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Solo Guitar - Level 4 - Digital Download

SKU: A0.1321927

Composed by Anonym. Arranged by Bettina Schipp. Early Music,Historic,Medieval,Renaissance. Individual part. 2 pages. Songbooks.info #910344. Published by songbooks.info (A0.1321927).

These Medieval and Renaissance Songs were arranged for Guitar fingerpicking. They were written in the well-known tablature for string instruments as well as in classical musical notation - for slightly intermediate and advanced guitarists. The songs were recorded at a slow tempo and with a metronome in the background. Have fun making music...!
Diese Lieder aus dem Mittelalter und der Renaissance wurden für das Fingerpicking mit der Gitarre arrangiert. Sie wurden in der bekannten Tabulatur für Saiteninstrumente sowie in der klassischen Notenschrift notiert - für leicht fortgeschrittene und fortgeschrittene GitarristInnen. Die Lieder wurden in einem langsamen Tempo und mit einem Metronom im Hintergrund aufgenommen. Viel Spaß beim Musizieren...!

Edi beo thu hevene quene
Guitare

$2.49 2.37 € Guitare PDF SheetMusicPlus

Solo Guitar - Level 2 - Digital Download

SKU: A0.941927

Composed by Matteo Carcassi. Arranged by Cristiano Sousa. Instructional,Romantic Period,Standards. Individual part. 2 pages. Cristiano Sousa #6866407. Published by Cristiano Sousa (A0.941927).

     Study n°3 (Andantino) is focused at arpeggiation displayed in tuplets. To left hand, there is little difficulties rather than smooth voice leading. The fingering presented, however, give the sound expected. Right hand requires a diferenciation between inner, upper and bottom voices and it provides some challenge as well a give good field to mastering skills.

    This edition features detailled fingerings.

    You can contact me at cristiano.sousa.santos@gmail.com

STUDY nº 3 op. 60 [ by Matteo Carcassi ]: guitar solo
Guitare

$5.99 5.7 € Guitare PDF SheetMusicPlus

Solo Guitar - Level 4 - Digital Download

SKU: A0.899135

Composed by Alban Berg. Arranged by Rod Whittle. 20th Century. Individual part. 3 pages. Maggie Creek Music #3874077. Published by Maggie Creek Music (A0.899135).

For solo classical guitar; 3 pp

Alban Berg 1885 -1935

Berg was a student of Arnold Schoenberg, and came to prominence with compositions using the atonalism of that school. He incorporated chromaticism and an absence of tonality into his compositions with complete facility, if not to public acclaim. His creativity was interrupted by World War 1, during which he served in the Austrian Army. He returned to composition as a champion of modern music, with his opera Wozzeck (1923) bringing both fame and notoriety. He died of blood poisoning in 1935.

Over the past century dissonance increased in the compositions of serious music to a point where the semitones had equal value, which is harmonically a kind of wall. Berg was an early innovator. However, if when strictly followed such serialism reaches an ultimate dissonance that effectively sees off melody and harmony as emotional and structural entities, that still leaves elements around form, dynamics and rhythm for the purposes of expression, and these together with adroit note selection prove to be surprisingly potent for articulation and cohesion.

The Lyric Suite (1927), which uses Schoenberg's twelve-tone technique, is a case in point. The very name seems incongruous for an atonal work, yet lyric it is, and if the forms used are necessarily masked by the characteristics of serial writing they are not eliminated by them. In this excerpt a rondo form is used with the principle subject repeated on the third page (noted in the score) after a digression to more remote regions than this form usually adopts, due to the atonality.  

As well, Berg's writing is rarely purely atonal. In fact the integration of consonant elements are one of the music's most alluring features. It would be so easy, one feels, for melodic material to coagulate the mix, but in his hands the very opposite is generated, an increased clarity of mood. The music remains consistent, as it should, and the incorporation of (often only relatively) thematic material, if often arresting after so much dissonance, doesn't always always mean less intensity or gloom. It is simply effective, either way.


Having said all that, it can hardly be denied that the substance of atonality (dissonance, clashing semitones, unharmonic bass) gives it a special suitability to express dark outlooks, and Berg is the author of Wozzeck and Lulu, no downtown musicals. It is hard to determine if Berg chose atonality because it could deliver the angst or because he was bored with obvious forms and romanticism. Probably both.


'Change of scene' from Act III of Wozzeck
Guitare

$5.00 4.76 € Guitare PDF SheetMusicPlus

Solo Guitar - Level 4 - Digital Download

SKU: A0.899136

Composed by Alban Berg. Arranged by Rod Whittle. Contemporary. Individual part. 4 pages. Maggie Creek Music #3874083. Published by Maggie Creek Music (A0.899136).

