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| Tales of an Old Grandmother, Op. 31 for Trombone & Piano Trombone and Piano Cherry Classics
Trombone & Piano - moderately advanced SKU: CY.CC2476 Composed by S. Prok...(+)
Trombone & Piano - moderately advanced SKU: CY.CC2476 Composed by S. Prokofiev. Arranged by Ralph Sauer. Russian 20th century. Solo part and score. Published by Cherry Classics (CY.CC2476). * Also known as Four Grandmother Songs and Old Granny Tales, this work was composed in New York in 1918 at the beginning of the composer's self-imposed exile from Russia after its Revolution. * These short pieces were immediately successful and were performed worldwide. * In the epigraph to this work Prokofiev wrote, Some recollections had become half erased from her memory; others will never be erased. * Mr. Sauer once again, has produced a magnificent work for Trombone & Piano. * This work with its great character is a joy to perform, about 8 - 9 minutes in length for moderately advanced performers. . $25.00 - See more - Buy onlinePre-shipment lead time: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| Tales of an Old Grandmother, Op. 31 for Euphonium & Piano Euphonium, Piano (duet) Cherry Classics
Euphonium & Piano - moderately advanced SKU: CY.CC2477 Composed by S. Pro...(+)
Euphonium & Piano - moderately advanced SKU: CY.CC2477 Composed by S. Prokofiev. Arranged by Ralph Sauer. 20th Century Russian. Solo part & accompaniment. Published by Cherry Classics (CY.CC2477). * Also known as Four Grandmother Songs and Old Granny Tales, this work was composed in New York in 1918 at the beginning of the composer's self-imposed exile from Russia after its Revolution. * These short pieces were immediately successful and were performed worldwide. * In the epigraph to this work Prokofiev wrote, Some recollections had become half erased from her memory; others will never be erased. * Mr. Sauer once again, has produced a magnificent work for Euphonium & Piano. * This work with its great character is a joy to perform, about 8 - 9 minutes in length for moderately advanced performers. . $25.00 - See more - Buy onlinePre-shipment lead time: 2 to 3 weeks | | |
| The Great American Songbook: The Composers Ukulele Hal Leonard
Ukulele SKU: HL.263232 For Ukulele. Composed by Various. Ukulele. ...(+)
Ukulele SKU: HL.263232 For Ukulele. Composed by Various. Ukulele. Standards. Softcover. 232 pages. Published by Hal Leonard (HL.263232). ISBN 9781540021038. UPC: 888680729318. 9.0x12.0x0.586 inches. Romance, heartbreak, optimism, melancholy, or just a lovely autumn day - it's all been captured by American songwriters. A generation of the country's finest songwriters captured universal feelings and experiences in such an infectious combination of words and music that their songs still inspire today. This collection features 100 classics by treasured composers arranged for ukulele: All the Things You Are (Jerome Kern) * Blue Skies (Irving Berlin) * Come Fly with Me (Sammy Cahn) * Georgia on My Mind (Hoagy Carmichael) * Mood Indigo (Duke Ellington) * On the Street Where You Live (Lerner & Loewe) * People Will Say We're in Love (Rodgers & Hammerstein) * Somebody Loves Me (George Gershwin) * You'd Be So Nice to Come Home To (Cole Porter) * and more. $19.99 - See more - Buy onlinePre-shipment lead time: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| The Real Little New Broadway Fake Book C Instruments [Fake Book] Hal Leonard
645 Songs from 285 Shows. Composed by Various. Fake Book. Broadway. Softcover....(+)
645 Songs from 285 Shows.
Composed by Various. Fake
Book. Broadway. Softcover.
696 pages. Published by Hal
Leonard
$39.99 - See more - Buy onlinePre-shipment lead time: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| The New Broadway Fake Book C Instruments Hal Leonard
645 Songs from 285 Shows. Composed by Various. Fake Book. Broadway, Musicals. ...(+)
645 Songs from 285 Shows.
Composed by Various. Fake
Book. Broadway, Musicals.
Softcover. 696 pages.
Published by Hal Leonard
$49.99 - See more - Buy onlinePre-shipment lead time: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Transcriptions of Lieder Piano solo Carl Fischer
Chamber Music Piano SKU: CF.PL1056 Composed by Clara Wieck-Schumann, Fran...(+)
Chamber Music Piano SKU: CF.PL1056 Composed by Clara Wieck-Schumann, Franz Schubert, and Robert Schumann. Edited by Nicholas Hopkins. Collection. With Standard notation. 128 pages. Carl Fischer Music #PL1056. Published by Carl Fischer Music (CF.PL1056). ISBN 9781491153390. UPC: 680160910892. Transcribed by Franz Liszt. Introduction It is true that Schubert himself is somewhat to blame for the very unsatisfactory manner in which his admirable piano pieces are treated. He was too immoderately productive, wrote incessantly, mixing insignificant with important things, grand things with mediocre work, paid no heed to criticism, and always soared on his wings. Like a bird in the air, he lived in music and sang in angelic fashion. --Franz Liszt, letter to Dr. S. Lebert (1868) Of those compositions that greatly interest me, there are only Chopin's and yours. --Franz Liszt, letter to Robert Schumann (1838) She [Clara Schumann] was astounded at hearing me. Her compositions are really very remarkable, especially for a woman. There is a hundred times more creativity and real feeling in them than in all the past and present fantasias by Thalberg. --Franz Liszt, letter to Marie d'Agoult (1838) Chretien Urhan (1790-1845) was a Belgian-born violinist, organist and composer who flourished in the musical life of Paris in the early nineteenth century. According to various accounts, he was deeply religious, harshly ascetic and wildly eccentric, though revered by many important and influential members of the Parisian musical community. Regrettably, history has forgotten Urhan's many musical achievements, the most important of which was arguably his pioneering work in promoting the music of Franz Schubert. He devoted much of his energies to championing Schubert's music, which at the time was unknown outside of Vienna. Undoubtedly, Urhan was responsible for stimulating this enthusiasm in Franz Liszt; Liszt regularly heard Urhan's organ playing in the St.-Vincent-de-Paul church in Paris, and the two became personal acquaintances. At eighteen years of age, Liszt was on the verge of establishing himself as the foremost pianist in Europe, and this awakening to Schubert's music would prove to be a profound experience. Liszt's first travels outside of his native provincial Hungary were to Vienna in 1821-1823, where his father enrolled him in studies with Carl Czerny (piano) and Antonio Salieri (music theory). Both men had important involvements with Schubert; Czerny (like Urhan) as performer and advocate of Schubert's music and Salieri as his theory and composition teacher from 1813-1817. Curiously, Liszt and Schubert never met personally, despite their geographical proximity in Vienna during these years. Inevitably, legends later arose that the two had been personal acquaintances, although Liszt would dismiss these as fallacious: I never knew Schubert personally, he was once quoted as saying. Liszt's initial exposure to Schubert's music was the Lieder, what Urhan prized most of all. He accompanied the tenor Benedict Randhartinger in numerous performances of Schubert's Lieder and then, perhaps realizing that he could benefit the composer more on his own terms, transcribed a number of the Lieder for piano solo. Many of these transcriptions he would perform himself on concert tour during the so-called Glanzzeit, or time of splendor from 1839-1847. This publicity did much to promote reception of Schubert's music throughout Europe. Once Liszt retired from the concert stage and settled in Weimar as a conductor in the 1840s, he continued to perform Schubert's orchestral music, his Symphony No. 9 being a particular favorite, and is credited with giving the world premiere performance of Schubert's opera Alfonso und Estrella in 1854. At this time, he contemplated writing a biography of the composer, which regrettably remained uncompleted. Liszt's devotion to Schubert would never waver. Liszt's relationship with Robert and Clara Schumann was far different and far more complicated; by contrast, they were all personal acquaintances. What began as a relationship of mutual respect and admiration soon deteriorated into one of jealousy and hostility, particularly on the Schumann's part. Liszt's initial contact with Robert's music happened long before they had met personally, when Liszt published an analysis of Schumann's piano music for the Gazette musicale in 1837, a gesture that earned Robert's deep appreciation. In the following year Clara met Liszt during a concert tour in Vienna and presented him with more of Schumann's piano music. Clara and her father Friedrich Wieck, who accompanied Clara on her concert tours, were quite taken by Liszt: We have heard Liszt. He can be compared to no other player...he arouses fright and astonishment. His appearance at the piano is indescribable. He is an original...he is absorbed by the piano. Liszt, too, was impressed with Clara--at first the energy, intelligence and accuracy of her piano playing and later her compositions--to the extent that he dedicated to her the 1838 version of his Etudes d'execution transcendante d'apres Paganini. Liszt had a closer personal relationship with Clara than with Robert until the two men finally met in 1840. Schumann was astounded by Liszt's piano playing. He wrote to Clara that Liszt had played like a god and had inspired indescribable furor of applause. His review of Liszt even included a heroic personification with Napoleon. In Leipzig, Schumann was deeply impressed with Liszt's interpretations of his Noveletten, Op. 21 and Fantasy in C Major, Op. 17 (dedicated to Liszt), enthusiastically observing that, I feel as if I had known you twenty years. Yet a variety of events followed that diminished Liszt's glory in the eyes of the Schumanns. They became critical of the cult-like atmosphere that arose around his recitals, or Lisztomania as it came to be called; conceivably, this could be attributed to professional jealousy. Clara, in particular, came to loathe Liszt, noting in a letter to Joseph Joachim, I despise Liszt from the depths of my soul. She recorded a stunning diary entry a day after Liszt's death, in which she noted, He was an eminent keyboard virtuoso, but a dangerous example for the young...As a composer he was terrible. By contrast, Liszt did not share in these negative sentiments; no evidence suggests that he had any ill-regard for the Schumanns. In Weimar, he did much to promote Schumann's music, conducting performances of his Scenes from Faust and Manfred, during a time in which few orchestras expressed interest, and premiered his opera Genoveva. He later arranged a benefit concert for Clara following Robert's death, featuring Clara as soloist in Robert's Piano Concerto, an event that must have been exhilarating to witness. Regardless, her opinion of him would never change, despite his repeated gestures of courtesy and respect. Liszt's relationship with Schubert was a spiritual one, with music being the one and only link between the two men. That with the Schumanns was personal, with music influenced by a hero worship that would aggravate the relationship over time. Nonetheless, Liszt would remain devoted to and enthusiastic for the music and achievements of these composers. He would be a vital force in disseminating their music to a wider audience, as he would be with many other composers throughout his career. His primary means for accomplishing this was the piano transcription. Liszt and the Transcription Transcription versus Paraphrase Transcription and paraphrase were popular terms in nineteenth-century music, although certainly not unique to this period. Musicians understood that there were clear distinctions between these two terms, but as is often the case these distinctions could be blurred. Transcription, literally writing over, entails reworking or adapting a piece of music for a performance medium different from that of its original; arrangement is a possible synonym. Adapting is a key part of this process, for the success