SKU: LM.26614
ISBN 9790230966146.
Gavotte No. 1, Bourree No. 1, Menuet No. 1, Menuet No. 2 (1e suite en Do Majeur) - Menuet, Rondeau (2e suite en Si mineur) - Gavotte No. 1 et No. 2 (3e suite en Re Majeur) - Menuet (1e concerto brandebourgeois).
SKU: BR.PB-4891-07
World premiere: Essen, May 4, 1975
ISBN 9790004206874. 6.5 x 9 inches.
Das Concerto da camera will weder eine barockisierende noch avantgardistische Musik fur die Blockflote sein - sondern ein instrumentgerechtes, abwechslungsreiches, temperamentvolles Stuck. Der Solopart (im Wechsel von Alt- und Piccolo-Flote) ist virtuos und ausdrucksstark zugleich angelegt, unter Berucksichtigung der in den letzten Jahren fur die Blockflote speziell entwickelten Techniken (uberblasene Akkorde, Flackergerausche, Fingervibrato etc.). Die relativ umfangreiche Orchesterbesetzung (funf Holz-, vier Blechblaser, Harfe, Schlagwerk, Streicher) soll farbige Kontraste schaffen und verschiedene Strukturen verdeutlichen. Im ersten Satz, einem knappen ,,Preludio bringt das Solo-Instrument verfremdete Zitate aus dem langsamen Satz eines Telemann-Konzertes (a-moll) uber Klangflachen von Streichern und Blasern. Zweiter Satz: Ein mehrteiliges, rhapsodisches Allegro, bei dem der Part der Blockflote von Repetitionsfiguren bestimmt wird. Das Orchester setzt mosaikahnliche kurze dodekaphonische und serielle Klanggruppen und -blocke dagegen. Im ruhigeren Zwischenteil korrespondiert die Solostimme mit dichtem polyphon gefuhrten Streicherensemble. Der langsame Satz , Mittelpunkt des ganzen Konzerts, entwickelt sich als weit ausgesponnene Fantasie und kristallisiert sich um die einzelnen Zeilen der alten Liedweise ,,Innsbruck, ich muss dich lassen - ,,auf der Suche nach der verlorenen Zeit. Ein rhythmisch eigenwilliges zwolftoniges Bass-Ostinato beherrscht das Finale, greift allmahlich in steter Steigerung auf alle Stimmen uber und ubertont schliesslich den Solopart. Nach kurzer Klimax kehrt das Thema nach und nach in die Bassregister zuruck, wahrend das Solo-Instrument mit virtuosen Spielfiguren dominiert. Eine Fanfare und eine im Unisono aus der Hohe herabschiessende Figur leiten diesen letzten Satz ein, erscheinen in der Mitte und am Ende, ehe eine humorvolle Stretta das Werk beschliesst. Das ,,Concerto da camera ist an kein festes Kompositionsprinzip gebunden; es konfrontiert den relativ zarten Klang der Blockflote mit den verschiedenen lautstarkeren Orchestergruppen und zeigt in diesem Spannungsfeld die Moglichkeiten und Grenzen des Soloinstruments auf.(Jurg Baur)Bibliography:Schneider, Michael: Verschmitzt Jurg Baur und die Blockflote, in: Tibia 38 (2013), S. 418-431.Wallerang, Lars: Die Orchesterwerke Jurg Baurs als Dialog zwischen Tradition und Moderne, Koln: Dohr 2003.
SKU: HL.14021527
Francais.
A collection of simplified versions of J.S.Bach's original compositions arranged for solo piano. The succession of pieces do not correspond to an increasing technical level but offers the discovery of the author's musical repertoire. The accompanying CD (CD audio and CD-rom) allows the pianist to listen to each composition and hear the interpretation suggested. Suitable for pianists grades 3-5 standard. (CD-rom is compatible for PC and Mac).
SKU: BR.EB-6762
ISBN 9790004169636. 9 x 12 inches.
