Matériel : CD d'écoute
SKU: BT.MUSAM957814
ISBN 9780711982246. English.
If you want to come over like a crazy stadium rocker this is the book for you! You won't learn much about music theory or fancy chords, but you will learn how to..
SKU: PR.114419130
ISBN 9781491113622. 9 x 12 inches.
The difficulty level in Gary Schocker’s third book of etudes inspired the composer to title thiscollection EXTREME SPORTS. Each etude targets specific techniques, composed by a flutist withthe knowledge and understanding of these particular demands. In addition to being fine concertfare, the etudes will help train and lengthen the breath, develop speed and fluidity, and providebeauty as well as challenge.
SKU: HL.48189311
UPC: 888680874698. 8.5x12.0x0.205 inches.
Cayre Terre Des Extremes Flute Guitar Harpsichord Score/Parts.
SKU: HL.392379
UPC: 716408507811. 18.5x48.5x0.617 inches.
The Gator Lightweight Gig Bag for Radically-Shaped Guitars (GBE-EXTREME) offers the rudimentary protection of a softshell bag as well as the heavy-duty durability of a Gator case. The rugged nylon exterior is resistant to rips, tears, and moisture while a top-to-bottom heavy-duty side zipper enclosure allos for easy loading and unloading. Inside, 10mm of foam core padding provides extra protection. A single exterior zipper pocket provides ample space for your favorite guitar strings, picks, and accessories. Keep your radically-shaped guitar safe with the Gator GBE-EXTREME Lightweight Gig Bag.
SKU: BT.DHP-1206105-070
ISBN 9789043159265.
The term Beatlemania was coined as the extreme enthusiasm exhibited by fans of the English rock band The Beatles in the 1960s. Norah Green compiled three of their 60s hits in an arrangement for Four part mixed ensemble: Love Me Do, Penny Lane and Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da. De term Beatlemania drukt het extreme enthousiasme uit dat in de jaren zestig van de vorige eeuw werd tentoongespreid door fans van de Engelse rockband The Beatles. Norah Green verzamelde drie van de hits van het viertal in een arrangement voor vierstemmig variabel blazersensemble: Love Me Do, Penny Lane and Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da. Der Begriff Beatlemania bezeichnete die extreme Begeisterung der Fans für die englische Rockband The Beatles in den 1960er-Jahren. Norah Green hat drei ihrer Hits aus dieser Zeit in einem Vierstemmig variables Bläserensemble-Arrange ment zusammengestellt: Love Me Do, Penny Lane and Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da. Le terme Beatlemania est né de l’enthousiasme extraordinaire manifesté par les fans des Beatles, le célébrissime groupe anglais des années soixante. Norah Green a rassemblé trois de leurs tubes dans un arrangement pour ensemble variable quatre voix: Love Me Do, Penny Lane and Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da.
SKU: BR.EB-9387
ISBN 9790004188576. 0 x 0 inches.
Commissione d by the Kolner Philharmonie (KolnMusik) for the non bthvn projekt 2020 and the Cite de la musique / Philharmonie de Paris Dedicated to Arditti Quartet Each movement of this quartet explores a single state, its lights and its shadows. Each movement, you could say, is a moment . And these moments could last for more or less time without compromising their essential nature. The processes could be extended or compressed, repeated or reversed, but the core ideas - if they are ideas, but maybe they are simply experiences? - are what they are. Despite this, the precise sequence of movements matters a great deal. Heard together they do articulate some kind of linear narrative, maybe even a metaphorical journey (albeit a circular one where the arrival might, who knows, prove to be a new departure). One situation gives way to another and instrumental relationships within the quartet vary, but ultimately the imaginative impulse behind the piece preferences states of unity. Whether or not this unity is expressed texturally - sometimes literal unisons pervade, but not always - there is generally a sense that even seemingly diverse aspects relate to a fundamental condition of concord: a conscious limitation in the pitch structure to spectral emanations of the root notes E-flat and C. At the opening this is unambiguously audible in the perpetual alternation of these two notes in the low cello register. Later the two spectra are woven into a micro-tonal 'double-spectral-mode' (derived from the first 24 partials of the C and E-flat fundamentals), which defines the subtle melodic inflection of the second movement, and the never-quite-chromatic ascending scales of the third. For now this feels like a rich source of melodic possibility, so far only just glimpsed... And why the insistence on E-flat? Probably by way of historical anecdote. Apparently Karl Holz (a member of the Schuppanzigh Quartet) said to Beethoven: We performed your Quartet in E-flat Op. 127 in his [Weber's] honour; he found the Adagio too long; but I told him: Beethoven also has a longer feeling and a longer imagination than anyone standing or not standing today. - Since then, even Linke (another member of the quartet) can no longer stand him: we cannot forgive him for this. Listening again to Op. 127, in light of these comments, I was struck by the opening moment: the unfolding of an E-flat 7th chord over the course of a few bars. Every time I hear it I find myself wishing that Beethoven would have lingered longer there, without resolution or progression, just enjoying that sonority. And maybe - why not? - tune the 7th naturally. And what would it be to stretch that moment into an entire piece? What would Weber think of that?! In the end I was not so extreme in my self-limitation, and other concerns took over, but it was from these thoughts that the composition process began... Lastly, about the title: it comes from a book called 'The Clock of the Long Now' by Stewart Brand, published at the turn of the millennium. It's about the creation of a thousand-year clock to embody the aspiration to thinking in terms of longer time-spans than are presently habitual. If the music of Beethoven embodied a 'longer' feeling and imagination than some of his contemporaries were able to appreciate, what is our relation to time now? Longer or shorter? Maybe it depends who you ask... It's probably more extreme in both directions: attention spans might be diminishing in the digital world, but conversely there is an awareness of distant pasts and potential futures which would have been inconceivable at the time of Beethoven. In any case, the interesting thing is to ponder how societal conditions, assumptions and expectations might - whether consciously or unconsciously - influence the time of art, for listeners and creators alike. And what if time is running out? (Christian Mason)World premiere: Paris, Cite de la musique, January 14, 2020.
SKU: HL.49044838
ISBN 9790220134418. UPC: 841886027602. 9.0x12.0x0.067 inches.
Vier Seiten for violoncello is an attempt to present an event that in reality takes about two seconds in extreme slow motion, thus making even the micromovements visible or audible beyond the straight line of motion.When I composed the piece, the fatal accident of Ayrton Senna came to my mind again and again - an accident which was shown on TV in slow motion again and again until it became unbearable. The fast motion of the car immediately before the crash into a concrete wall, a motion which was no longer purposeful but out of control and which had the car pulled to and fro and from side to side, was followed by that crash. In this extreme slow motion, it is no longer shown as a crash but as the fast telescoping of carbon fibre, metal and human body parts.After this crash, as a postlude so to speak, everything suddenly slowed down, tyres and automotive particles floating in the air, the torso of the vehicle swinging until the motion stopped. It was not until this moment that I realized that the whole presentation of the incident had been accompanied by paralyzing silence.- Thomas LarcherVier Seiten is a response to Ayrton Senna's fatal car accident, portrayed in slow motion, as it was repeatedly shown on television at the time. In this poignant work, a violent fast section represents the crash, followed by a long epilogue, reflecting the apparent stillness of the immediate aftermath.