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Piano,Vocal,Voice - Level 4 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1181588 Composed by Felix Mendelssohn, Lyrics by Heinrich Heine (translation by Hal Drapper). Arranged by Piacere Music Sheets. Chamber,Instructional,Romantic Period,Standards,Wedding. Score. 10 pages. Piacere Music Sheets #781379. Published by Piacere Music Sheets (A0.1181588). Opus/Catalog Number: Op. 34, No. 2Key/Tone: A-flat majorMovements/Sections: Andante tranquilloYear/Date of Composition: 1834Vocal Range: Eb4 to F5 (C4 = middle C)Difficulty: Grade 8/12 (Intermediate)Obs.: This beautiful piece is the second of six songs for voice and piano in Mendelssohn's 6 GesĂ€nge, Op. 34. This song is a setting of the poem Auf FlĂŒgeln des Gesanges by the German Romantic poet Heinrich Heine (1797-1856) and translate py Hal Drapper. This poem was first published in his Buch der Lieder in 1827.This score is an arrangement for high voice and piano, and contains the translated English Lyrics. A version with the original German Lyrics can also be bought.Included: Full score and individual parts.
Mendelssohn - On Wings of Song in A-flat major - Intermediate
Piano, Voix

$4.95 4.28 € Piano, Voix PDF SheetMusicPlus

Piano,Vocal,Voice - Level 4 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1181582 Composed by Felix Mendelssohn, Lyrics by Heinrich Heine. Arranged by Piacere Music Sheets. Chamber,Instructional,Romantic Period,Standards,Wedding. Score. 10 pages. Piacere Music Sheets #781373. Published by Piacere Music Sheets (A0.1181582). Opus/Catalog Number: Op. 34, No. 2Key/Tone: A-flat majorMovements/Sections: Andante tranquilloYear/Date of Composition: 1834Vocal Range: Eb4 to F5 (C4 = middle C)Difficulty: Grade 8/12 (Intermediate)Obs.: This beautiful piece is the second of six songs for voice and piano in Mendelssohn's 6 GesĂ€nge, Op. 34. This song is a setting of the poem Auf FlĂŒgeln des Gesanges by the German Romantic poet Heinrich Heine (1797-1856).This poem was first published in his Buch der Lieder in 1827.This score is an arrangement for high voice and piano, and contains the original German Lyrics. A version with English Lyrics can be bought as well.Included: Full score and individual parts.
Mendelssohn - Auf Flügeln des Gesanges in A-flat major - Intermediate
Piano, Voix

$4.95 4.28 € Piano, Voix PDF SheetMusicPlus

French Horn,Piano - Level 5 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1416184 Composed by Robert Schumann. Arranged by Layne Anspach. Classical. Score and part. 62 pages. Songburd Music #997868. Published by Songburd Music (A0.1416184). ROBERT SCHUMANN was a German pianist, music critic and one of the great composers of the Romantic Period who, in an earlier part of his career, was generally critical of the compositional works for piano and voice of his day, and consequently the greater number of his compositions throughout the 1830s were written mostly for piano.  Then came the year of 1840, considered to be Schumann’s liedarjahr (year of song), when he composed nearly half of his life’s best-known works, featuring some of the greatest liederkreis (song cycles) ever written for voice and piano.  One of his widely celebrated song cycles is the well-known Dichterliebe, Op. 48, which is based on a fanciful story of a knight who experiences rejection and love lost, giving us an insight into Schumann’s interests as a ballad writer, melding dramatic irony with his introspective nature and musical style. Schumann’s talent for combining dramatic lyrics with pleasing melodies is clearly seen in the moving lieder (songs) of his repertoire, and his Dichterliebe (A Poet’s Love) is thought to be the paramount work among his song cycles.  Achieved in part by drawing upon the lyric poetry of Heinrich Heine, a German author, poet and literary critic whose political activism among the Junges Deutschland (Young Germans) of the 1830s and 1840s instigated at one point the banning of his works in Germany, leading him to become an expatriate who spent his final years living in Paris, France. Notably, the Romantic Period in Germany is thought to have had its roots in the Sturm und Drang (Storm and Stress) of the late 1700s and was certainly influenced to some degree by the French Revolution, which contrasted itself to the rationalism of the fading period of the Age of Enlightenment.  Thus, the ideological movement of the Young Germans, and its reactive stance to the Romanticism of the era, adds some contrast to Heine’s lyric poetry, which expressed personal emotions and the irony of love, solidified in his Buch der Lieder (Book of Songs) that was published in 1827. Divided into five sections, Heine’s Book of Songs dealt with issues of unrequited love, romanticism, and introspection, and it was from the more than 60 poems of the lyrical cycle Lyrisches Intermezzo (Lyrical Intermezzo) that Schumann found inspiration for his noteworthy song cycle, selecting 16 of Heine’s lyric poems for his Dichterliebe.  For this arrangement, German lyrics are included to assist the performer in connecting the music to the thoughts, feelings, and specific moments expressed in the words that might otherwise be lost if not aligned with the music.  Noting that changes in mood or tone of the music are better understood when aligned with the words, and by including the lyrics, the performer can phrase a passage while having a guide to see the end of the musical line. Romantic lieder allows for rubato in performance, as playing the piece exactly as written on the page will result in a less inspiring rendition.  To match the horn’s register with the vocal line, the piano part required alterations by moving some notation higher in the register.
Dichterliebe
Cor et Piano