Das Concerto da camera will weder eine barockisierende noch avantgardistische Musik fur die Blockflote sein - sondern ein instrumentgerechtes, abwechslungsreiches, temperamentvolles Stuck. Der Solopart (im Wechsel von Alt- und Piccolo-Flote) ist virtuos und ausdrucksstark zugleich angelegt, unter Berucksichtigung der in den letzten Jahren fur die Blockflote speziell entwickelten Techniken (uberblasene Akkorde, Flackergerausche, Fingervibrato etc.). Die relativ umfangreiche Orchesterbesetzung (funf Holz-, vier Blechblaser, Harfe, Schlagwerk, Streicher) soll farbige Kontraste schaffen und verschiedene Strukturen verdeutlichen. Im ersten Satz, einem knappen ,,Preludio bringt das Solo-Instrument verfremdete Zitate aus dem langsamen Satz eines Telemann-Konzertes (a-moll) uber Klangflachen von Streichern und Blasern. Zweiter Satz: Ein mehrteiliges, rhapsodisches Allegro, bei dem der Part der Blockflote von Repetitionsfiguren bestimmt wird. Das Orchester setzt mosaikahnliche kurze dodekaphonische und serielle Klanggruppen und -blocke dagegen. Im ruhigeren Zwischenteil korrespondiert die Solostimme mit dichtem polyphon gefuhrten Streicherensemble. Der langsame Satz , Mittelpunkt des ganzen Konzerts, entwickelt sich als weit ausgesponnene Fantasie und kristallisiert sich um die einzelnen Zeilen der alten Liedweise ,,Innsbruck, ich muss dich lassen - ,,auf der Suche nach der verlorenen Zeit. Ein rhythmisch eigenwilliges zwolftoniges Bass-Ostinato beherrscht das Finale, greift allmahlich in steter Steigerung auf alle Stimmen uber und ubertont schliesslich den Solopart. Nach kurzer Klimax kehrt das Thema nach und nach in die Bassregister zuruck, wahrend das Solo-Instrument mit virtuosen Spielfiguren dominiert. Eine Fanfare und eine im Unisono aus der Hohe herabschiessende Figur leiten diesen letzten Satz ein, erscheinen in der Mitte und am Ende, ehe eine humorvolle Stretta das Werk beschliesst. Das ,,Concerto da camera ist an kein festes Kompositionsprinzip gebunden; es konfrontiert den relativ zarten Klang der Blockflote mit den verschiedenen lautstarkeren Orchestergruppen und zeigt in diesem Spannungsfeld die Moglichkeiten und Grenzen des Soloinstruments auf. (Jurg Baur) Bibliography: Schneider , Michael: Verschmitzt Jurg Baur und die Blockflote, in: Tibia 38 (2013), S. 418-431. Wallerang , Lars: Die Orchesterwerke Jurg Baurs als Dialog zwischen Tradition und Moderne, Koln: Dohr 2003.World premiere: Essen, May 4, 1975.
SKU: SU.00220551
This CD Sheet Music™ collection makes available over 200 works for flute with piano accompaniment by over 80 composers from the Baroque, Classical and Romantic periods. Works include: Adam (Hongroise), Anderson (Three Cadenzas for Mozart's Flute Concerto No. 2), CPE Bach (5 Sonatas), JCF Bach (Sonata Nos. 1&2), JS Bach (Sonatas, BWV 1030-1035), Barrère (Nocturne), Beethoven (6 Themes with Variations), Bizet (Minuet from L'Arlésienne), Blavet (Les Tendres Badinages), Booth (In the Woods at Evensong), Boulenger (D'un matin de Printemp, Briccialdi (Il Carnevale di Venezia, Bergmüller (Chanson), Busoni (Album Leaf), Caix d'Hervelois (La Bagatelle,Musette), Catherine (Arabesque), Daquin (Rigaudon), Debussy (Le Petit Berger, Rêverie, Arabesque No. 2), Donjon (Adagio Nobile, Invocation, Offertoire), Doppler (Fantaisie Pastorale Hongroise), Duvernoy (Intermezzo), Enesco (Cantabile & Presto), Fauré Berceuse, Sicilienne), Foote (3 Pieces for Flute & Piano), Gabriel-Marie (La Cinquantaine), Ganne (Andante & Scherzo), Gluck (Aria from Orphée, Ballet from Armide), Godard (The Idylle), Gossec (Timbourin), Graupner (Sonata Nos. 1&2), Grétry (Air lent), Griffes (Poem), Hahn (Variations on a Theme by Mozart), Handel (Sonata Nos. 1-7, Sonata Nos. 1-3 for Flute & Continuo), Hotteterre (Échos), Hullmandel (Menuet Champêtre), Kirchhoff (Rigaudon), Köhler (Valse Allemande), Krieger (Bourrée), Kuhlau (Divertimento Nos. 1-6, Grand Solo Nos. 1-3), Kuhnau (Gavotte and Bourrée), Latour (Theme in G major), Locatelli (3 Sonatas), Loeillet (Adagio, Gavotte), Lully (20 Pieces for Flute & Keyboard), Maganini (Sérénade), Marais (Les Folies d'Espagne), Marcello (Cantabile, Largo, Massenet (Meditation from Thaïs), Matheson (Sonata Nos. 1-12), Mendelssohn (Scherzo from A Midsummer Night's Dream), Molique (Andante), Moszkowski (Spanish Dances), Mouquet (La Flute de Pan), Mozart (Concerto Nos. 1&2, Sonata Nos. 1-6), Müthel Sonata in D), Offenbach (Barcarolle from The Tales of Hoffmann), Pergolesi (Aria), Pessard )Andalouse), Popp (Birdsong), Quantz (Sonata Nos. 1-6, Concerto in G), Rameau (La Livri), Reger (Burleske, Menuet and Gigue, Romance), Reinecke (Concerto for Flute in D, Sonata in E), Rheinberger (Rhapsodie), Rietz (Sonata), Rimsky-Korsakov (Flight of the Bumblebee), Sacchini (Andantino galante from Dardanus), Saint-Saëns (Romance, Odelette), A. Scarlatti (Minuet), Schers (Sarabande), Schubert (Introduction & Variations on a Theme), Schumann (Humming Song), Tafanel (Andante, Pastoral and Scherzettino, Telemann (Dolce, The Trusty Music Maker, Tosti (Good Bye), Verdi (La Traviata), Vivaldi (Sonata in C), Weber (Adagio), and more. Also includes composer biographies and relevant articles from the 1911 edition of Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2000+ pages
Please note, customers using Macintosh computers running macOS Catalina (version 10.5) have reported hardware compatibility issues with this product. If you encounter these issues, we recommend copying the entire contents of the disk to a contained folder on a thumb drive or other storage device for use on your Mac.
SKU: FG.55011-632-0
ISBN 9790550116320.
Victoria Yagling (1946-2011) was born in Russia and lived in Finland since 1990. Her long career as a cellist served as an excellent accompaniment to the composition she began at an early age. For 11 years she was a cello student of Mstislav Rostropovich at the Moscow Conservatory and Dmitry Kabalevsky and Tikhon Khrennikov taught her composition. Yagling won the first prize in the Gaspar Cassado Cello Competition and the following year the second prize in the Moscow Tchaikovsky Competition. Her solo engagements took her to countless countries. She has also taught at several international music courses and master classes and was often a jury member for international cello competitions. Yagling left a profilic oeuvre, and the three cello concertos are her main works. Her other orchestral works include Finnish Notebook, Lyrical Preludes and the Suite for Cello and String Orchestra. She has also composed solo works (e.g. the Suite for Cello Solo No. 1 chosen as an obligatory piece for the 7th Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow in 1982), chamber works, including two string quartets, and vocal music. Her expressive, romantically orientated style is Russian in spirit and has grown out of the soil provided by Prokofiev and Shostakovich. Concerto No. 2 for violoncello and orchestra (1983-84) is dedicated to Mstislav Rostropovich. The composer edited the piano reduction in 2004. As a cellist who possessed an exceptional knowledge of her instrument, she carefully marked in her scores all the smallest instrumental details, fingerings included. The duration of the concerto is c. 22 minutes.
SKU: BT.PBBESTPIA1
ISBN 9782824400433.
