the tunes without altering their notes, instead using aconstantly modulating sense of harmony — sometimes leading to polytonal harmonizations of what are normallysimple four-chord hymns.The work begins and ends with a repeated chime on the note C: a reminder of steeples, white clapboard churchesin the country, and small church organs. Beginning with a Mixolydian folk tune of Caribbean origin presentedtwice with layered entrances, the work starts with a feeling of mystery and gentle sorrow. It proceeds, after along transition, into a second hymn that is sometimes connected to the sea (hence the sensation of water andwaves throughout it). This tune, by John B. Dykes (1823-1876), is a bit more chromatic and “shifty†than mosthymn-tunes, so I chose to play with the constant sensation of modulation even more than the original does. Atthe climax, the familiar spiritual “Were you there?†takes over, with a double-time polytonal feeling propelling itforward at “Sometimes it causes me to tremble.â€Trumpets in counterpoint raise the temperature, and the tempo as well, leading the music into a third tune (ofunknown provenance, though it appears with different texts in various hymnals) that is presented in a sprightlymanner. Bassoons introduce the melody, but it is quickly taken up by other instruments over three “verses,â€constantly growing in orchestration and volume. A mysterious second tune, unrelated to this one, interrupts it inall three verses, sending the melody into unknown regions.The final melody is “For the Beauty of the Earth.†This tune by Conrad Kocher (1786-1872) is commonly sung atThanksgiving — the perfect choice to end this work celebrating two people known for their generosity.Keeping the sense of constant modulation that has been present throughout, I chose to present this hymn in threegrowing verses, but with a twist: every four bars, the “key†of the hymn seems to shift — until the “Lord of all, toThee we praise†melody bursts out in a surprising compound meter. This, as it turns out, was the “mystery tuneâ€heard earlier in the piece. After an Ivesian, almost polytonal climax, the Coda begins over a long B( pedal. At first,it seems to be a restatement of the first two phrases of “For the Beauty†with long spaces between them, but it soonchanges to a series of “Amen†cadences, widely separated by range and color. These, too, do not conform to anykey, but instead overlay each other in ways that are unpredictable but strangely comforting.The third verse of “For the Beauty of the Earth†contains this quatrain:“For the joy of ear and eye, –For the heart and mind’s delightFor the mystic harmonyLinking sense to sound and sightâ€and it was from this poetry that I drew the title for the present work. It is my hope that audiences and performerswill find within it a sense of grace: more than a little familiar, but also quite new and unexpected.
SKU: BR.CHB-14677-02
ISBN 9790004413067. 7.5 x 10.5 inches.
Since 2001 the Ninth has been included in UNESCO's Memory of the World Register. Beethoven was preoccupied with his unique work for many years, since at least 1815, and still shortly before his death, according to the highly complex source situation. The work will now finally be available as an edition produced from the new Beethoven Complete Edition in time for the 2020 anniversary year commemorating the composer's 250th birthday. Not all doubtful cases can be clarified, not all gaps closed, but numerous aspects have been further illuminated in this edition. New findings and source evaluations taken into account here, appear, for instance, pertaining to the work's title, the tradition of the metronome indications, the contrabassoon part, and the underlying vocal text in the finale, as well as in the original rendering of the sforzato and forte markings. The edition is to be considered, according to its editor Beate Angelika Kraus, as a contribution to the understanding of a work in which there is a discrepancy between its significance in musical life and the critical appreciation of its musical text..
SKU: BR.CHB-14677
SKU: PR.114419290
ISBN 9781491135235. UPC: 680160676118. 9 x 12 inches.