of a transcription relies on the transcriber's ability to adapt the piece to the different medium. As a result, the pre-existing material is generally kept intact, recognizable and intelligible; it is strict, literal, objective. Contextual meaning is maintained in the process, as are elements of style and form. Paraphrase, by contrast, implies restating something in a different manner, as in a rewording of a document for reasons of clarity. In nineteenth-century music, paraphrasing indicated elaborating a piece for purposes of expressive virtuosity, often as a vehicle for showmanship. Variation is an important element, for the source material may be varied as much as the paraphraser's imagination will allow; its purpose is metamorphosis. Transcription is adapting and arranging; paraphrasing is transforming and reworking. Transcription preserves the style of the original; paraphrase absorbs the original into a different style. Transcription highlights the original composer; paraphrase highlights the paraphraser. Approximately half of Liszt's compositional output falls under the category of transcription and paraphrase; it is noteworthy that he never used the term arrangement. Much of his early compositional activities were transcriptions and paraphrases of works of other composers, such as the symphonies of Beethoven and Berlioz, vocal music by Schubert, and operas by Donizetti and Bellini. It is conceivable that he focused so intently on work of this nature early in his career as a means to perfect his compositional technique, although transcription and paraphrase continued well after the technique had been mastered; this might explain why he drastically revised and rewrote many of his original compositions from the 1830s (such as the Transcendental Etudes and Paganini Etudes) in the 1850s. Charles Rosen, a sympathetic interpreter of Liszt's piano works, observes, The new revisions of the Transcendental Etudes are not revisions but concert paraphrases of the old, and their art lies in the technique of transformation. The Paganini etudes are piano transcriptions of violin etudes, and the Transcendental Etudes are piano transcriptions of piano etudes. The principles are the same. He concludes by noting, Paraphrase has shaded off into composition...Composition and paraphrase were not identical for him, but they were so closely interwoven that separation is impossible. The significance of transcription and paraphrase for Liszt the composer cannot be overstated, and the mutual influence of each needs to be better understood. Undoubtedly, Liszt the composer as we know him today would be far different had he not devoted so much of his career to transcribing and paraphrasing the music of others. He was perhaps one of the first composers to contend that transcription and paraphrase could be genuine art forms on equal par with original pieces; he even claimed to be the first to use these two terms to describe these classes of arrangements. Despite the success that Liszt achieved with this type of work, others viewed it with circumspection and criticism. Robert Schumann, although deeply impressed with Liszt's keyboard virtuosity, was harsh in his criticisms of the transcriptions. Schumann interpreted them as indicators that Liszt's virtuosity had hindered his compositional development and suggested that Liszt transcribed the music of others to compensate for his own compositional deficiencies. Nonetheless, Liszt's piano transcriptions, what he sometimes called partitions de piano (or piano scores), were instrumental in promoting composers whose music was unknown at the time or inaccessible in areas outside of major European capitals, areas that Liszt willingly toured during his Glanzzeit. To this end, the transcriptions had to be literal arrangements for the piano; a Beethoven symphony could not be introduced to an unknowing audience if its music had been subjected to imaginative elaborations and variations. The same would be true of the 1833 transcription of Berlioz's Symphonie fantastique (composed only three years earlier), the astonishingly novel content of which would necessitate a literal and intelligible rendering. Opera, usually more popular and accessible for the general public, was a different matter, and in this realm Liszt could paraphrase the original and manipulate it as his imagination would allow without jeopardizing its reception; hence, the paraphrases on the operas of Bellini, Donizetti, Mozart, Meyerbeer and Verdi. Reminiscence was another term coined by Liszt for the opera paraphrases, as if the composer were reminiscing at the keyboard following a memorable evening at the opera. Illustration (reserved on two occasions for Meyerbeer) and fantasy were additional terms. The operas of Wagner were exceptions. His music was less suited to paraphrase due to its general lack of familiarity at the time. Transcription of Wagner's music was thus obligatory, as it was of Beethoven's and Berlioz's music; perhaps the composer himself insisted on this approach. Liszt's Lieder Transcriptions Liszt's initial encounters with Schubert's music, as mentioned previously, were with the Lieder. His first transcription of a Schubert Lied was Die Rose in 1833, followed by Lob der Tranen in 1837. Thirty-nine additional transcriptions appeared at a rapid pace over the following three years, and in 1846, the Schubert Lieder transcriptions would conclude, by which point he had completed fifty-eight, the most of any composer. Critical response to these transcriptions was highly favorable--aside from the view held by Schumann--particularly when Liszt himself played these pieces in concert. Some were published immediately by Anton Diabelli, famous for the theme that inspired Beethoven's variations. Others were published by the Viennese publisher Tobias Haslinger (one of Beethoven's and Schubert's publishers in the 1820s), who sold his reserves so quickly that he would repeatedly plead for more. However, Liszt's enthusiasm for work of this nature soon became exhausted, as he noted in a letter of 1839 to the publisher Breitkopf und Hartel: That good Haslinger overwhelms me with Schubert. I have just sent him twenty-four new songs (Schwanengesang and Winterreise), and for the moment I am rather tired of this work. Haslinger was justified in his demands, for the Schubert transcriptions were received with great enthusiasm. One Gottfried Wilhelm Fink, then editor of the Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung, observed of these transcriptions: Nothing in recent memory has caused such sensation and enjoyment in both pianists and audiences as these arrangements...The demand for them has in no way been satisfied; and it will not be until these arrangements are seen on pianos everywhere. They have indeed made quite a splash. Eduard Hanslick, never a sympathetic critic of Liszt's music, acknowledged thirty years after the fact that, Liszt's transcriptions of Schubert Lieder were epoch-making. There was hardly a concert in which Liszt did not have to play one or two of them--even when they were not listed on the program. These transcriptions quickly became some of his most sough-after pieces, despite their extreme technical demands. Leading pianists of the day, such as Clara Wieck and Sigismond Thalberg, incorporated them into their concert programs immediately upon publication. Moreover, the transcriptions would serve as inspirations for other composers, such as Stephen Heller, Cesar Franck and later Leopold Godowsky, all of whom produced their own transcriptions of Schubert's Lieder. Liszt would transcribe the Lieder of other composers as well, including those by Mendelssohn, Chopin, Anton Rubinstein and even himself. Robert Schumann, of course, would not be ignored. The first transcription of a Schumann Lied was the celebrated Widmung from Myrten in 1848, the only Schumann transcription that Liszt completed during the composer's lifetime. (Regrettably, there is no evidence of Schumann's regard of this transcription, or even if he was aware of it.) From the years 1848-1881, Liszt transcribed twelve of Robert Schumann's Lieder (including one orchestral Lied) and three of Clara (one from each of her three published Lieder cycles); he would transcribe no other works of these two composers. The Schumann Lieder transcriptions, contrary to those of Schubert, are literal arrangements, posing, in general, far fewer demands on the pianist's technique. They are comparatively less imaginative in their treatment of the original material. Additionally, they seem to have been less valued in their day than the Schubert transcriptions, and it is noteworthy that none of the Schumann transcriptions bear dedications, as most of the Schubert transcriptions do. The greatest challenge posed by Lieder transcriptions, regardless of the composer or the nature of the transcription, was to combine the vocal and piano parts of the original such that the character of each would be preserved, a challenge unique to this form of transcription. Each part had to be intact and aurally recognizable, the vocal line in particular. Complications could be manifold in a Lied that featured dissimilar parts, such as Schubert's Auf dem Wasser zu singen, whose piano accompaniment depicts the rocking of the boat on the shimmering waves while the vocal line reflects on the passing of time. Similar complications would be encountered in Gretchen am Spinnrade, in which the ubiquitous sixteenth-note pattern in the piano's right hand epitomizes the ever-turning spinning wheel over which the soprano voice expresses feelings of longing and heartache. The resulting transcriptions for solo piano would place exceptional demands on the pianist. The complications would be far less imposing in instances in which voice and piano were less differentiated, as in many of Schumann's Lieder that Liszt transcribed. The piano parts in these Lieder are true accompaniments for the voice, providing harmonic foundation and rhythmic support by doubling the vocal line throughout. The transcriptions, thus, are strict and literal, with far fewer demands on both pianist and transcriber. In all of Liszt's Lieder transcriptions, regardless of the way in which the two parts are combined, the melody (i.e. the vocal line) is invariably the focal point; the melody should sing on the piano, as if it were the voice. The piano part, although integral to contributing to the character of the music, is designed to function as accompaniment. A singing melody was a crucial objective in nineteenth-century piano performance, which in part might explain the zeal in transcribing and paraphrasing vocal music for the piano. Friedrich Wieck, father and teacher of Clara Schumann, stressed this point repeatedly in his 1853 treatise Clavier und Gesang (Piano and Song): When I speak in general of singing, I refer to that species of singing which is a form of beauty, and which is a foundation for the most refined and most perfect interpretation of music; and, above all things, I consider the culture of beautiful tones the basis for the finest possible touch on the piano. In many respects, the piano and singing should explain and supplement each other. They should mutually assist in expressing the sublime and the noble, in forms of unclouded beauty. Much of Liszt's piano music should be interpreted with this concept in mind, the Lieder transcriptions and opera paraphrases, in particular. To this end, Liszt provided numerous written instructions to the performer to emphasize the vocal line in performance, with Italian directives such as un poco marcato il canto, accentuato assai il canto and ben pronunziato il canto. Repeated indications of cantando,singend and espressivo il canto stress the significance of the singing tone. As an additional means of achieving this and providing the performer with access to the poetry, Liszt insisted, at what must have been a publishing novelty at the time, on printing the words of the Lied in the music itself. Haslinger, seemingly oblivious to Liszt's intent, initially printed the poems of the early Schubert transcriptions separately inside the front covers. Liszt argued that the transcriptions must be reprinted with the words underlying the notes, exactly as