$54.99 47.57 € Cor et Piano PDF SheetMusicPlus

Organ - advanced - Digital Download SKU: S9.Q45183 Martin Luther. Composed by Enjott Schneider. This edition: Sheet music. Downloadable. Duration 24 minutes. Schott Music - Digital #Q45183. Published by Schott Music - Digital (S9.Q45183). On the occasion of the quincentenary of Reformation Day in 2017, the composer Enjott Schneider thoroughly studied Martin Luther the individual and all his contradictions. The result is a brilliant, demanding organ symphony which is perfect for concerts on the subject of Reformation and Martin Luther. The composer describes the five movements of the symphony as follows: '1st movement: Wir glauben all an einen Gott with its quintuplet-like beginning is very Gregorian in style, outlining the range of Lutheran emotionalism between the Middle Ages and the modern era. The irrationality of faith ultimately has priority over any thought and evidence. At the beginning of the movement, sounds of knocking on wood remind of the nailing of the Ninety-Five Theses to the doors of churches in Wittenberg. The chorale melody sometimes hides with an almost rough medieval saltarello, referring to Luther's robustness and vitality with which he knew to carry away even common people. 2nd movement: In 1530, the electoral prince of Saxony presented to Luther at Coburg Castle the golden signet ring with the Luther rose which became the symbol of his theology of grace. A white heart with black cross is fixed on a five-petalled rose. To him, white is the colour of angels and ghosts, black stands for the pain of crucification: The just shall live by faith, but by faith in the Crucified. But the fact that the rose and the heart are the dominating symbols shows how Catholic Marian piety remained an ingredient of Luther's spirituality throughout his life. In line with the dominant five-petal structure of the rose, this movement was composed, to a large extent, in accordance with the floating, lyrical rhythm in 5/8 time. 3rd movement: The omnipresence of death and dying – from the plague and war to the never-ending dangers of daily life – was an essential part of the world view of that time. Fears ensued that might heighten into the grotesque, e.g. in the pictures of Hieronymus Bosch. The Danse macabre was a popular motif in those years. Luther's chorale Mitten wir im Leben sind / mit dem Tod umfangen from 1524 (Enchiridion from Erfurt) is based on the Gregorian chant Media vita in morte sumus created in France around 750 and, with its idea of transience, inspired a simplistic air. 4th movement: The famous confession delivered at the Diet of Worms in 1521, I stand here and can say no more. God help me. Amen, are not Luther's words but the version later used as text for a pamphlet. However, it represents quite plainly the straightforwardness and inevitability of his mission. Musically, it was made into a perpetuum mobile, i.e. a dogged, ostinato and never-ending musical air. 5th movement: The Mighty Fortress, on the other hand, is one of the great symbols of Martin Luther which, with its shining C major key, embodies the Protestant ideology and willful nature of the Reformation unlike any other song. Heinrich Heine called it the Marseille anthem of the Reformation, Friedrich Engels the Marseillaise of the Peasants' Wars. This disputability is not thought through to the end but rather interrupted: With a jubilant birdcall version of the melody, the finale shows a rather chamber-music-like side of the ideals of freedom of Christians.'.
Orgelsinfonie No. 16
Orgue

$21.99 19.02 € Orgue PDF SheetMusicPlus

Choral Choir,Choral (SATB) - Level 2 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1349761 Composed by Robert Schumann. Arranged by D. Jason Bishop. 19th Century,Classical,Instructional,Romantic Period,Wedding. 6 pages. Tully Road Music #934535. Published by Tully Road Music (A0.1349761). Die Lotosblume (which means The Lotus-Flower”) is No. 7 of Robert Schumann’s song cycle Myrthen, which was a wedding present to his wife Clara Wieck. Schumann completed the cycle in 1840, totaling 26 Lieder (songs for solo voice and piano), with texts by prominent 19th-century German poets such as Ludwig Rellstab, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, and others. “Die Lotosblume” is a poem by Heinrich Heine (1797-1856) the text of which, given the circumstances of Robert’s & Clara’s romance, is thought to have a double meaning: the lotus-flower represents Clara, the moon Robert, and the sun Clara’s father, who disapproved of their relationship. This arrangement preserves Schumann’s original piano part in support of a 4-part (SATB) harmonization of the melody. Although the lower voices are informed by the harmonies of the accompaniment and move largely in parallel motion, each voice retains its own counter-melodic value. The arrangement was premiered in 2014 by the Morris County (NJ) Honor Choir under the direction of the arranger, D. Jason Bishop.
Die Lotosblume
Chorale SATB

$2.00 1.73 € Chorale SATB PDF SheetMusicPlus

High Voice,Vocal Solo - Level 3 - Digital Download SKU: A0.597338 By Franz Schubert. By Franz Schubert. Arranged by Flavio Regis Cunha. Romantic Period. 8 pages. Flavio Regis Cunha #5725037. Published by Flavio Regis Cunha (A0.597338). Schwanengesang (swan song), D 957, is a collection of songs written by Franz Schubert towards the end of his life and published posthumously.The collection was named by its first editor, Tobias Haslinger, probably intending to present it as Schubert's final musical testament to the world. Unlike earlier Die schöne MĂŒllerin and Winterreise, it contains settings by three poets, Ludwig Rellstab (1799–1860), Heinrich Heine (1797–1856) and Johann Gabriel Seidl (1804–1875). Schwanengesang was composed in 1828 and published in 1829 just a few months after the composer's death on 19 November 1828.Advanced Intermediate.Format: Concert, 9 x 12.8 pages.
Serenade - Ständchen - Schwanengesang, D. 957 No. 4 (Duet for Voice and Piano)
Voix haute
Franz Schubert
$5.99 5.18 € Voix haute PDF SheetMusicPlus


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