Results
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£44.95
Masquerade (Score Only)
The first performance took place on the 4th. September 1993 at the Free Trade Hall in Manchester during the British Open Brass Band Championships.Note by Philip Wilby:Masquerade is a centenary tribute to Verdi's last opera Falstaff and takes its final scene as the basis for my own piece. Thus I have used some of Verdi's music, and some of Shalespeare's plot, and woven them into a fabric with highly demanding music of my own to produce a work in the great tradition of operatically-based brass band pieces. Such scores date from the very beginnings of band repertory and are often not direct arrangements in the established sense but new compositions produced in homage to a past master. They may still offer performers and audience alike something familiar interwoven with something new. My own piece reuses some elements from the original story: . .Falstaff has been caught in a web of his own lies by the ladies of the town, who propose to teach him a lesson. The story opens at night in Windsor Great Park. The plotters, variously disguised in Hallowe'en fashion (as fairies,elves hobgoblins etc!) assemble in the park to await Falstaff's arrival (musicologists will, perhaps, note a rare use of 'large bottle in F' being used during this scene of suppressed alcoholic revelry!). Falstaff's companions, Bardolph,Piston and Robin, enter (represented here by the three trombones!), and are variously abused by the masqueraders. At the height of the Tout an alarm sounds and Falstaff (euphonium cadenza) enters as Midnight strikes. From a safe hiding place he watches as the disguised Nanetta (principal comet) sings a serene solo as the moon appcars above the trees. With sudden force the others seize him and drag him from his hiding place. As in the traditional game 'Blind Man's Buff', he is roughly turned seven times (a sequence of solo accelerandi) until, at last, he recognizes his assailants as his sometime friends. Far from complaining, Verdi's character concludes the opera with a good-humoured fugue on the words.... 'All the World's a Joke... Every mortal laughs at the others, But he laughs best who has the final laugh. Philip Wilby.
Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
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£44.95
On a Clear Day
Includes: On a Clear Day; Hurry! It's Lovely up Here!; Melinda; Come Back to Me.
Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
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£44.95
Robert Farnon for Brass
Includes: Here Comes the Band; The First Waltz; Jumping Bean; Journey into Melody; Peanut Polka.
Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
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£39.95
Salute to Jolson Selection
Includes: I'm Just Wild About Harry; I Only Have Eye's For You; Avalon; Rock A-Bye Your Baby; California Here I Come.
Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
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£44.95
Santa Claus-Trophobia
Includes: Santa Claus is Comin' to Town; Here Comes Santa Claus; I Saw Mummy Kissing Santa Claus; Theme from Santa Claus, the Movie; When Santa Got Stuck Up the Chimney; A Rootin' Tootin' Santa Claus.
Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
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£39.95
Savoy Christmas Medley
Includes: Little Brown Jug; God Rest You Merry Gentlemen; Good King Wenceslas; Joyfully Carol Xmas Bells; The Vicar of Bray; The Moon Shines Bright; Here We Come a Wassailing; The First Noel; Auld Lang Syne.
Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
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£50.90
The Dove (Y Deryn Pur (euph solo))
Also known as The Dear Dove, The Gentle Bird, The Gentle Dove andThe Sincere Bird, this traditional Welsh song is presented here as a euphonium solo but is also suited to the baritone as the accompanying soundbite demonstrates.
Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
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£24.95
The Old Rugged Cross
This popular hymn tune is here arranged for euphonium solo with brass bandt. A reflective arrangement that should be part of every euphonium player's repertoire.
Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
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£10.00
The Old Rugged Cross (Score Only)
This popular hymn tune is here arranged for euphonium solo with brass band accompaniment. A reflective arrangement that should be part of every euphonium player's repertoire.
Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
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£32.50
Vienna Nights (Score Only)
The City of Vienna stands at one of the historic crossroads of the world, linking east and west and embracing artistic influences from all sides. In the 250th anniversary year of Mozart's birth, this fantasy on Mozart's celebrated Piano Sonata in A (K331), has been composed true to the form and content of the original, but also to the underlying substance of the conception.One of Mozart's distinguishing features, and one that links him to later music by Beethoven, Schubert, Mahler and Schoenberg, is the breadth of his musical vision. His music links intellectual rigour with ecstatic utterance and darker preoccupations. It is, perhaps, this shadow-laden side of his musical nature which gives his work a profundity often absent in the work of his contemporaries. Admirers of his Requiem Mass or the Statue music in Don Giovanni will recognise that it is this extra sense of reality which makes Mozart so relevant to the modern age, and where he may link hands with the other great Viennese thinkers such as Berg, Webern and Adorno.The composer follows the three movement plan of the Sonata closely. The original begins with a Theme and Variations which is freely quoted. His Minuet is mirrored in the Recitative and Notturno, where each section of the band lays down a metaphoric rose to his memory. Famously, the sonata ends in populistic style with a Turkish Rondo. Ever since the Hapsburg-Ottoman Wars, which came to an end in the seventeenth century, Viennese composers have included Turkish elements in their music, not least in the use of certain percussion instruments. Vienna Nights is thusly a homage.It celebrates the world's greatest composer, but also the city which fostered his work. Here, in your imagination, you might easily conjure up a caf table near the Opera House, where Mozart, Mahler and Sigmund Freud, observed by us all from a discreet distance, may meet as old friends.
Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days