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Piano Solo - Level 4 - Digital Download SKU: A0.693002 Composed by Ben Dockery. Contemporary,Instructional,Jazz,Standards. Score. 3 pages. Ben Dockery #3129605. Published by Ben Dockery (A0.693002). This fast, boisterous piece for piano (app. 1 min. 20 sec.) utilizes drum rudiments (the para-diddle) that should be very familiar to any snare-drum student.  The highly dissonant and chromatic A-section is followed by a contrasting modal B-section that echoes sounds of jazz pianists McCoy Tyner and Chick Corea.  Performers should take care to exaggerate accents throughout.  Otherwise, the larger pulse gets obscured and the effect is lost.  Also pay attention to suggested fingerings for the LH at the end of the B-section.  This composition would be a good fit for advanced intermediate students who are tired of playing pretty and would like to make some musical noise. 
Pianodiddle or Piano for Drummers
Piano seul

$2.99 2.57 € Piano seul PDF SheetMusicPlus

Instrumental Solo,Piano - Level 2 - Digital Download SKU: A0.612458 By Josh Groban Featuring Andy Mckee. By Harry Simeone, Henry Onorati, Katherine K Davis, and Katherine K. Davis. Arranged by Stephen DeCesare. Christian,Christmas,Contemporary,Sacred. Score and individual part. 14 pages. Exultet Music #5869647. Published by Exultet Music (A0.612458). The popular Christmas song which was recorded in 1951 by the Trapp Family (the famous family that is featured in the Sound of Music) and also the subject of a 1968 Rankin/Bass animated television Christmas special, has now been arranged for a Flute or Violin solo, Snare Drum, and Piano. Accessible and appropriate for any school, church or concert venue.  .
The Little Drummer Boy
Piano seul
Josh Groban Featuring Andy Mckee
$4.99 4.28 € Piano seul PDF SheetMusicPlus

Piano Solo - Level 2 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1376326 By Heidi Savoie. By Heidi Savoie. Arranged by Heidi Savoie. Classical,Contemporary,Instructional,Jazz,Singer/Songwriter. Score. 1 pages. Heidi Savoie #960870. Published by Heidi Savoie (A0.1376326). This is a solo piano arrangement of Almost May, best suited for an early intermediate player. Almost May - Theme and VariationsBackstory: Years ago I wrote a simple piano piece for my students. As instrumental music can fully exist outside the confines of words, it can be difficult to find the right title for something that is pure sound and possibility. I took inspiration from the time of year in which I had composed it and stamped it, “Almost Mayâ€. Like springtime in the Northern Hemisphere, “Almost May†unfolds slowly and majestically, with ever-evolving layers for the senses to discover. What to listen for: ThemeThe main theme is first presented by the piano with minimal fanfare. This part was written to be easy enough for a child, which despite being sparing of notes, delivers rich harmonic content. Every note has been carefully curated for the optimal combination of accessibility and depth. Weaving chromatically into distantly-related keys, the melody takes small steps into contrasting musical spaces. In a wordless procession, the storyline plays out, as if the theme discovers that someone very different lives next door, and they slowly become inseparable. The piano is accompanied by an airy touch of brushes against a snare drum, like the pitter patter of soft feline steps. In the low frequency range, the upright bass supports and deepens the tonal palette with its earthy underpinnings. What to listen for: Variation I The unmistakable string section arrives like a breath of warm air. Lush, warm and reassuring like sunshine on your cheeks, the string parts begin with long tones. This broadness and stability will evolve into more layers of complexity throughout the section. While the role of the string section is background accompaniment, it undergoes textural changes which allow for some layers to briefly rise to the forefront as melody. Careful listening to the string parts will reveal an oceanic churning, a motion from background to foreground with expansions and contractions along the way. Floating overtop this density is the improvised piano solo, with ascending gestures that progress in detail and density. Each instrument enters a general unfolding and growth period in the first variation. The bass and drums include more fills than before, as the ensemble tends gradually toward more grandeur. What to listen for: Variation II The final variation opens with a decadent treatment of the melody. What was initially expressed by a soloist as a childlike plea is reimagined as a two-part conversation between the piano and lead viola. The obbligato voiced in the viola is a derivation of the melody that holds the space between phrases so the listener's attention is passed seamlessly between the piano and viola part. This dialogue features commentary on the original melody in the form of ornamentation and taking surprising pathways to expected destinations. The rhythm section (bass and drums) takes more liberties in creating a verdant soundscape as the ensemble rises to a final climax.
Almost May for Piano Solo
Piano seul
Heidi Savoie
$3.99 3.42 € Piano seul PDF SheetMusicPlus