Schubert had done, a request that was honored by printing the words above the right-hand staff. Liszt also incorporated a visual scheme for distinguishing voice and accompaniment, influenced perhaps by Chopin, by notating the accompaniment in cue size. His transcription of Robert Schumann's Fruhlings Ankunft features the vocal line in normal size, the piano accompaniment in reduced size, an unmistakable guide in a busy texture as to which part should be emphasized: Example 1. Schumann-Liszt Fruhlings Ankunft, mm. 1-2. The same practice may be found in the transcription of Schumann's An die Turen will ich schleichen. In this piece, the performer must read three staves, in which the baritone line in the central staff is to be shared between the two hands based on the stem direction of the notes: Example 2. Schumann-Liszt An die Turen will ich schleichen, mm. 1-5. This notational practice is extremely beneficial in this instance, given the challenge of reading three staves and the manner in which the vocal line is performed by the two hands. Curiously, Liszt did not use this practice in other transcriptions. Approaches in Lieder Transcription Liszt adopted a variety of approaches in his Lieder transcriptions, based on the nature of the source material, the ways in which the vocal and piano parts could be combined and the ways in which the vocal part could sing. One approach, common with strophic Lieder, in which the vocal line would be identical in each verse, was to vary the register of the vocal part. The transcription of Lob der Tranen, for example, incorporates three of the four verses of the original Lied, with the register of the vocal line ascending one octave with each verse (from low to high), as if three different voices were participating. By the conclusion, the music encompasses the entire range of Liszt's keyboard to produce a stunning climactic effect, and the variety of register of the vocal line provides a welcome textural variety in the absence of the words. The three verses of the transcription of Auf dem Wasser zu singen follow the same approach, in which the vocal line ascends from the tenor, to the alto and to the soprano registers with each verse. Fruhlingsglaube adopts the opposite approach, in which the vocal line descends from soprano in verse 1 to tenor in verse 2, with the second part of verse 2 again resuming the soprano register; this is also the case in Das Wandern from Mullerlieder. Gretchen am Spinnrade posed a unique problem. Since the poem's narrator is female, and the poem represents an expression of her longing for her lover Faust, variation of the vocal line's register, strictly speaking, would have been impractical. For this reason, the vocal line remains in its original register throughout, relentlessly colliding with the sixteenth-note pattern of the accompaniment. One exception may be found in the fifth and final verse in mm. 93-112, at which point the vocal line is notated in a higher register and doubled in octaves. This sudden textural change, one that is readily audible, was a strategic means to underscore Gretchen's mounting anxiety (My bosom urges itself toward him. Ah, might I grasp and hold him! And kiss him as I would wish, at his kisses I should die!). The transcription, thus, becomes a vehicle for maximizing the emotional content of the poem, an exceptional undertaking with the general intent of a transcription. Registral variation of the vocal part also plays a crucial role in the transcription of Erlkonig. Goethe's poem depicts the death of a child who is apprehended by a supernatural Erlking, and Schubert, recognizing the dramatic nature of the poem, carefully depicted the characters (father, son and Erlking) through unique vocal writing and accompaniment patterns: the Lied is a dramatic entity. Liszt, in turn, followed Schubert's characterization in this literal transcription, yet took it an additional step by placing the register of the father's vocal line in the baritone range, that of the son in the soprano range and that of the Erlking in the highest register, options that would not have been available in the version for voice and piano. Additionally, Liszt labeled each appearance of each character in the score, a means for guiding the performer in interpreting the dramatic qualities of the Lied. As a result, the drama and energy of the poem are enhanced in this transcription; as with Gretchen am Spinnrade, the transcriber has maximized the content of the original. Elaboration may be found in certain Lieder transcriptions that expand the performance to a level of virtuosity not found in the original; in such cases, the transcription approximates the paraphrase. Schubert's Du bist die Ruh, a paradigm of musical simplicity, features an uncomplicated piano accompaniment that is virtually identical in each verse. In Liszt's transcription, the material is subjected to a highly virtuosic treatment that far exceeds the original, including a demanding passage for the left hand alone in the opening measures and unique textural writing in each verse. The piece is a transcription in virtuosity; its art, as Rosen noted, lies in the technique of transformation. Elaboration may entail an expansion of the musical form, as in the extensive introduction to Die Forelle and a virtuosic middle section (mm. 63-85), both of which are not in the original. Also unique to this transcription are two cadenzas that Liszt composed in response to the poetic content. The first, in m. 93 on the words und eh ich es gedacht (and before I could guess it), features a twisted chromatic passage that prolongs and thereby heightens the listener's suspense as to the fate of the trout (which is ultimately caught). The second, in m. 108 on the words Betrogne an (and my blood boiled as I saw the betrayed one), features a rush of diminished-seventh arpeggios in both hands, epitomizing the poet's rage at the fisherman for catching the trout. Less frequent are instances in which the length of the original Lied was shortened in the transcription, a tendency that may be found with certain strophic Lieder (e.g., Der Leiermann, Wasserflut and Das Wandern). Another transcription that demonstrates Liszt's readiness to modify the original in the interests of the poetic content is Standchen, the seventh transcription from Schubert's Schwanengesang. Adapted from Act II of Shakespeare's Cymbeline, the poem represents the repeated beckoning of a man to his lover. Liszt transformed the Lied into a miniature drama by transcribing the vocal line of the first verse in the soprano register, that of the second verse in the baritone register, in effect, creating a dialogue between the two lovers. In mm. 71-102, the dialogue becomes a canon, with one voice trailing the other like an echo (as labeled in the score) at the distance of a beat. As in other instances, the transcription resembles the paraphrase, and it is perhaps for this reason that Liszt provided an ossia version that is more in the nature of a literal transcription. The ossia version, six measures shorter than Schubert's original, is less demanding technically than the original transcription, thus representing an ossia of transcription and an ossia of piano technique. The Schumann Lieder transcriptions, in general, display a less imaginative treatment of the source material. Elaborations are less frequently encountered, and virtuosity is more restricted, as if the passage of time had somewhat tamed the composer's approach to transcriptions; alternatively, Liszt was eager to distance himself from the fierce virtuosity of his early years. In most instances, these transcriptions are literal arrangements of the source material, with the vocal line in its original form combined with the accompaniment, which often doubles the vocal line in the original Lied. Widmung, the first of the Schumann transcriptions, is one exception in the way it recalls the virtuosity of the Schubert transcriptions of the 1830s. Particularly striking is the closing section (mm. 58-73), in which material of the opening verse (right hand) is combined with the triplet quarter notes (left hand) from the second section of the Lied (mm. 32-43), as if the transcriber were attempting to reconcile the different material of these two sections. Fruhlingsnacht resembles a paraphrase by presenting each of the two verses in differing registers (alto for verse 1, mm. 3-19, and soprano for verse 2, mm. 20-31) and by concluding with a virtuosic section that considerably extends the length of the original Lied. The original tonalities of the Lieder were generally retained in the transcriptions, showing that the tonality was an important part of the transcription process. The infrequent instances of transposition were done for specific reasons. In 1861, Liszt transcribed two of Schumann's Lieder, one from Op. 36 (An den Sonnenschein), another from Op. 27 (Dem roten Roslein), and merged these two pieces in the collection 2 Lieder; they share only the common tonality of A major. His choice for combining these two Lieder remains unknown, but he clearly recognized that some tonal variety would be needed, for which reason Dem roten Roslein was transposed to C>= major. The collection features An den Sonnenschein in A major (with a transition to the new tonality), followed by Dem roten Roslein in C>= major (without a change of key signature), and concluding with a reprise of An den Sonnenschein in A major. A three-part form was thus established with tonal variety provided by keys in third relations (A-C>=-A); in effect, two of Schumann's Lieder were transcribed into an archetypal song without words. In other instances, Liszt treated tonality and tonal organization as important structural ingredients, particularly in the transcriptions of Schubert's Lieder cycles, i.e. Schwanengesang, Winterreise a... $32.99 - See more - Buy onlinePre-shipment lead time: 1 to 2 weeks | | |
| The Ultimate Country Fake Book - 4th Edition
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| Best Fake Book Ever - 5th Edition C Instruments [Fake Book] Hal Leonard
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with CD. 48 pages. Schott
Music #ED13814. Published by
Schott Music
$9.99 - See more - Buy onlinePre-shipment lead time: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Piano Junior: Lesson Book 3 Vol. 3 Piano solo [Sheet music + Audio access] - Beginner Schott
A Creative and Interactive Piano Course for Children. Composed by Hans-Guenter...(+)
A Creative and Interactive
Piano Course for Children.
Composed by Hans-Guenter
Heumann. This edition: Saddle
stitching. Sheet music.
Piano. Method. Edition with
Online audio file. 94 pages.
Schott Music #ED13803.
Published by Schott Music
$11.99 - See more - Buy onlinePre-shipment lead time: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Piano Junior: Performance Book 4 Vol. 4 Piano solo [Sheet music + Audio access] - Beginner Schott
A Creative and Interactive Piano Course for Children. Composed by Hans-Guent...(+)
A Creative and Interactive
Piano Course for Children.
Composed by Hans-Guenter
Heumann. This edition: Saddle
stitching. Sheet music.
Piano. Classical. Softcover
with CD. 40 pages. Schott
Music #ED13834. Published by
Schott Music
$8.99 - See more - Buy onlinePre-shipment lead time: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Piano Junior: Performance Book 3 Vol. 3 Piano solo [Sheet music + Audio access] - Beginner Schott
A Creative and Interactive Piano Course for Children. Composed by Hans-Guenter...(+)
A Creative and Interactive
Piano Course for Children.
Composed by Hans-Guenter
Heumann. This edition: Saddle
stitching. Sheet music.
Piano. Method. Softcover
Audio Online. 40 pages.
Schott Music #ED13833.
Published by Schott Music
$8.99 - See more - Buy onlinePre-shipment lead time: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Piano Junior: Duet Book 3 Vol. 3 1 Piano, 4 hands [Sheet music + Audio access] - Beginner Schott
A Creative and Interactive Piano Course for Children. Composed by Hans-Guenter...(+)
A Creative and Interactive
Piano Course for Children.
Composed by Hans-Guenter
Heumann. This edition: Saddle
stitching. Sheet music. Piano
Duet. Method. Edition with
Online audio file. 40 pages.
Schott Music #ED13823.