Supported by a major commissioning award from the Serge Koussevitzky Music Foundation in the Library of Congress, my Chinese Folk Dance Suite is written for violin solo and orchestra, and premiered by The Women's Philharmonic with violin soloist Terrie Baune, conducted by Apo Hsu, on March 10, 2001, at Yerba Buena Center For the Arts Theater in San Francisco. Inspired by various Chinese traditional folk dances, I've composed three movements in the suite: 1) Lion Dance. Traditionally, people dance with richly decorated hand made lions, accompanied by percussion ensemble, to celebrate happy occasions and major festivals throughout the country. In the composition, I use Chinese drum and other percussion instruments in the background, to form a dynamic and rhythmic texture responding to the solo part, which imitates the tunes played on the suona (traditional Chinese trumpet). The pitch materials came from traditional Guangdong Music tune and Chaozhou Music tune ; 2) YangKo. Originated in northern China, it's a major folk dance form in mass performance popularized in the country. In YangKo performance, people always play rhythmic patterns on the drums hung around their waists while singing and dancing. In my second movement, I have imagined a warm scene of YangKo dancing in distance. The solo violin plays a sweet and gracious melodic line while all members in the orchestra sing the non-pitch syllables in different layers as the soft background, to imitate the percussion sound which produces the ever going pulse. 3) Muqam. It is a large scale traditional music and dance form from Uygur nationality in Xinjiang province, originated in the 15th century. In my third movement, I keep the meter of seven eight and the melodic style of Muqam music. The fiery dancing gesture cumulates the sustained climax section at the end of the work, after a colorful violin cadenza in both improvisational singing style and polyphonic writing with woven lines. Scored for 2 flutes (2nd doubling piccolo), 2 oboes, 2 clarinets in Bb, 2 bassoons, 4 French horns in F, 2 trumpets in Bb, 3 trombones, percussion 1 (3 congas, low tom-tom, temple block, paddle castanets), percussion 2 (snare drum, 6 small Beijing opera gong, 12 big Beijing opera gong, crotales, tambourine), percussion 3 (suspended cymbal, a pair of 6 Chinese cymbals, bass drum), solo violin, violins I, violins II, violas, cellos and double basses. Duration is about 16 minutes. The work is recorded on Bis [CD-1352] and released in 2003, performed by Cho-Liang Lin and the Singapore Symphony Orchestra, cond. by Lan Shui. Reduction for B-flat soprano saxophone and piano by Wong Tak Chiu (2017) and edited by Chen Yi (2018) The second movement YangKo is premiered by Dr. Wong and Korak Lerpibulchai at the Singapore Saxophone Symposium on 8/13/2017. The American premiere of the saxophone and piano reduction version of Chinese Folk Dance Suite is given by Chi Him Chik and Hao Yin at the Society for American Music National Conference in Kansas City, MO on 3/2/2018.
SKU: HL.354338
ISBN 9781705107669. UPC: 840126936964. 9.0x12.0x0.109 inches.
Richard Wilson was born in Cleveland on May 15, 1941. He studied piano with Roslyn Pettibone, Egbert Fischer, and Leonard Shure, andcello with Robert Ripley and Ernst Silberstein. After beginning composition studies with Roslyn Pettibone and Howard Whittaker, he went on in 1959 to Harvard, studying with Randall Thompson, G.W. Woodworth, and principally with Robert Moevs, and graduating in 1963 magna cum laude. Awarded the Frank Huntington Beebe Award for study abroad, he continued studying piano with Friedrich Wührer in Munich, and composition, again with Moevs, in Rome, where he also gave piano recitals. Wilson joined the faculty of Vassar College in 1966. He was appointed to the Mary Conover Mellon Professorship of Music there in 1988, and he has served three times as chairman of the Department of Music. Wilson has been commissioned by the San Francisco Symphony, the American Symphony, the New Juilliard Ensemble, the Koussevitzky Foundation, the Fromm Foundation, Chamber Music America, the Chicago Chamber Musicians, the Walter W. Naumburg Foundation, and the Library of Congress. His works have been heard in such American musical centers as New York, Philadelphia, Washington, Boston, Cleveland, and Los Angeles and at the Aspen Music Festival, but also in London, Berlin, Frankfurt, Zurich, Milan, Amsterdam, Graz, Leningrad, Stockholm, Tokyo, Bogota, and a number of Australian cities. The recipient in 1992 of a Guggenheim Fellowship, he was awarded the Elise L. Stoeger Prize of the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center in 1994, the Academy Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 2004, and has served as composer in residence with the American Symphony Orchestra since 1992. Wilson has been praised by 21st Century Music as a “splendidly talented and highly accomplished composer whose music rewards seeking out†and by the New York Sun as “possessed of a hard-won idiom that has grown and developed over the years into a probing blend of wit, classic form, modern harmony, and impressionistic color.†Writing in the New Yorker, Andrew Porter called his String Quartet No. 3 a “richly wrought and unusual composition,†while the New York Times called it “a work of substance and expressivity ... [that] merits a place in the active repertory.â€.
