PIANO
advanced Not classified 5,175 Piano & keyboards Piano solo 12,176 Easy Piano 538 Piano, Voice 406 1 Piano, 4 hands 273 Piano, Vocal and Guitar 201 2 Pianos, 4 hands 124 Piano Trio: piano, violin, cello 64 Piano Accompaniment 48 C Instruments 29 Organ, Piano (duet) 23 Piano Quartet: piano, violin, viola, cello 18 Piano Quintet: piano, 2 violins, viola, cello 17 2 Pianos, 8 hands 10 1 Piano, 6 hands 8 Piano Quartet: piano, 2 violins, cello 5
Woodwind Flute and Piano 420 Clarinet and Piano 231 Oboe, Piano (duet) 168 Alto Saxophone and Piano 162 Tenor Saxophone and Piano 111 Soprano Saxophone and Piano 61 Baritone Saxophone, Piano 39 Treble (Alto) Recorder, Piano 20 2 Flutes, Piano 12 Flute, Cello, Piano (trio) 11 Flute, Violin, Piano 10 Clarinet, Cello, Piano (trio) 6 Descent (Soprano) Recorder, Piano 5 Saxophone and Piano 2
Others
FREE SHEET MUSIC
FOR PIANO
SHEET MUSIC LIBRARY
FOR PIANO
DIGITAL SHEET MUSIC
FOR PIANO
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
FOR PIANO
INSTRUMENTS :
ACCESSSORIES :
GIFTS :
Digital sheet music, access after purchasing
Sheetmusic to print
5 sheet music found The Poison Arrow
The Poison Arrow # Piano Quartet: piano, 2 violins, cello # INTERMEDIATE/ADVANCED # Contemporary # Grisha Krivchenia # companions, kinsmen & # The Poison Arrow # Abundant Silence # SheetMusicPlus
Instrumental Duet,Piano Cello,Instrumental Duet,Piano,Violin - Level 4 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1173377 Composed by Grisha Krivchenia. Classical,Contem...(+)
Instrumental Duet,Piano Cello,Instrumental Duet,Piano,Violin - Level 4 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1173377 Composed by Grisha Krivchenia. Classical,Contemporary. Score and parts. 36 pages. Abundant Silence #773525. Published by Abundant Silence (A0.1173377). The Poison Arrow by Grisha Krivchenia For Piano, Violin, and Violoncello, Advanced, 34 Pages The title of The Poison Arrow refers to one of the Buddha's sermons. A young man comes to Siddhatta Gotama with a barrage of ontological questions: how long has the universe been in existence, who created it, etc. Gotama replies with an analogy:It's just as if a man were wounded with an arrow thickly smeared with poison. His friends & companions, kinsmen & relatives would provide him with a surgeon, and the man would say, 'I won't have this arrow removed until I know whether the man who wounded me was a noble warrior, a priest, a merchant, or a worker.' He would say, 'I won't have this arrow removed until I know the given name & clan name of the man who wounded me.'[...]The man would die and those things would still remain unknown to him.*​In the Buddha's teaching, speculative philosophies are not important; what matters is figuring out how to overcome suffering in everyday life. We will all die without answering the mysteries of physics and metaphysics. So the appropriate thing to do is to focus significant attention on living a better life here and now.The first movement of The Poison Arrow depicts suffering, and a frantic, often fruitless, attempt to find a way out. The second movement is a depiction of life without suffering, completely placid and free.