Published by Schott Music
$8.99 - See more - Buy onlinePre-shipment lead time: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
| Piano Junior: Lesson Book 4 Vol. 4 Piano solo [Sheet music + Audio access] - Beginner Schott
A Creative and Interactive Piano Course for Children. Composed by Hans-Guenter...(+)
A Creative and Interactive
Piano Course for Children.
Composed by Hans-Guenter
Heumann. This edition: Saddle
stitching. Sheet music.
Piano. Method, Classical.
Edition with Online audio
file. 108 pages. Schott Music
#ED13804. Published by Schott
Music
$11.99 - See more - Buy onlinePre-shipment lead time: 24 hours - In Stock | | |
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| 100 Of The Best Movie
Songs Ever ! Piano, Vocal and Guitar [Sheet music] - Intermediate Amsco Wise Publications
A great selection of 100 of the best film songs ever, arranged for piano, voice ...(+)
A great selection of 100 of the best film songs ever, arranged for piano, voice and guitar. Features fabulous songs from all your favourite movies including: Casablanca, Cabaret, Mary Poppins, Forest Gump, Midnight Cowboy, Footloose, Jaws, Star Trek, Ghost, Titanic, Schindler's List, Saturday Night Fever, Stand By Me, Love Story, Breakfast At Tiffany's... and many, many more!
35.50 EUR - Sold by Note4Piano Pre-shipment lead time: 24 hours - In Stock Only 1 left in stock, order soon ! | |
| First 50 West End Songs:
Easy Piano: Mixed
Songbook Easy Piano - Easy Hal Leonard
You Should Play on the Piano. 50 great West End hits for beginning pianists to l...(+)
You Should Play on the Piano. 50 great West End hits for beginning pianists to learn, arranged for easy piano with chord symbols and full lyrics. Includes songs from: Blood Brothers, The Phantom of the Opera, Matilda the Musical, and many more top West End shows!
13.99 GBP - Sold by Musicroom UK Pre-shipment lead time: In Stock | |
| Coffret Great Piano Solos
Vol.2 Piano solo Amsco Wise Publications
A superb four-volume collection of over 180 solos for the intermediate level Pia...(+)
A superb four-volume collection of over 180 solos for the intermediate level Pianist. Includes popular film and show tunes - themes and songs from top TV shows - and classical favourites from choral works, concertos, ballets, operas and symphonies. / Piano
115.30 EUR - Sold by LMI-partitions (Seller in french langage) Pre-shipment lead time: On order | |
| The Big Book Of Broadway Piano, Vocal and Guitar [Sheet music] - Intermediate/advanced Hal Leonard
Great songs from the world's top shows including Evita, Cabaret, The Phantom Of ...(+)
Great songs from the world's top shows including Evita, Cabaret, The Phantom Of The Opera and Fiddler On The Roof. With these sixty-four songs arraged for piano, voice and guitar, you can bring Broadway home!
40.00 EUR - Sold by Note4Piano Pre-shipment lead time: 3-10 days - In Stock Supplier | |
| The Best Songs Ever - 8th
Edition Piano solo [Sheet music] - Easy Hal Leonard
E-Z Play Today Volume 200. The updated 8th edition of this bestseller includes 7...(+)
E-Z Play Today Volume 200. The updated 8th edition of this bestseller includes 71 great favorites, all in our world-famous E-Z Play® notation: At Last · Bohemian Rhapsody · Candle in the Wind · Edelweiss · Hallelujah · I Dreamed a Dream · Moon River · My Way · Night and Day · Over the Rainbow · Piano Man · Send in the Clowns · Somewhere · Tears in Heaven · Unchained Melody · When I Fall in Love · Yesterday · and many more. / Niveau : Facile / Recueil / Piano, Orgue ou Clavier
31.50 EUR - Sold by LMI-partitions (Seller in french langage) Pre-shipment lead time: In Stock | |
| THE REAL BOOK - VOLUME I
- SIXTH EDITION Eb Eb Instruments [Sheet music] Hal Leonard
Par . The Real Books are the best-selling jazz books of all time. Since the 1970...(+)
Par . The Real Books are the best-selling jazz books of all time. Since the 1970s, musicians have trusted these volumes to get them through every gig, night after night. The problem is that the books were illegally produced and distributed, without any regard to copyright law, or royalties paid to the composers who created these musical masterpieces. Hal Leonard is very proud to present the first legitimate and legal editions of these books ever produced. You won't even notice the difference, other than all the notorious errors being fixed: the covers and typeface look the same, the song list is nearly identical, and the price for our edition is even cheaper than the original! Every conscientious musician will appreciate that these books are now produced accurately and ethically, benefitting the songwriters that we owe for some of the greatest tunes of all time! Includes 400 songs / Date parution : 2024-01-18/ Recueil / Instruments en Mib
67.20 EUR - Sold by LMI-partitions (Seller in french langage) Pre-shipment lead time: On order | |
| Grover Washington Jr.:
Best of Grover Washington
Jr.: Saxophone:
Instrumental Saxophone Cherry Lane
One of the most successful saxophonists of all time Grover Washington Jr. bega...(+)
One of the most successful saxophonists of all time Grover Washington Jr. began his professional life as a preteen and made and recorded beautiful music for over 30 years before his untimely passing in 1999. This folio featuresnote-for-note sax transcriptions of 13 of his finest songs: East River Drive ? In the Name of Love ? It Feels So Good ? Just the Two of Us ? Let It Flow ? Little Black Samba ? Make Me a Memory (SadSamba) ? Mr. Magic ? Passion Flower ? Take Five (Another Take Five) ? Take Me There ? Time Out of Mind ? Winelight. Also includes a biography great photos and a fingering guide.
19.99 GBP - Sold by Musicroom UK | |
| THE REAL BOOK - VOLUME I
- MINI EDITION C Instruments [Fake Book] Hal Leonard
Par . Hal Leonard proudly presents new mini editions of its best-selling Real Bo...(+)
Par . Hal Leonard proudly presents new mini editions of its best-selling Real Books. These 5.5 x 8.5 little books pack a big jazz punch; they include all 400 fantastic songs found in the 9 x 12 versions / Date parution : 2023-06-16/ Recueil / Instruments En C
59.70 EUR - Sold by LMI-partitions (Seller in french langage) Pre-shipment lead time: On order | |
| Merle Haggard: The Best
of Merle Haggard: Guitar
Solo: Instrumental Album Guitar notes and tablatures [Sheet music] Hal Leonard
Easy guitar arrangements with TAB for 25 of Merle Haggard's greatest songs incl...(+)
Easy guitar arrangements with TAB for 25 of Merle Haggard's greatest songs including: Big City · Carolyn · I Think I'll Just Stay Here and Drink · If We Make It Through December · Mama Tried · Misery and Gin · Okie from Muskogee · Rainbow Stew · Sing Me Back Home · Workin' Man Blues · more.
16.99 GBP - Sold by Musicroom UK | |
| REAL BOOK 6TH EDITION -
INSTRUMENT EN FA Hal Leonard
The Real Book – Volume I – Sixth Edition F Instruments Real Book Series Soft...(+)
The Real Book – Volume I – Sixth Edition F Instruments Real Book Series SoftcoverThe Real Books are the best-selling jazz books of all time. Since the 1970s, musicians have trusted these volumes to get them through every gig, night after night. The problem is that the books were illegally produced and distributed, without any regard to copyright law, or royalties paid to the composers who created these musical masterpieces.Hal Leonard is very proud to present the first legitimate and legal editions of these books ever produced. You won't even notice the difference, other than all the notorious errors being fixed: the covers and typeface look the same, the song list is nearly identical, and the price for our edition is even cheaper than the original! Every conscientious musician will appreciate that these books are now produced accurately and ethically, benefitting the songwriters who we owe for some of the greatest tunes of all time! Includes 400 songs: All Blues • Au Privave • Autumn Leaves • Black Orpheus • Bluesette • Body and Soul • Bright Size Life • Con Alma • Dolphin Dance • Don't Get Around Much Anymore • Easy Living • Epistrophy • Falling in Love with Love • Footprints • Four on Six • Giant Steps • Have You Met Miss Jones? • How High the Moon • I'll Remember April • Impressions • Lullaby of Birdland • Misty • My Funny Valentine • Oleo • Red Clay • Satin Doll • Sidewinder • Stella by Starlight • Take Five • There Is No Greater Love • Wave • and hundreds more! Editions also available in C, B-flat, and Bass Clef. African Flower (Petite Fleur Africaine) Afro Blue Afternoon In Paris Água De Beber (Water To Drink) Airegin Alfie Alice In Wonderland All Blues All By Myself All Of Me All Of You All The Things You Are Alright, Okay, You Win Always Ana Maria Angel Eyes Anthropology Apple Honey April In Paris April Joy Arise, Her Eyes Armageddon Au Privave Autumn In New York Autumn Leaves Beautiful Love Beauty And The Beast Bessie's Blues Bewitched Big Nick Bird Like Black Coffee Black Diamond Black Narcissus Black