SKU: AP.36-A134502
UPC: 735816433567. English.
Johannes Brahms (1833-1897) composed his Piano Concerto No. 1 in 1858 and performed the work's debut in Hanover, Germany, in 1859, to mixed reviews. The work initially began as a sonata for two pianos, then a four-movement symphony. Under the counsel of friends Julius Otto Grimm and violinist Joseph Joachim, Brahms landed on a three-movement piano concerto. After its fifth performance in December 1861, with Clara Schumann as piano soloist, the work still received mixed audience reception. It has since grown in popularity and has been recognized as a masterpiece. Instrumentation: 2.2.2.2: 4.2.0.0: Timp: Str (9-8-7-6-5 in set): Solo Piano.
These products are currently being prepared by a new publisher. While many items are ready and will ship on time, some others may see delays of several months.
SKU: PR.41641386L
UPC: 680160607921.
Piccolo, 2 Flutes, 2 Oboes, English Horn, 3 Clarinets in Bb, Bass Clarinet, 2 Bassoons, Contrabassoon, 4 Horns in F, 4 Trumpets in C, 2 Trombones, Bass Trombone, Tuba, Timpani, 3 Percussion, Piano/Celesta, Harp, Strings.
SKU: PR.416413860
UPC: 680160607914.
SKU: HL.49015665
ISBN 9790001139786. UPC: 884088156251. 9.0x12.0x0.296 inches.
Best playability and musical spirit - this is what characterizes the music of Bertold Hummel who died in 2002, and why his music must be part of the repertoire of any amateur and semi-professional orchestra. The Oregon Symphony occupies a special position in his oeuvre: it was written by Hummel for the typically American symphonic wind bands, requiring almost 100 musicians, including 15 clarinets in three groups of five alone, as well as four piccolos and six flutes, bass clarinet, bassoons, saxophones, trumpets, horns, tubas and the typically American sousaphone, and five percussionists. The work consists of four movements; in the rousing finale, Hummel mixes jazz motifs with popular themes and even weaves the anthem of the State of Oregon in the final music. For getting better acquainted with this music, the first movement is also separately available ('Symphonische Ouverture', SHS 1001).Picc. * 2 * 2 * Klar. in Es * 3 * Bassklar. in B * 2 Altsax. in Es * Tenorsax. in B * Baritonsax. in Es * 2 - 4 * 3 (Korn.) * 3 * Tenorhr. in B (Bar.) * 2 - P. S. (Trgl. * 4 hg. Beck. * Beckenp. * Tamt. * Gong * Glock. ad lib. * Bngs. * Schellentr. * kl. Tr. * gr. Tr. * Holzbl. * Tempelbl. * Ratsche * Xyl. * Vibr) (5 Spieler) - Kb.
SKU: AP.36-A932601
ISBN 9781638879831. UPC: 676737768577. English.
Béla Bartók's (1881-1945) Four Orchestra Pieces, Op. 12 premiered in January 1922 in Budapest, but did not become one of Bartók's best-known works until its popularity was revived by Pierre Boulez in the 1970s. Bartók's influences are on display in these pieces, including that of Debussy in the first movement Preludio, and Beethoven's Ninth Symphony in the Scherzo. Four Orchestra Pieces is considered a bridge stylistically between Bartók's early works like Duke Bluebeard's Castle and his mature works like The Miraculous Mandarin. Instrumentation: 4(3&4dPicc).3(2&3dEH).3(3dEb/BCl)+BCl(dEb).4(4dCBsn): 4.4(AlldCrnt).4.1: Timp.Perc(2): Clst.Hp(2).Pno(4-Hands): Str (9-8-7-6-5 in set). Reprint edition.
SKU: AP.36-A932690
UPC: 676737521530. English.
SKU: HL.673654
ISBN 9781705168714. UPC: 196288081661. 9.0x12.0 inches.
A two and a half minute piece for voices and piano, commissioned and first performed by the London Symphony Orchestra Discovery Choir conducted by Neil Ferris. One Earth sets a text by Di Sherlock for voices and piano and is an ideal community choir piece.