HAENDEL : Rigaudon - GRIEG : Arietta, extr. des Pièces lyriques Op.12 - MOZART : Valse favorite KV606 - Mc DOWELL : Pour une rose sauvage, extr. des Woodland Sketches - MA KAPAR : Berceuse - GLINKA : Polka - COUPERIN : L'Epineuse, extr. du VIe Ordre - BACH : Musette en ré majeur BWV anh.126 - ANONYME : Marche du Petit Livre d'Anna Magdalena Bach - FUCHS : Douce Consolation Op.47 n°11 - SCHUMANN : Premier Chagrin, extr. de l'Album pour la jeunesse Op.68 - GURLITT : Petites Fleurs Op.205 - SPINDLER : Chanson sans paroles - HUMMEL : Ecossaise Op.52 n°5 - MOUSSORGSKI : Une larme - CHOPIN : Mazurka Op.67 n°2 - SCHUBERT : Valse n°6 Op.18 D145 - BEETHOVEN : Bagatelle Op.119 n°1 - SATIE :Gymnopédie n°1 - MENDELSSOHN : Chant du gondolier Op.30 n°6 - BACH : Invention 2 voix n°4 BWV 775 - FAURE : Pièce brève Op.84 n°5 - MOZART : Fantaisie en ré mineur K.397 - CHOPIN : Prélude Op.28 n°6 - DEBUSSY : Doctor Gradus ad Parnassum, extr. des Children's Corner - SCRIABINE : Prélude Op.22 n°3 - SCHUMANN : L'Enfant s'endort, extr. des Scènes d'enfants Op.15 - LISZT : Consolation n°3 - DEBUSSY : Première Arabesque - BACH : Concerto italien BWV971, 2e mouvement.
SKU: CF.B3470
ISBN 9781491159460. UPC: 680160918058.
The awardee of two Guggenheim fellowships, Julia Perry studied composition with Luigi Dallapiccola and Nadia Boulanger, and conducted her works on a tour throughout Europe with the Vienna Philharmonic and the BBC Orchestra. She would become one of the first African-American female composers to have an orchestral work performed by the New York Philharmonic. Although she had an auspicious and promising career in her early life, it was tragically cut short by a series of strokes leading to partial paralysis and eventually, her death, at age 55 in 1979.Perry’s catalog is widely varied, featuring thirteen symphonies, numerous chamber and solo works, pieces for band, choral and vocal music, and four operas. Her Violin Concerto, completed in 1968, shows the influence of Dallapiccola’s teachings: sharp harmonic dissonances organized around specific pitch centers, short repetitive patterns that establish significant musical materials, and contrapuntal textures. Her fastidious performance markings in the solo violin part indicate her profound understanding of the instrument. Angular, muscled, and sparkling by turns, this piece is a sophisticated entry to the serious violinist's concert repertoire.There is no evidence or documentation that the Violin Concerto was ever premiered or performed during her lifetime, despite the fact that the composer prepared a full score, piano reduction and orchestral parts. Regrettably, this is the case with the majority of her works composed in the final decade of her life.What is extraordinary about Julia Perry’s musical career was the astonishing success she attained in her early years. In her youth she studied piano, voice, violin and cello. She began to compose in her teenage years, her first publication being a choral work in 1947 by Carl Fischer. Her Stabat Mater was published in 1951 and would become one of her most often performed pieces, with performances in Europe and the United States. In 1953 she was awarded a Guggenheim fellowship to study with the Italian composer Luigi Dallapiccola, first at the Berkshire Music Center in Tanglewood, later in Florence, Italy. During this time, she also pursued studies with Nadia Boulanger in Paris and was awarded a second Guggenheim fellowship. She studied conducting at this time, touring Europe in 1957 to conduct her own works with the Vienna Philharmonic and the BBC Orchestra. During her European sojourns, she learned and mastered French, German and Italian. She would become one of the first African-American female composers to have an orchestral work performed by the New York Philharmonic.Perry’s circumstances would change dramatically once she reached forty years of age, having returned permanently to the United States. At some point in the spring of 1970, she suffered the first of two strokes that would paralyze her right side and confine her to a wheelchair for the rest of her life. Nonetheless, she continued to compose and to promote her works with publishers and conductors. A second stroke contributed to her death in 1979 at age 55. She likely endured harsh ethnic and gender discrimination in the course of her career, and her later years would witness a period of extreme civil unrest. These matters and the significance of music in her life are undoubtedly what led her to say, “Music has a great role to play in establishing the brotherhood of man.”Perry’s catalog is widely varied, featuring thirteen symphonies, numerous chamber and solo works, pieces for band, choral and vocal music, and four operas. Her Violin Concerto, completed in 1968, is indicative of the influence of Dallapiccola’s teachings: sharp harmonic dissonances organized around specific pitch centers, short repetitive patterns that establish significant musical materials, and contrapuntal textures. The work is a single movement of 392 measures organized around three alternating tempos: Slow (Œ = 60), Moderate (Œ = 84) and Fast (Œ = 120). The opening thirty-measure cadenza for the solo violin introduces most of the thematic material for the piece. The orchestration commonly features antiphonal writing between orchestral groups, for example, strings alternating with brass, or strings alternating with winds. The harp and piano generally appear as solo instruments, rather than as members of the orchestra. Her fastidious performance markings in the solo violin part indicate her profound understanding of the instrument.There is no evidence or documentation that the Violin Concerto was ever premiered or performed during her lifetime, despite the fact that the composer prepared a full score, piano reduction and orchestral parts. Regrettably, this is the case with the majority of her works composed in the final decade of her life.