Nile Black Orpheus Blue Bossa Blue In Green Blue Monk The Blue Room Blue Train (Blue Trane) Blues For Alice Bluesette Body And Soul Boplicity (Be Bop Lives) Bright Size Life Broad Way Blues Broadway But Beautiful Butterfly C'est Si Bon Call Me Call Me Irresponsible Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man Captain Marvel Central Park West Ceora Chega De Saudade (No More Blues) Chelsea Bells Chelsea Bridge Cherokee (Indian Love Song) Cherry Pink And Apple Blossom White A Child Is Born Chippie Chitlins Con Carne Come Sunday Como En Vietnam Con Alma Conception Confirmation Contemplation Coral Cotton Tail Could It Be You Countdown Crescent Crystal Silence D Natural Blues Daahoud Dancing On The Ceiling Darn That Dream Day Waves Days And Nights Waiting Dear Old Stockholm Dearly Beloved Dedicated To You Deluge Desafinado Desert Air Detour Ahead Dexterity Dizzy Atmosphere Django Doin' The Pig Dolores Dolphin Dance Domino Biscuit Don't Blame Me Don't Get Around Much Anymore Donna Lee Dream A Little Dream Of Me Dreamsville Easter Parade Easy Living Easy To Love (You'd Be So Easy To Love) Ecclusiastics Eighty One El Gaucho Epistrophy Equinox Equipoise E.S.P. Fall Falling Grace Falling In Love With Love Fee-Fi-Fo-Fum A Fine Romance 500 Miles High 502 Blues Follow Your Heart Footprints For All We Know For Heaven's Sake (I Love You) For Sentimental Reasons Forest Flower Four Four On Six Freddie Freeloader Freedom Jazz Dance Full House Gee Baby, Ain't I Good To You Gemini Giant Steps The Girl From Ipanema (Garôta De Ipanema) Gloria's Step God Bless' The Child Golden Lady Good Evening Mr. And Mrs. America Grand Central The Green Mountains Groovin' High Grow Your Own Guilty Gypsy In My Soul Half Nelson Have You Met Miss Jones? Heaven Heebie Jeebies Hello, Young Lovers Here's That Rainy Day Hot Toddy House Of Jade How High The Moon How Insensitive (Insensatez) How My Heart Sings Hullo Bolinas I Can't Get Started I Can't Give You Anything But Love I Could Write A Book I Got It Bad And That Ain't Good I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart I Love Paris I Love You I Mean You I Remember Clifford I Should Care I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free I'll Never Smile Again I'll Remember April I'm All Smiles I'm Beginning To See The Light I'm Your Pal Icarus If You Never Come To Me (Inutil Paisagem) Impressions In A Mellow Tone In A Sentimental Mood In The Mood In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning In Your Quiet Place The Inch Worm Indian Lady Inner Urge Interplay The Intrepid Fox Invitation Iris Is You Is, Or Is You Ain't (Ma' Baby) Isn't It Romantic? Isotope Israel It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing) It's Easy To Remember Jelly Roll Jordu Journey To Recife Joy Spring Juju Jump Monk June In January Just One More Chance Kelo Lady Bird Lady Sings The Blues Lament Las Vegas Tango Lazy Bird Lazy River Like Someone In Love Limehouse Blues Lines And Spaces Litha Little Boat (O Barquinho) Little Waltz Long Ago (And Far Away) Lonnie's Lament Look To The Sky Love Is The Sweetest Thing Lucky Southern Lullaby Of Birdland Lush Life The Magician In You Mahjong Maiden Voyage A Man And A Woman (Un Homme Et Une Femme) Man In The Green Shirt Meditation (Meditacao) Memories Of Tomorrow Michelle Midnight Mood Midwestern Nights Dream Milano Minority Miss Ann Missouri Uncompromised Mr. P.C. Misty Miyako Moment's Notice Mood Indigo Moonchild The Most Beautiful Girl In The World My Buddy My Favorite Things My Foolish Heart My Funny Valentine My One And Only Love My Romance My Shining Hour My Ship My Way Mysterious Traveller Naima (Niema) Nardis Nefertiti Never Will I Marry Nica's Dream Night Dreamer The Night Has A Thousand Eyes A Night In Tunisia Night Train Nobody Knows You When You're Down And Out Nostalgia In Times Square Nuages (The Old Man From) The Old Country Oleo Oliloqui Valley Once I Loved (Amor Em Paz) (Love In Peace) Once In Love With Amy One Finger Snap One Note Samba (Samba De Uma Nota So) Only Trust Your Heart Orbits Ornithology Out Of Nowhere Paper Doll Passion Dance Passion Flower Peace Peggy's Blue Skylight Pent Up House Penthouse Serenade Peri's Scope Pfrancing Pinocchio Pithecanthropus Erectus Portsmouth Figurations Prelude To A Kiss Prince Of Darkness P.S. I Love You Pussy Cat Dues Quiet Nights Of Quiet Stars (Corcovado) Quiet Now Recorda Me Red Clay Reflections Reincarnation Of A Lovebird Ring Dem Bells Road Song 'Round Midnight Ruby, My Dear Poem For #15 (The Saga Of Harrison Crabfeathers) Satin Doll Scotch And Soda Scrapple From The Apple Sea Journey Seven Come Eleven Seven Steps To Heaven Sidewinder Silver Hollow Sirabhorn Skating In Central Park So Nice (Summer Samba) So What Solar Solitude Some Day My Prince Will Come Some Other Spring Some Skunk Funk Somebody Loves Me Sometime Ago Song For My Father The Song Is You Sophisticated Lady The Sorcerer Speak No Evil The Sphinx Standing On The Corner The Star-Crossed Lovers Stella By Starlight Steps Stolen Moments Stompin' At The Savoy Straight No Chaser A String Of Pearls Stuff Sugar A Sunday Kind Of Love The Surrey With The Fringe On Top Swedish Pastry Sweet Georgia Bright Sweet Henry Take Five Take The “A” Train Tame Thy Pen Tell Me A Bedtime Story Thanks For The Memory That's Amore (That's Love) (There Is) No Greater Love There Will Never Be Another You There'll Be Some Changes Made They Didn't Believe Me Think On Me Thou Swell Three Flowers Time Remembered Tones For Joan's Bones Topsy Tour De Force Triste Tune Up Turn Out The Stars Twisted Blues Unchain My Heart Unity Village Unquity Road Up Jumped Spring Upper Manhattan Medical Group (UMMG) Valse Hot Very Early Virgo Wait Till You See Her Waltz For Debby Wave We'll Be Together Again Well You Needn't (It's Over Now) West Coast Blues What Am I Here For? What Was When I Fall In Love When Sunny Gets Blue When You Wish Upon A Star Whispering Wild Flower Windows Witch Hunt Wives And Lovers (Hey, Little Girl) Woodchopper's Ball Woodyn' You The World Is Waiting For The Sunrise Yes And No Yesterday Yesterdays You Are The Sunshine Of My Life You Are Too Beautiful You Brought A New Kind Of Love To Me You Don't Know What Love Is You Took Advantage Of Me You're Nobody 'til Somebody Loves You Young At Heart / Instrument en fa / Hal Leonard
39.70 EUR - Sold by Woodbrass Pre-shipment lead time: On order | |
| THE Eb REAL BOOK VOL.1
MINI EDITION Hal Leonard
The Real Books are the best-selling jazz books of all time. Since the 1970s, mus...(+)
The Real Books are the best-selling jazz books of all time. Since the 1970s, musicians have trusted these volumes to get them through every gig, night after night. The problem is that the books were illegally produced and distributed, without any regard to copyright law, or royalties paid to the composers who created these musical masterpieces. Hal Leonard is very proud to present the first legitimate and legal editions of these books ever produced. You won't even notice the difference, other than all the notorious errors being fixed: the covers and typeface look the same, the song list is nearly identical, and the price for our edition is even cheaper than the original! Every conscientious musician will appreciate that these books are now produced accurately and ethically, benefitting the songwriters that we owe for some of the greatest tunes of all time! Includes 400 songs: All Blues · Au Privave · Autumn Leaves · Black Orpheus · Bluesette · Body and Soul · Bright Size Life · Con Alma · Dolphin Dance · Don't Get Around Much Anymore · Easy Living · Epistrophy · Falling in Love with Love · Footprints · Four on Six · Giant Steps · Have You Met Miss Jones? · How High the Moon · I'll Remember April · Impressions · Lullaby of Birdland · Misty · My Funny Valentine · Oleo · Red Clay · Satin Doll · Sidewinder · Stella by Starlight · Take Five · There Is No Greater Love · Wave · and hundreds more! Editions also available in C, B-flat, and E-flat. African Flower (Petite Fleur Africaine) Afro Blue Afternoon In Paris Água De Beber (Water To Drink) Airegin Alfie Alice In Wonderland All Blues All By Myself All Of Me All Of You All The Things You Are Alright, Okay, You Win Always Ana Maria Angel Eyes Anthropology Apple Honey April In Paris April Joy Arise, Her Eyes Armageddon Au Privave Autumn In New York Autumn Leaves Beautiful Love Beauty And The Beast Bessie's Blues Bewitched Big Nick Bird Like Black Coffee Black Diamond Black Narcissus Black Nile Black Orpheus Blue Bossa Blue In Green Blue Monk The Blue Room Blue Train (Blue Trane) Blues For Alice Bluesette Body And Soul Boplicity (Be Bop Lives) Bright Size Life Broad Way Blues Broadway But Beautiful Butterfly C'est Si Bon Call Me Call Me Irresponsible Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man Captain Marvel Central Park West Ceora Chega De Saudade (No More Blues) Chelsea Bells Chelsea Bridge Cherokee (Indian Love Song) Cherry