Matériel : Conducteur
Par MOZART WOLFGANG AMADEUS. Requiem K. 626 The Requiem, completed by Franz Xaver Sussmayr, in its traditional form. Mozart's final work, the Requiem K. 626, was left incomplete and it is fraught with questions and emotions: the expressive depth of its music, sorrow at the great composer's early death, truth and legend, fragments and attempts to complete the work. The completion of the fragmentary score by his assistant Franz Xaver Sussmayr, who helped him with The Magic Flute, has the character of a historical source with utmost closeness to Mozart's thoughts. - Urtext of the New Mozart Edition - Full score (BA4538-01), performance material (BA4538), vocal score (BA4538-90) and study score format 22. 5 x 16. 5cm (TP152) available for sale - Facsimile edition BVK2346/ Répertoire / Orchestre
SKU: HL.392322
ISBN 9781705157114. UPC: 196288030188. 7.75x10.5x0.314 inches.
Mozart's Requiem, his last and unfinished composition, is one of the most famous choral works in the classical repertoire, a masterpiece whose genesis in several respects is shrouded in mystery. The name SAM-Klang takes the three voice parts from the arrangements -- Soprano, Alto and Men -- and combines it with the Scandinavian and German words for ââ¬Åsoundâ⠬ to create the portmanteau word ââ¬Åsound togetherââ¬Â or ââ¬Åharmony.à â¬Â The series offers basic and advanced choral repertoire. In addition to new repertoire and new arrangements, you will also find essential parts of the classical German, Scandinavian, French and English SATB repertoire, carefully and considerately reworked for SAM. The arrangements retain the characteristic features of the original movements and have almost the same richness of timbre, resulting in works which sound nearly unchanged to an audience. Piano reductions of all choral movements facilitate rehearsal preparation. The arrangements offer development opportunities for all voice sections, bringing new life and new quality to SAM choir work. SAM-Klang enables youth choirs to gain access to classical choral literature and ensures that mixed choirs who face challenges in finding singers for all male voice parts continue to have access to well-loved repertoire.