SKU: BT.CMP-1094-07-010
9x12 inches.
This easy-to-prepare beginning band comedy piece will have the audience rolling in the aisles. Feature that popular principal, custodian, secretary or any other staff or community member who has a little bit of comedian in them as the Triangle soloist. One interruption after another prevents the soloist from actually playing the Triangle until the very end of the piece where, with a band member’s assistance, the soloist finally gets to play the Triangle one single time. Everyone will love it! Side-splitting!Di t concert voor triangel en orkest staat garant voor een komische noot. De triangelsolist(e) komt met veel poespas op en mist vervolgens tijdens het concerto - op een zeer opvallende manier - elk moment waarop hij of zij moet spelen.De laatste noot is echter eindelijk raak. Het wordt extra leuk als een bekende persoon deze grappige rol op zich neemt (bijvoorbeeld een oud-lid of een voorzitter): de spelers en het publiek zullen zich kostelijk vermaken!Ein heiteres, komödiantisches Stück, das leicht einzustudieren ist: Präsentieren Sie jemanden - gerne auch einen Nicht-Musiker - dem verdutzten Publikum als den Triangel-Solisten“ vor. Was nun folgt, ist unbezahlbar komisch: Eine Unterbrechung jagt die andere und hält den Solisten“ von seinem kunstvollen Vortrag ab, bis er schließlich, ganz zum Schluss, mit tatkräftiger Unterstützung eines Orchestermusikers, doch noch zu seinem Auftritt kommt. Ein absoluter Brüller!Cette composition humoristique est un hommage « vibrant » au triangle. Une seule note jouer mais avec prestance, précision et sérieux. La carrière en dépend ! Hélas, les empêchements sont nombreux : problème de matériel, de temps, d’espace, sonnerie du portable, etc. Notre brillant soliste réussira-t-il son coup de maître ? vous de le découvrir !
SKU: BT.CMP-1094-07-040
9x12 inches. English.
This easy-to-prepare beginning band comedy piece will have the audience rolling in the aisles. Feature that popular principal, custodian, secretary or any other staff or community member who has a little bit of comedian in them as the Triangle soloist. One interruption after another prevents the soloist from actually playing the Triangle until the very end of the piece where, with a band member’s assistance, the soloist finally gets to play the Triangle one single time. Everyone will love it! Side-splitting!Ei n heiteres, komödiantisches Stück, das leicht einzustudieren ist: Präsentieren Sie jemanden - gerne auch einen Nicht-Musiker - dem verdutzten Publikum als den Triangel-Solisten“ vor. Was nun folgt, ist unbezahlbar komisch: Eine Unterbrechung jagt die andere und hält den Solisten“ von seinem kunstvollen Vortrag ab, bis er schließlich, ganz zum Schluss, mit tatkräftiger Unterstützung eines Orchestermusikers, doch noch zu seinem Auftritt kommt. Ein absoluter Brüller!Cette composition humoristique est un hommage « vibrant » au triangle. Une seule note jouer mais avec prestance, précision et sérieux. La carrière en dépend ! Hélas, les empêchements sont nombreux : problème de matériel, de temps, d’espace, sonnerie du portable, etc. Notre brillant soliste réussira-t-il son coup de maître ? vous de le découvrir !
SKU: BR.PB-5712
ISBN 9790004216491. 6.5 x 9 inches.
Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy created a standard work with his final violin concerto in E minor op. 64 MWV O 14 that is now firmly established in today's concert repertoire. When in 1838 the composer indicated that he had in mind a violin concerto [...] in E minor [...], it was not only his friend Ferdinand David, the Gewandhaus concertmaster for whom it was intended, who was euphoric. The whole civilized violin world was awaiting this concerto - and yet it was another seven years before the much-anticipated composition was ultimately published by the Leipzig publishing house Breitkopf & Hartel in June 1845, as well as simultaneously in London and Milan. The concerto particularly appeals through its innovative treatment of the solo part, not only because the solo violin strikingly opens the first movement without a preceding orchestral tutti, but also because of its musical dialogue with the orchestra. The Leipzig Gewandhaus premiere on 13 March 1845 with Ferdinand David as soloist under the direction of Nils Wilhelm Gade served - as so frequently with Mendelssohn - virtually as a proofreading process. After the composer subsequently made extensive changes that also involved David, the work first appeared just short of nine months later. The first edition documents the composer's valid final revision, which is reproduced as the work's main version in the present Urtext edition.The matching piano reduction includes not only an unmarked string part, but also a part with the established markings by Igor Oistrach.
SKU: BR.OB-5645-19
ISBN 9790004344743. 10 x 12.5 inches.
SKU: BR.OB-5645-16
ISBN 9790004344736. 10 x 12.5 inches.
SKU: HL.242899
UPC: 888680953126. 9x12.25 inches.
This is the violin solo part of Philip Glass's wonderful Violin Concerto No. 2 “American Four Seasons.” The piece was commissioned by Toronto Symphony Orchestra and London Philharmonic Orchestra, among others, the world premiere was held in Toronto on December 9th 2009, conducted by Peter Oundjian. At this premiere, the violinist was Robert McDuffie, for whom the Concerto was composed. During the summer and autumn of 2009, Glass composed this work after many years of exchanges with McDuffie. His idea of creating a work that would be influenced by, and an accompaniment to Vivaldi's The Four Seasons. Interestingly, Glass has provided no indication in the score of where each season falls, making it open for interpretation by the performers or the audience.
SKU: BR.PB-5712-07
SKU: BR.EB-9374
ISBN 9790004188446. 9 x 12 inches.
Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy created a standard work with his final violin concerto in E minor op. 64 MWV O 14 that is now firmly established in today's concert repertoire. When in 1838 the composer indicated that he had in mind a violin concerto [...] in E minor [...], it was not only his friend Ferdinand David, the Gewandhaus concertmaster for whom it was intended, who was euphoric. The whole civilized violin world was awaiting this concerto - and yet it was another seven years before the much-anticipated composition was ultimately published by the Leipzig publishing house Breitkopf & Hartel in June 1845, as well as simultaneously in London and Milan. The concerto particularly appeals through its innovative treatment of the solo part, not only because the solo violin strikingly opens the first movement without a preceding orchestral tutti, but also because of its musical dialogue with the orchestra. The Leipzig Gewandhaus premiere on 13 March 1845 with Ferdinand David as soloist under the direction of Nils Wilhelm Gade served - as so frequently with Mendelssohn - virtually as a proofreading process. After the composer subsequently made extensive changes that also involved David, the work first appeared just short of nine months later. The first edition documents the composer's valid final revision, which is reproduced as the work's main version in the present Urtext edition. The matching piano reduction includes not only an unmarked string part, but also a part with the established markings by Igor Oistrach.
SKU: BR.OB-5645-23
ISBN 9790004344873. 10 x 12.5 inches.