SKU: HL.48022729
Bertold Hummel composed the Concerto for Bassoon and String Orchestra first with the basset horn as solo instrument before arrangingit for bassoon at the suggestion of Eberhard Buschmann. The piece is characterized by the use of French folk-song melodies which areintegrated into their own thematic material. In the first movement, Prologue, the solo instrument stands out while declaiming in a recitative-like manner. The second movement, Concerto, follows the meaning of the word 'concertare' = 'compete' by combining the soloist and the string ensemble 'competitively' to form a unified whole. The short epilogue is a fading away, with strictly alternating solo instrument and strings. Bassoon with piano reduction.
SKU: BT.MUSDU10804
English.
Internationally renowned minimalist Philip Glass composed this Piano concerto in the traditional three-movement form. The first movement, titled ‘The Vision’ is classic Glass, with a steamroller quality that suggests theimmensedrive and ambition the two explorers needed to draw on for their journey into the wilderness. At the beginning of the second movement, the theme in the solo Indian Flute musically represents the name ‘Sacajawea’, theShoshoneIndian mother and guide who assisted the explorers on their way, for whom the movement is named.The final movement, entitled ‘The Land’, is an exploration of expansiveness, both of the land that was being explored, butalso of thegeologically expanded time over which the landscape has evolved, and the great changes that followed Lewis and Clark’s journey.This concerto is designated as part of The Concerto Project recording series started byGlass in theyear 2000, currently in four volumes and including eight concerti.American composer Philip Glass is widely known as one of the most celebrated, influential and prolific of the modern composers. He is frequentlyreferred to as aminimalist, though he prefers to call himself a composer of ‘music with repetitive structures.’ His operas, among them the renowned Einstein On The Beach, are performed across the globe, and he has created workfor small andlarge ensembles, film and experimental theatre, and founded his own performing group, The Philip Glass Ensemble.
SKU: YM.GTP01096650
ISBN 9784636966503.
15 famous melorides by Composers from the end of 19th to eary 20th century arranged for children. The purpuse of this book is NOT to study piano technique, but to touch the sound of each era through the historical masterpieces. 15Shou Lai Zi 19Shi Ji Mo 20Shi Ji Chu De Zhu Ming Xuan Lu . Ben Shu De Mu De Bing Fei Gang Qin Ji Qiao Jiao Xue . Er Shi Yong Er Duo Qu Qin Shen Gan Shou Mei Ge Shi Qi Yin Le De Te Dian . Debussy: 1. La fille aux cheveux de lin; 2. Cortege from Petit Suite; 3. Arabesque No.1; 4. Reverie; Clair de lune from Suite bergamasque Rachmaninoff: Prelude Op.3/2; 6. Piano Concerto No.2 Op.11 - 1st movement; 7. Symphony NNo.2 Op.27 - 3rd movement; 9. Vocalise Op.34/14; 10. 18th variation from Rapsodie sur un theme de Paganini O.43 Ravel: 11. Pavane pour une infant defunte; 12. Jeux d'eau; 13. Alborada del gracioso from Miroirs; 14. La Valse; 15. Bolero.
SKU: RM.BOUV01936-BA
ISBN 9790231019360.
Conducteur BT Partie separee R.