For solo classical guitar; 4 pp; first part of 2nd movement of the Lyric Suite

Alban Berg 1885 -1935

Berg was a student of Arnold Schoenberg, and came to prominence with compositions using the atonalism of that school. He incorporated chromaticism and an absence of tonality into his compositions with complete facility, if not to public acclaim. His creativity was interrupted by World War 1, during which he served in the Austrian Army. He returned to composition as a champion of modern music, with his opera Wozzeck (1923) bringing both fame and notoriety. He died of blood poisoning in 1935.

Over the past century dissonance increased in the compositions of serious music to a point where the semitones had equal value, which is harmonically a kind of wall. Berg was an early innovator. However, if when strictly followed such serialism reaches an ultimate dissonance that effectively sees off melody and harmony as emotional and structural entities, that still leaves elements around form, dynamics and rhythm for the purposes of expression, and these together with adroit note selection prove to be surprisingly potent for articulation and cohesion.

The Lyric Suite (1927), which uses Schoenberg's twelve-tone technique, is a case in point. The very name seems incongruous for an atonal work, yet lyric it is, and if the forms used are necessarily masked by the characteristics of serial writing they are not eliminated by them. In this excerpt a rondo form is used with the principle subject repeated on the third page (noted in the score) after a digression to more remote regions than this form usually adopts, due to the atonality.  

As well, Berg's writing is rarely purely atonal. In fact the integration of consonant elements are one of the music's most alluring features. It would be so easy, one feels, for melodic material to coagulate the mix, but in his hands the very opposite is generated, an increased clarity of mood. The music remains consistent, as it should, and the incorporation of (often only relatively) thematic material, if often arresting after so much dissonance, doesn't always always mean less intensity or gloom. It is simply effective, either way.

Having said all that, it can hardly be denied that the substance of atonality (dissonance, clashing semitones, unharmonic bass) gives it a special suitability to express dark outlooks, and Berg is the author of Wozzeck and Lulu, no downtown musicals. It is hard to determine if Berg chose atonality because it could deliver the angst or because he was bored with obvious forms and romanticism. Probably both.


Excerpt from the Lyric Suite
Guitare

$5.00 4.76 € Guitare PDF SheetMusicPlus

Solo Guitar - Digital Download

SKU: A0.899140

Composed by Alban Berg. Arranged by Rod Whittle. 20th Century. Individual part. 4 pages. Maggie Creek Music #4349085. Published by Maggie Creek Music (A0.899140).

for solo classical guitar  4 pp   (7 min.)

ALBAN BERG (1885 -1935)

Berg was a student of Arnold Schoenberg, and came to prominence with compositions using the atonalism of that school. He incorporated chromaticism and an absence of tonality into his compositions with complete facility, if not to public acclaim. His creativity was interrupted by World War 1, during which he served in the Austrian Army. He returned to composition as a champion of modern music, with his opera Wozzeck (1923) bringing both fame and notoriety. He died of blood poisoning in 1935.

Over the past century dissonance increased in the compositions of serious music to a point where the semitones had equal value, which is harmonically a kind of wall. Berg was an early innovator. However, if when strictly followed such serialism reaches an ultimate dissonance that effectively sees off melody and harmony as emotional and structural entities, that still leaves elements around form, dynamics and rhythm for the purposes of expression, and these together with adroit note selection prove to be surprisingly potent for articulation and cohesion.

The Lyric Suite (1927), which uses Schoenberg's twelve-tone technique, is a case in point. The very name seems incongruous for an atonal work, yet lyric it is, and if the forms used are necessarily masked by the characteristics of serial writing they are not eliminated by them. In this excerpt a rondo form is used with the principle subject repeated on the third page (noted in the score) after a digression to more remote regions than this form usually adopts, due to the atonality.  

As well, Berg's writing is rarely purely atonal. In fact the integration of consonant elements are one of the music's most alluring features. It would be so easy, one feels, for melodic material to coagulate the mix, but in his hands the very opposite is generated, an increased clarity of mood. The music remains consistent, as it should, and the incorporation of (often only relatively) thematic material, if often arresting after so much dissonance, doesn't always always mean less intensity or gloom. It is simply effective, either way.

Having said all that, it can hardly be denied that the substance of atonality (dissonance, clashing semitones, unharmonic bass) gives it a special suitability to express dark outlooks, and Berg is the author of Wozzeck and Lulu, no downtown musicals. With it Berg discovered the way to express what he wanted to.

Excerpt from Lulu Suite
Guitare

$5.00 4.76 € Guitare PDF SheetMusicPlus




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