Piano Solo - Level 3 - Digital Download SKU: A0.835780 Composed by Paul Burnell. Contemporary. Score. 22 pages. Paul Burnell #3222631. Published by Paul Burnell (A0.835780). Composed 2015. One of a series of fourteen accompaniments to texts published between 1896 – 1899. For percussion, piano and narrator.Duration 4:15 approx. 'Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde' is a novella by Robert Louis Stevenson (1850 - 1894) first published in 1886. Percussion 1 - Bamboo Cane, Ratchet, Cabasa, manual music box mechanism Percussion 2 - Bamboo Cane, Snare Drum Percussion 3 - Bamboo Cane, Floor Tom Percussion 4 - Bamboo Cane, Bass Drum, Guiro Percussion 5 - Spring Drum, manual music box mechanism, Siren (hand crank siren, or recording) Vibraphone Piano (piano and vibraphone cue all notes to be whistled in percussion 1 - 4) The music boxes are small hand-driven (not clockwork) mechanisms ideally playing classical 'standards'. Narrator (optional: add a subtle electronic effect doubling pitch an octave lower until rehearsal letter H) 
Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (Excerpt), an Accompanied Reading
Piano seul

$5.95 5.11 € Piano seul PDF SheetMusicPlus

Piano Solo - Level 4 - Digital Download SKU: A0.790093 Composed by Frederic Chopin. Arranged by Diamond S Music. Classical,Concert. Score. 8 pages. Diamond S Music #3569611. Published by Diamond S Music (A0.790093). POLONAISE in A MAJOR (MILITARY) Op.40 No.1 by Frédéric Chopin for PIANO SOLO. This is Chopin’s most popular and famous Piano Solos. This is the original Chopin version of the piece. During the September 1939 German invasion of Poland at the outset of World War II, Polskie Radio broadcast this piece daily as nationalistic protest, and to rally the Polish people. The A major Polonaise could hardly be more succinct, synthetic and condensed in its style and character. It has neither an introduction nor a coda, and the theme strikes one with its firmness and grace. As Jan KleczyÅ„ski put it, ‘Each note, each accent, glows with life and power’. The theme that complements the main part of the polonaise contains more of those pungent, robust sonorities, referring to the style of military music. But the pinnacle of succinctness and firmness is presented by the Polonaise’s trio, in D major. Chopin has it played energico and fortissimo. Here, too, the complementary theme brings strains of military music, evoking for many interpreters the sounds of a snare drum. Other similar arrangements and selections from DIAMOND S MUSIC available at: https://www.sheetmusicplus.com/publishers/diamond-s-music/6940
Polonaise in A Major (Militaire) by Frederic Chopin - Piano Solo
Piano seul

$4.50 3.86 € Piano seul PDF SheetMusicPlus

Piano Solo - Level 5 - Digital Download SKU: A0.987083 Composed by Eric Paul Nolte and Felix Le Couppey. Arranged by Eric Paul Nolte. Contemporary,Instructional. Score. 5 pages. Eric Paul Nolte #1954995. Published by Eric Paul Nolte (A0.987083). This piece is a free adaptation and a complete reworking of a study by Felix Le Couppey (1811-1887), from his L'Agilité, Opus 20, 25 Progressive Studies for Mechanism and Light Touch. In its original form, this study was a charming little piece of musical fluff. But getting it up to speed reduced me to tears! It also gave me an epiphany of immense power that transformed my technique. Suddenly I could play faster than I had ever thought possible, and I could do so with a thrilling ease! This epiphany emerged from the spluttering frustration I felt over my inability to play these sixteenth notes at Le Couppey's metronome marking of 144. It dawned on me that I couldn’t play fast enough because I was tripping over my own fingers when I used the overly articulated technique of moving the fingers by the lift, throw, relax method. This superfluous motion creates an impenetrable barrier, a speed wall, as does playing legato scales by passing the thumb under the palm, when shifting hand position up and down the keyboard. So I found another way-which I’ve since learned was known to every pianist who ever achieved prodigious speed. Here’s how to bring this piece up to speed with ease: Be sure to practice this piece with each hand alone. For each group of sixteenth notes, gently place the four fingers down simultaneously, to get the feel. Think of your arm, from elbow to fingertips, as something like a kitchen utensil, such as a spatula. Moving your right arm as a unit, place your finger tips down into the key bed, depressing all four notes at once, as a block chord. Make sure that all the fingers remain stiff (not rigid with tension, but just stiff enough to resist collapsing upwards.) Slowly lift and then play each group by placing all the fingers down with a rotation of your forearm, calm and relaxed, with the fingers rolling through the notes at the speed of a brief snare drum roll: Rrrrip! To rip through this group of notes like this takes no more effort than to place those four fingers down, calmly, all at once! Then, with a quick shift up or down the keyboard to get into position for the next group, that’s the whole trick for playing such passages with astonishing speed and ease! It takes time and effort to get the knack here, but the result can be transformative and thrilling! As for my adaptation of this study, I believe it offers intermediate advanced players the chance to enjoy a great leap in technique like the one I experienced, and also offers a piece of music that one might not blush to play outside the practice room-perhaps bringing it at least into the living room for a soirée, if not into the concert hall. To make this adaptation, I wrote a grumbly bass line with lungs, and nice fat chords to flesh out most of the skinny little triads that accompany the original study’s fast passages. I added a brooding, chromatic introduction that features as a melody the accompanimental figure of a broken triad that Le Couppey wrote a few times on the second page, in various inversions. I employed this broken chord figure several more times in both hands, and also added a little coda, sprinkled with sparkle. Playing time is about 1 minute and 30 seconds.
Etude in C, Le Couppey-Nolte
Piano seul

$3.99 3.42 € Piano seul PDF SheetMusicPlus






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