SKU: HL.14001908
8.25x11.75x0.344 inches.
SKU: HL.14007461
8.75x11.75x0.683 inches.
SKU: HL.14007460
8.5x11.75x0.192 inches.
SKU: HL.49013133
ISBN 9790001134347.
Rolf Granderath has put together a sequence of the most spirited tunes and stirring Latin American rhythms from Heinz Geese's popular children's musical the boat trip to Rio (ED 6585 / ED 6586) and arranged them for (youth) wind band. (Children's) voices may be added ad libitum. Prelude * Song: the Journey to Rio * Song: the Fine Life of the Sailor * Song: the Sailors feel Homesick * Song: Shore Leave in Rio * Song: Visiting Foreign Ports -Song of the Seagulls * Song: the Return Home to Rio.
SKU: HL.14021039
ISBN 9781844493425. 5.5x7.5x0.214 inches.
A dreamlike and evocative work from Peter Maxwell Davies for flute and orchestra. The piece captures the wonder and sanctuary of the composer's home, surrounded by seabirds and seals that fire the imagination in childlike ways, evoking images of mermaids and angels. Descriptive and inventive orchestral colours support and illuminate the flute solo material that is both tranquil and highly virtuosic. The piece was first performed in May 1999 at the Royal Concert Hall, Dublin.
SKU: HL.49015932
ISBN 9783795768775. UPC: 841886001879. 7.5x10.5x0.477 inches.
Preface * Faksimile * The Planets: * 1. Mars, the bringer of war * 2. Venus, the bringer of peace * 3. Mercury, the winged messenger * 4. Jupiter, the bringer of jollity * 5. Saturn, the bringer of old age * 6. Uranus, the magician * 7. Neptune, the mystic.
SKU: HL.14022908
ISBN 9788759857007. 8.25x11.75x0.095 inches. English.
SKU: HL.14018155
ISBN 9788759890219. English.
Concerto No. 2 For Saxophone And Orchestra was composed by Anders Koppel in 2003.Commissioned by the Odense Symphony Orchestra and dedicated to Benjamin Koppel.
SKU: HL.14031323
SKU: HL.14028022
ISBN 9788759861615. 12.0x16.5x0.52 inches.
Ruders writes: My second concerto for violin and orchestra is a 'reverse' cousin of Polydrama the cello concerto. The former starts out extremely slow and speeds up gradually and the latter progresses in exactly the opposite way, but whereas the cello concerto is composed as one, uninterrupted stretch, the violin concerto is formally completely different: there are 4 movements, each of them combined via a 'ritornello', a solo-cadenza which appears 4 times (the works conclude with a solo) in almost the shape, i.e. the length varies from time to time.