Pink And Apple Blossom White A Child Is Born Chippie Chitlins Con Carne Come Sunday Como En Vietnam Con Alma Conception Confirmation Contemplation Coral Cotton Tail Could It Be You Countdown Crescent Crystal Silence D Natural Blues Daahoud Dancing On The Ceiling Darn That Dream Day Waves Days And Nights Waiting Dear Old Stockholm Dearly Beloved Dedicated To You Deluge Desafinado Desert Air Detour Ahead Dexterity Dizzy Atmosphere Django Doin' The Pig Dolores Dolphin Dance Domino Biscuit Don't Blame Me Don't Get Around Much Anymore Donna Lee Dream A Little Dream Of Me Dreamsville Easter Parade Easy Living Easy To Love (You'd Be So Easy To Love) Ecclusiastics Eighty One El Gaucho Epistrophy Equinox Equipoise E.S.P. Fall Falling Grace Falling In Love With Love Fee-Fi-Fo-Fum A Fine Romance 500 Miles High 502 Blues Follow Your Heart Footprints For All We Know For Heaven's Sake (I Love You) For Sentimental Reasons Forest Flower Four Four On Six Freddie Freeloader Freedom Jazz Dance Full House Gee Baby, Ain't I Good To You Gemini Giant Steps The Girl From Ipanema (Garôta De Ipanema) Gloria's Step God Bless' The Child Golden Lady Good Evening Mr. And Mrs. America Grand Central The Green Mountains Groovin' High Grow Your Own Guilty Gypsy In My Soul Half Nelson Have You Met Miss Jones? Heaven Heebie Jeebies Hello, Young Lovers Here's That Rainy Day Hot Toddy House Of Jade How High The Moon How Insensitive (Insensatez) How My Heart Sings Hullo Bolinas I Can't Get Started I Can't Give You Anything But Love I Could Write A Book I Got It Bad And That Ain't Good I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart I Love Paris I Love You I Mean You I Remember Clifford I Should Care I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free I'll Never Smile Again I'll Remember April I'm All Smiles I'm Beginning To See The Light I'm Your Pal Icarus If You Never Come To Me (Inutil Paisagem) Impressions In A Mellow Tone In A Sentimental Mood In The Mood In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning In Your Quiet Place The Inch Worm Indian Lady Inner Urge Interplay The Intrepid Fox Invitation Iris Is You Is, Or Is You Ain't (Ma' Baby) Isn't It Romantic? Isotope Israel It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing) It's Easy To Remember Jelly Roll Jordu Journey To Recife Joy Spring Juju Jump Monk June In January Just One More Chance Kelo Lady Bird Lady Sings The Blues Lament Las Vegas Tango Lazy Bird Lazy River Like Someone In Love Limehouse Blues Lines And Spaces Litha Little Boat (O Barquinho) Little Waltz Long Ago (And Far Away) Lonnie's Lament Look To The Sky Love Is The Sweetest Thing Lucky Southern Lullaby Of Birdland Lush Life The Magician In You Mahjong Maiden Voyage A Man And A Woman (Un Homme Et Une Femme) Man In The Green Shirt Meditation (Meditacao) Memories Of Tomorrow Michelle Midnight Mood Midwestern Nights Dream Milano Minority Miss Ann Missouri Uncompromised Mr. P.C. Misty Miyako Moment's Notice Mood Indigo Moonchild The Most Beautiful Girl In The World My Buddy My Favorite Things My Foolish Heart My Funny Valentine My One And Only Love My Romance My Shining Hour My Ship My Way Mysterious Traveller Naima (Niema) Nardis Nefertiti Never Will I Marry Nica's Dream Night Dreamer The Night Has A Thousand Eyes A Night In Tunisia Night Train Nobody Knows You When You're Down And Out Nostalgia In Times Square Nuages (The Old Man From) The Old Country Oleo Oliloqui Valley Once I Loved (Amor Em Paz) (Love In Peace) Once In Love With Amy One Finger Snap One Note Samba (Samba De Uma Nota So) Only Trust Your Heart Orbits Ornithology Out Of Nowhere Paper Doll Passion Dance Passion Flower Peace Peggy's Blue Skylight Pent Up House Penthouse Serenade Peri's Scope Pfrancing Pinocchio Pithecanthropus Erectus Portsmouth Figurations Prelude To A Kiss Prince Of Darkness P.S. I Love You Pussy Cat Dues Quiet Nights Of Quiet Stars (Corcovado) Quiet Now Recorda Me Red Clay Reflections Reincarnation Of A Lovebird Ring Dem Bells Road Song 'Round Midnight Ruby, My Dear Poem For #15 (The Saga Of Harrison Crabfeathers) Satin Doll Scotch And Soda Scrapple From The Apple Sea Journey Seven Come Eleven Seven Steps To Heaven Sidewinder Silver Hollow Sirabhorn Skating In Central Park So Nice (Summer Samba) So What Solar Solitude Some Day My Prince Will Come Some Other Spring Some Skunk Funk Somebody Loves Me Sometime Ago Song For My Father The Song Is You Sophisticated Lady The Sorcerer Speak No Evil The Sphinx Standing On The Corner The Star-Crossed Lovers Stella By Starlight Steps Stolen Moments Stompin' At The Savoy Straight No Chaser A String Of Pearls Stuff Sugar A Sunday Kind Of Love The Surrey With The Fringe On Top Swedish Pastry Sweet Georgia Bright Sweet Henry Take Five Take The “A” Train Tame Thy Pen Tell Me A Bedtime Story Thanks For The Memory That's Amore (That's Love) (There Is) No Greater Love There Will Never Be Another You There'll Be Some Changes Made They Didn't Believe Me Think On Me Thou Swell Three Flowers Time Remembered Tones For Joan's Bones Topsy Tour De Force Triste Tune Up Turn Out The Stars Twisted Blues Unchain My Heart Unity Village Unquity Road Up Jumped Spring Upper Manhattan Medical Group (UMMG) Valse Hot Very Early Virgo Wait Till You See Her Waltz For Debby Wave We'll Be Together Again Well You Needn't (It's Over Now) West Coast Blues What Am I Here For? What Was When I Fall In Love When Sunny Gets Blue When You Wish Upon A Star Whispering Wild Flower Windows Witch Hunt Wives And Lovers (Hey, Little Girl) Woodchopper's Ball Woodyn' You The World Is Waiting For The Sunrise Yes And No Yesterday Yesterdays You Are The Sunshine Of My Life You Are Too Beautiful You Brought A New Kind Of Love To Me You Don't Know What Love Is You Took Advantage Of Me You're Nobody 'til Somebody Loves You Young At Heart / Instrument en sib / Hal Leonard
49.99 EUR - Sold by Woodbrass Pre-shipment lead time: On order | |
| The Songbook (IRON AND
WINE) Lyrics and Chords Chester
Par IRON AND WINE. Iron and Wine: The Songbook contains songs from albums and EP...(+)
Par IRON AND WINE. Iron and Wine: The Songbook contains songs from albums and EPs by American singer-songwriter Iron and Wine. The artist-approved chord songbook includes lyrics and chords with short picking patterns in tab and notation and is full colour throughout with artwork, photographs and tour posters, a song index and index of first lines. Sam Beam is a singer-songwriter who has been creating music as Iron and Wine for over a decade. Through the course of seven albums, numerous EPs and singles, and the initial volumes of an Archive Series - Iron and Wine has captured the emotion and imagination of listeners with distinctly cinematic songs/ Recueil / Accords de Guitare et Paroles
58.61 EUR - Sold by LMI-partitions (Seller in french langage) Pre-shipment lead time: On order | |
| The Real Book Play Along
Vol.1 6th Edition C
Instruments (livre + Cle
Usb) C Instruments [Fake Book] Hal Leonard
The Real Book you know and love has now been updated to include backing tracks f...(+)
The Real Book you know and love has now been updated to include backing tracks for 240 songs on one convenient USB flash drive stick! The play-along CDs alone are worth $100 so this is an amazing package price! The Real Books are the best-selling jazz books of all time. Since the 1970s, musicians have trusted these volumes to get them through every gig, night after night. The problem is that the books were illegally produced and distributed without any reqard to copyright law or royalties paide to the composers who created these musical masterpieces. Hal Leonard is very proud to present the first legitimate and legal editions of these books ever produced. You won't even notice the difference, other than that all of the notorious errors have been fixed! (I Love You) For Sentimental Reasons [Best, William] [Watson, Deek] (The Old Man From) The Old Country [Adderley, Nat] [Lewis, Curtis, R.] 500 Miles High [Corea, Chick] [Potter, Neville] 502 Blues [Rowles, James] A Child Is Born [Jones, Thad] A Fine Romance [Kern, Jerome] [Fields, Dorothy] A Man And A Woman (Un Homme Et Une Femme) [Lai, Francis] [Barouh, Pierre] [Keller, Jerry] A Night In Tunisia [Gillespie, John ?Dizzy?] [Paparelli, Frank] A String Of Pearls [Grey, Jerry] A Sunday Kind Of Love [Belle, Barbara] [Prima, Louis] [Leonard, Anita] [Rhodes, Stan] African Flower (Petite Fleur Africaine) [Ellington, Duke] Afro Blue [Santamaria, Mongo] Afternoon In Paris [Lewis, John] Água De Beber (Water To Drink) [Jobim, Antonio Carlos] [Gimbel, Norman] [De Moraes, Vinicius] Airegin [Rollins, Sonny] Alfie [Bacarach, Burt] [David, Hal] Alice In Wonderland [Fain, Sammy] [Hilliard, Bob] All Blues [Davis, Miles] All By Myself [Berlin, Irving] All Of Me [Simons, Seymour] [Marks, Gerald] All Of You [Porter, Cole] All The Things You Are [Kern, Jerome] [Hammerstein II, Oscar] Alright, Okay, You Win [Watts, Mayme] Always [Berlin, Irving] Ana Maria [Shorter, Wayne] Angel Eyes [Dennis, Matt] [Brent, Earl] Anthropology [Parker, Charlie] [Gillespie, Dizzy] Apple Honey [Herman, Woody] April In Paris [Duke, Vernon] [Harburg, E. Y.] April Joy [Metheny, Pat] Arise, Her Eyes [Swallow, Steve] Armageddon [Shorter, Wayne] Au Privave [Parker, Charlie] Autumn In New York [Duke, Vernon] Autumn Leaves [Kosma, Joseph] [Mercer, Johnny] [Prevert, Jacques] Beautiful Love [Young, Victor] [King, Wayne] [Van Alstyne, Egbert] [Gillespie, Haven] Beauty And The Beast [Shorter, Wayne] Bessie's Blues [Coltrane, John] Bewitched [Rodgers, Richard] [Hart, Lorenz] Big Nick [Coltrane, Nick] Black Coffee [Webster, Paul Francis] [Burke, Sonny] Black Diamond [Sealey, Milton] Black Narcissus [Henderson, Joe] Black Nile [Shorter, Wayne] Black Orpheus [Bonfa, Luiz] Blue Bossa [Dorham, Kenny] Blue In Green [Davis, Miles] Blue Monk [Monk, Thelonious] Blue Train (Blue Trane) [Coltrane, John] Blues For Alice [Parker, Charlie] Bluesette [Thielemans, Jean] [Gimbel, Norman] Body And Soul [Green, John] [Heyman, Edward] [Sour, Robert] [Eyton, Frank] Boplicity (Be Bop Lives) [Davis, Miles] [Evans, Gil] Bright Size Life [Metheny, Pat] Broad Way Blues [Coleman, Ornette] Broadway [Byrd, Bill] [McRae, Teddy] [Woode, Henri] But Beautiful [Van Heusen, Jimmy] [Burke, Johnny] Butterfly [Hancock, Herbie] [Maupin, Bennie] Byrd Like [Hubbard, Freddie] Call Me [Hatch, Tony] Call Me Irresponsible [Van Heusen, James] [Cahn, Sammy] Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man [Kern, Jerome] [Hammerstein II, Oscar] Captain Marvel [Corea, Chick] Central Park West [Coltrane, John] Ceora [Morgan, Lee] C'est Si Bon [Betti, Henri] [Seelen, Jerry] [Hornez, Andre] Chega De Saudade (No More Blues) [Jobim, Antonio Carlos] [De Moraes, Vinicius] Chelsea Bells [Swallow, Steve] Chelsea Bridge [Strayhorn, Billy] Cherokee (Indian Love Song) [Noble, Ray] Cherry Pink And Apple Blossom White [Louiguy] [Larue, Jacques] [David, Mack] Chippie [Coleman, Ornette] Chitlins Con Carne [Burrell, Kenny] Come Sunday [Ellington, Duke] Como En Vietnam [Swallow, Steve] Con Alma [Gillespie, John ?Dizzy?] Conception [Shearing, George] Confirmation [Parker, Charlie] Contemplation [Tyner, McCoy] Coral [Jarrett, Keith] Cotton Tail [Ellington, Duke] Could It Be You [Porter, Cole] Countdown [Coltrane, John] Crescent [Coltrane, John] Crystal Silence [Corea, Chick] D Natural Blues [Montgomery, John L. (Wes)] Daahoud [Brown, Clifford] Dancing On The Ceiling [Rodgers, Richard] [Hart, Lorenz] Darn That Dream [Van Heusen, Jimmy] [DeLange, Eddie] Day Waves [Corea, Chick] [Potter, Neville] Days And Nights Waiting [Jarrett, Keith] Dear Old Stockholm [Varmeland] Dearly Beloved [Kern, Jerome] [Mercer, Johnny] Dedicated To You [Cahn, Sammy] [Chaplin, Saul] [Hyzaret] Deluge [Shorter, Wayne] Desafinado [Jobim, Antonio, Carlos] [Mendonca, Newton] Desert Air [Corea, Chick] Detour Ahead [Ellis, Herb] [Frigo, John] [Carter, Lou] Dexterity [Parker, Charlie] Dizzy Atmosphere [Gillespie, John ?Dizzy?] Django [Lewis, John] Doin' The Pig [Swallow, Steve] Dolores [Shorter, Wayne] Dolphin Dance [Hancock, Herbie] Domino Biscuit [Swallow, Steve] Donna Lee [Parker, Charlie] Don't Blame Me [McHugh, Jimmy] [Fields, Dorothy] Don't Get Around Much Anymore [Ellington, Duke] [Russell, Bob] Dream A Little Dream Of Me [Schwandt, Wilbur] [Andree, Fabian] [Kahn, Gus] Dreamsville [Mancini, Henry] [Livingston, Jay] [Evans, Ray] E.S.P. [Shorter, Wayne] Easter Parade [Berlin, Irving] Easy Living [Robin, Leo] [Rainger, Ralph] Easy To Love (You'd Be So Easy To Love) [Porter, Cole] Ecclusiastics [Mingus, Charles] Eighty One [Davis, Miles] [Carter, Ronald] El Gaucho [Shorter, Wayne] Epistrophy [Monk, Thelonious] [Clarke, Kenny] Equinox [Coltrane, John] Equipoise [Cowell, Stanley] Fall [Shorter, Wayne] Falling Grace [Swallow, Steve] Falling In Love With Love [Rodgers, Richard] [Hart, Lorenz] Fee-Fi-Fo-Fum [Shorter, Wayne] Follow Your Heart [McLaughlin, John] Footprints [Shorter, Wayne] For All We Know [Coots, Fred, J.] [Lewis, Sam M.] For Heaven's Sake [Meyer, Don] [Bretton, Elise] [Edwards, Sherman] Forest Flower [Lloyd, Charles] Four [Davis, Miles] Four On Six [Montgomery, John L. (Wes)] Freddie Freeloader [Davis, Miles] Freedom Jazz Dance [Harris, Eddie] Full House [Montgomery, John L. (Wes)] Gee Baby, Ain't I Good To You [Redman, John] [Razaf, Andy] Gemini [Heath, Jimmy] Giant Steps [Coltrane, John] Gloria's Step [Le Faro, Scott] God Bless' The Child [Herzog Jnr, Arthur] [Holiday, Billie] Golden Lady [Wonder, Stevie] Good Evening Mr. And Mrs. America [Guerin, John] Grand Central [Coltrane, John] Groovin' High [Gillespie, John ?Dizzy?] Grow Your Own [Jarrett, Keith] Guilty [Kahn, Gus] [Whiting, Richard] [Akst, Harry] Gypsy In My Soul [Boland, Clay] [Jaffe, Moe] Half Nelson [Davis, Miles] Have You Met Miss Jones? [Rodgers, Richard] [Hart, Lorenz] Heaven [Ellington, Duke] Heebie Jeebies [Atkins, Boyd] Hello, Young Lovers [Rodgers, Richard] [Hammerstein II, Oscar] Here's That Rainy Day [Van Heusen, Jimmy] [Burke, Johnny] Hot Toddy [Hendler, Herb] [Flanagan, Ralph] House Of Jade [Shorter, Wayne] How High The Moon [Lewis, Morgan] [Hamilton, Nancy] How Insensitive (Insensatez) [Jobim, Antonio, Carlos] [De Moraes, Vinicius] [Gimbel, Norman] How My Heart Sings [Zindars, Earl] [Zindars, Anne] Hullo Bolinas [Swallow, Steve] I Can't Get Started With You [Duke, Vernon] [Gershwin, Ira] I Can't Give You Anything But Love [McHugh, Jimmy] [Fields, Dorothy] I Could Write A Book [Rodgers, Richard] [Hart, Lorenz] I Got It Bad And That Ain't Good [Ellington, Duke] [Webster, Paul Francis] I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart [Ellington, Duke] [Nemo, Henry] [Redmond, John] [Mills, Irving] I Love Paris [Porter, Cole] I Love You [Porter, Cole] I Mean You [Monk, Thelonious] [Hawkins, Coleman] I Remember Clifford [Golson, Benny] I Should Care [Cahn, Sammy] [Stordahl, Axel] [Weston, Paul] I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free [Taylor, Billy] Icarus [Twoner, Ralph N.] If You Never Come To Me (Inutil Paisagem) [Jobim, Antonio Carlos] [De Oliveira, Aloysio] [Gilbert, Ray] I'll Never Smile Again [Lowe, Ruth] I'll Remember April [Johnston, Pat] [Raye, Don] [De Paul, Gene] I'm All Smiles [Leonard, Michael] [Martin, Herbert] I'm Beginning To See The Light [George, Dan] [Hodges, Johnny] [Ellington, Duke] [James, Harry] I'm Your Pal [Swallow, Steve] Impressions [Coltrane, John] In A Mellow Tone [Ellington, Duke] In A Sentimental Mood [Ellington, Duke] In The Mood [Garland, Joe] In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning [Mann, David] [Hilliard, Bob] In Your Quiet Place [Jarrett, Keith] Indian Lady [Ellis, Don] Inner Urge [Henderson, Joe] Interplay [Evans, Bill] Invitation [Kaper, Bronislam] [Webster, Paul Francis] Iris [Shorter, Wayne] Is You Is, Or Is You Ain't (Ma' Baby) Isn't It Romantic? [Rodgers, Richard] [Hart, Lorenz] Isotope [Henderson, Joe] Israel [Carisi, John] It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing) [Ellington, Duke] [Mills, Irving] It's Easy To Remember [Rodgers, Richard] [Hart, Lorenz] Jelly Roll [Mingus, Charles] Jordu [Jordan, Duke] Journey To Recife [Evans, Richard] [Gimbel, Norman] Joy Spring [Brown, Clifford] Juju [Shorter, Wayne] Jump Monk [Mingus, Charles] June In January [Robin, Leo] [Rainger, Ralph] Just One More Chance [Johnston, Arthur] [Coslow, Sam] Kelo [Johnson, J. J.] Lady Bird [Dameron, Tadd] Lady Sings The Blues [Nichols, Herbert] [Holiday, Billie] Lament [Johnson, J.J] Las Vegas Tango [Evans, Gil] Lazy Bird [Coltrane, John] Lazy River [Carmichael, Hoagy] Like Someone In Love [Van Heusen, Jimmy] [Burke, Johnny] Limehouse Blues [Braham, Philip] [Furber, Douglas] Lines And Spaces [Lovano, Joe] Litha [Corea, Chick] Little Boat (O Barquinho) [Menescal, Roberto] [Boscoli, Ronaldo] [Kaye, Buddy] Little Waltz [Carter, Ron] Long Ago (And Far Away) [Kern, Jerome] [Gershwin, Ira] Lonnie's Lament [Coltrane, John] Look To The Sky [Jobim, Antonio Carlos] Love Is The Sweetest Thing [Noble, Ray] Lucky Southern [Jarrett, Keith] Lullaby Of Birdland [Shearing, George] [Weiss, George David] Lush Life [Strayhorn, Billy] Mahjong [Shorter, Wayne] Maiden Voyage [Hancock, Herbie] Man In The Green Shirt [Zawinul, Joe] Meditation (Meditacao) [Jobim, Antonio Carlos] [Mendonca, Newton] [Gimbel, Norman] Memories Of Tomorrow [Jarrett, Keith] Michelle [Lennon, John] [McCartney, Paul] Midnight Mood [Zawinul, Josef] Midwestern Nights Dream [Metheny, Pat] Milano [Lewis, John] Minority [Gryce, Gigi] Miss Ann [Dolphy, Eric] Missouri Uncompromised [Metheny, Pat] Misty [Garner, Erroll] Miyako [Shorter, Wayne] Moment's Notice [Coltrane, John] Mood Indigo [Ellington, Duke] [Mills, Irving] [Bigard, Albany] Moonchild [Jarrett, Keith] Mr. P.C. [Coltrane, John] My Buddy [Donaldson, Walter] [Kahn, Gus] My Favorite Things [Rodgers, Richard] [Hammerstein II, Oscar] My Foolish Heart [Young, Victor] [Washington, Ned] My Funny Valentine [Rodgers, Richard] [Hart, Lorenz] My One And Only Love [Wood, Guy] [Mellin, Robert] My Romance [Rodgers, Richard] [Hart, Lorenz] My Shining Hour [Arlen, Harold] [Mercer, Johnny] My Ship [Weill, Kurt] [Gershwin, Ira] My Way [Revaux, Jacques] [Francois, Claude] [Anka, Paul] [Thibaud, Gilles] Mysterious Traveller [Shorter, Wayne] Naima (Niema) [Coltrane, John] Nardis [Davis, Miles] Nefertiti [Shorter, Wayne] Never Will I Marry [Loesser, Frank] Nica's Dream [Silver, Horace] Night Dreamer [Shorter, Wayne] Night Train [Forrest, Jimmy] [Washington, Oscar] [Simpkins, Lewis C.] Nobody Knows You When You're Down And Out [Cox, Jimmie] Nostalgia In Times Square [Mingus, Charles] Nuages [Reinhardt, Django] [Larue, Jacques] Oleo [Rollins, Sonny] Oliloqui Valley [Hancock, Herbie] Once I Loved (Amor Em Paz) (Love In Peace) [Jobim, Antonio Carlos] [De Morales, Vinicius] [Gilbert, Ray] Once In Love With Amy [Loesser, Frank] One Finger Snap [Hancock, Herbie] One Note Samba (Samba De Uma Nota So) [Jobim, Antonio Carlos] [Mendonca, Newton] Only Trust Your Heart [Carter, Benny] [Cahn, Sammy] Orbits [Shorter, Wayne] Ornithology [Parker, Charlie] [Harris, Bennie] Out Of Nowhere [Green, Johnny] [Heyman, Edward] P.S. I Love You [Jenkins, Gordon] [Mercer, Johnny] Paper Doll [Black, Johnny S.] Passion Dance [Tyner, Mccoy] Passion Flower [Strayhorn, Billy] [Raskin, Milton] Peace [Silver, Horace] Peggy's Blue Skylight [Mingus, Charles] Pent Up House [Rollins, Sonny] Penthouse Serenade [Jason, Will] [Burton, Val] Peri's Scope [Evans, Bill] Pfrancing (No Blues) [Davis, Miles] Pinocchio [Shorter, Wayne] Pithecanthropus Erectus [Mingus, Charles] Poem For #15 (The Saga Of Harrison Crabfeathers) [Kuhn, Steve] Portsmouth Figurations [Swallow, Steve] Prelude To A Kiss [Ellington, Duke] [Gordon, Irving] [Mills, Irving] Prince Of Darkness [Shorter, Wayne] Pussy Cat Dues [Mingus, Charles] Quiet Nights Of Quiet Stars (Corcovado) [Jobim, Antonio Carlos] [Lees, Gene] Quiet Now [Zeitlin, Denny] Recorda Me [Henderson, Joe] Red Clay [Hubbard, Freddie] Reflections [Monk, Thelonious] Reincarnation Of A Lovebird [Mingus, Charles] Ring Dem Bells [Ellington, Duke] [Mills, Irving] Road Song [Montgomery, John L. (Wes)] 'Round Midnight [Monk, Thelonious] [Williams, Cootie] [Hanighen, Bernie] Ruby, My Dear [Monk, Thelonious] Satin Doll [Ellington, Duke] Scotch And Soda [Guard, Dave] Scrapple From The Apple [Parker, Charlie] Sea Journey [Corea, Chick] [Potter, Neville] Seven Come Eleven [Goodman, Benny] [Christian, Charlie] Seven Steps To Heaven [Davis, Miles] [Feldman, Victor] Sidewinder [Morgan, Lee] Silver Hollow [DeJohnette, Jack] Sirabhorn [Metheny, Pat] Skating In Central Park [Lewis, John] So Nice (Summer Samba) [Valle, Marcos] [Valle, Paulo Sergio] [Gimbel, Norman] So What [Davis, Miles] Solar [Davis, Miles] Solitude [Ellington, Duke] [De Lange, Eddie] [Mills, Irving] Some Day My Prince Will Come [Churchill, Frank] [Morel, Larry] Some Other Spring [Herzog Jnr, Arthur] [Kitchings, Irene] Some Skunk Funk [Brecker, Randy] Somebody Loves Me [Gershwin, George] [DeSylva, B. G.][MacDonald, Ballard] [Ranaud, Emelia] Sometime Ago [Mihanovich, Sergio] Song For My Father [Silver, Horace] Sophisticated Lady [Ellington, Duke] [Mills, Irving] [Parish, Micthell] Speak No Evil [Shorter, Wayne] Standing On The Corner [Loesser, Frank] Stella By Starlight [Young, Victor] [Washington, Ned] Steps [Corea, Chick] Stolen Moments [Nelson, Oliver] Stompin' At The Savoy [Goodman, Benny] [Sampson, Edgar] [Webb, Chick] Straight No Chaser [Monk, Thelonious] Stuff [Davis, Miles] Sugar [Turrentine, Stanley] Swedish Pastry [Kessel, Barney] Sweet Georgia Bright [Lloyd, Charles] Sweet Henry [Swallow, Steve] [Gregg, Jack] Take Five [Desmond, Paul] Take The 'A' Train [Strayhorn, Billy] Tame Thy Pen [Niles, Richard] Tell Me A Bedtime Story [Hancock, Herbie] Thanks For The Memory [Robin, Leo] [Rainger, Ralph] That's Amoré (That's Love) [Warren, Harry] [Brooks, Jack] The Blue Room [Rodgers, Richard] [Hart, Lorenz] The Girl From Ipanema (Garôta De Ipanema) [Jobim, Antonio Carlos] [Gimbel, Norman] [De Moraes, Vinicius] The Green Mountains [Swallow, Steve] The Inch Worm [Loesser, Frank] The Intrepid Fox [Hubbard, Freddie] The Magician In You [Jarrett, Keith] The Most Beautiful Girl In The World [Rodgers, Richard] [Hart, Lorenz] The Night Has A Thousand Eyes [Brainin, Jerry] [Bernier, Buddy] The Song Is You [Kern, Jerome] [Hammerstein II, Oscar] The Sorcerer [Hancock, Herbie] The Sphinx [Coleman, Ornette] The Star-Crossed Lovers [Ellington, Duke] [Strayhorn, Billy] The Surrey With The Fringe On Top [Rodgers, Richard] [Hammerstein II, Oscar] The World Is Waiting For The Sunrise [Seitz, Ernest] [Lockhart, Eugene] There Is No Greater Love [Jones, Isham] [Symes, Marty] There Will Never Be Another You [Warren, Harry] [Gordon, Mack] There'll Be Some Changes Made [Overstreet, Benton] [Higgins, Billy] They Didn't Believe Me [Kern, Jerome] [Reynolds, Herbert] Think On Me [Cables, George] Thou Swell [Rodgers, Richard] [Hart, Lorenz] Three Flowers [Tyner, McCoy] Time Remembered [Evans, Bill] Tones For Joan's Bones [Corea, Chick] Topsy [Battle, Edgar] [[Durham, Eddie] Tour De Force [Gillespie, John ?Dizzy?] Triste [Jobim, Antonio Carlos] Tune Up [Davis, Miles] Turn Out The Stars [Evans, Bill] [Lees, Gene] Twisted Blues [Montgomery, John, L. (Wes)] Unchain My Heart [Sharp, Bobby] [Powell, Teddy] Uniquity Road [Metheny, Pat] Unity Village [Metheny, Pat] Up Jumped Spring [Hubbard, Freddie] Upper Manhattan Medical Group (UMMG) [Strayhorn, Billy] Valse Hot [Rollins, Sonny] Very Early [Evans, Bill] Virgo [Shorter, Wayne] Wait Till You See Her [Rodgers, Richard] [Hart, Lorenz] Waltz For Debby [Evans, Bill] [Lees, Gene] Wave [Jobim, Antonio Carlos] We'll Be Together Again [Fischer, Carl] [Lane, Frankie] Well You Needn't (It's Over Now) [Monk, Thelonious] [Perro, Mike] West Coast Blues [Montgomery, John L. (Wes)] What Am I Here For? [Ellington, Duke] What Was [Corea, Chick] When I Fall In Love [Young, Victor] [Heyman, Edward] When Sunny Gets Blue [Fischer, Marvin] [Segal, Jack] When You Wish Upon A Star [Harline, Leigh] [Washington, Ned] Whispering [Coburn, Richard] [Schonberger, John] [Rose, Vincent] Wild Flower [Shorter, Wayne] Windows [Corea, Chick] Witch Hunt [Shorter, Wayne] Wives And Lovers (Hey, Little Girl) [Bacharach, Burt] [David, Hal] Woodchopper's Ball [Bishop, Joe] [Herman, Woody] Woodyn' You [Gillespie, Dizzy] Yes And No [Shorter, Wayne] Yesterday [Lennon, John] [McCartney, Paul] Yesterdays [Kern, Jerome] [Harbach, Otto] You Are The Sunshine Of My Life [Wonder, Stevie] You Are Too Beautiful [Rodgers, Richard] [Hart, Lorenz] You Brought A New Kind Of Love To Me [Fain, Sammy] [Kahal, Irving] [Norman, Pierre] You Don't Know What Love Is [Raye, Don] [DePaul, Gene] You Took Advantage Of Me [Rodgers, Richard] [Hart, Lorenz] Young At Heart [Richards, Johnny] [Leigh, Carolyn] You're Nobody 'Til Somebody Loves You [Morgan, Russ] [Stock, Larry] [Cavanaugh, James]
104.99 EUR - Sold by Woodbrass Pre-shipment lead time: In Stock | |
| Dueling Carmens: Two
Carmen Fantasies
(SARASATE PABLO DE /
HUBAY JENO) Violin and Piano [Sheet music] Hal Leonard
by Hubay and Sarasate for Violin and Piano. Par SARASATE PABLO DE / HUBAY JENO. ...(+)
by Hubay and Sarasate for Violin and Piano. Par SARASATE PABLO DE / HUBAY JENO. Georges Bizet\'s opera Carmen had its first performance in Paris in 1875. In the audience was the 17-year-old Hungarian violin virtuoso and budding composer Jenö Hubay. After the performance Hubay started writing his Carmen Fantasy from memory. The following season for his debut recital in Paris, he included his newly created composition. It is a lyrical work of great beauty and brilliance. Hubay combined his career of a concertizing virtuoso, composer and violin pedagogue. At the Royal Conservatory in Brussels he became the successor of Vieuxtemps and Wieniawski. Later, Franz Liszt invited Hubay to lead the violin department in the newly created Budapest Music Academy. He created the world-renowned Hungarian school of violin playing. His student, Franz von Vecsey, recorded theCarmen Fantasy in 1904 at age 11! His other students included Joseph Szigeti, Zoltán Szekely, Sándor Végh, Endre Gertler, György Garay and many more. Hubay was a very active composer, creating over 120 works including operas, ballets, concertos, songs and instrumental compositions. Pablo de Sarasate wrote his Carmen Fantasy in 1882. It is a composition of drama and passion, written with his unparalleled brilliance for violin writing. This work has remained in the standard repertory, on programs of virtuoso soloists, as well as a required work for major competitions. / Date parution : 2021-12-09/ Recueil / Violon et Piano
40.70 EUR - Sold by LMI-partitions (Seller in french langage) Pre-shipment lead time: In Stock | |
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