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Full Orchestra - Level 3 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1344002 Composed by S. Prokofiev. Arranged by A. Leytush. 20th Century. 181 pages. Arkady Leytush #929484. Published by Arkady Leytush (A0.1344002). 1. Fear & Comfort 2. Slumber 3. Under & Above Water 4. Manipulate Magician 5. Bird Commotion 6. Tree of Us 7. Harp (original name) 8. Melancholy 9. In the Park 10. Grimaces 11. Jester 12. Lame Grasshopper & Dragonfly 13. Laziness 14. Tin Soldiers & Ballerina 15. Premonition of Impending Disaster 16. Unrealistic Hopes 17. Tears & Calm 18. Reverie 19. Overturn 20. Dreams About the FutureThe reason for writing was the poems of K. D. Balmont, two lines of which Prokofiev chose as an epigraph: “In every fleeting moment I see worlds, full of changing rainbow playâ€. In 1940-42, the famous avant-garde artist Alexander Rodchenko created a series of drawings illustrating “Fleetingnessâ€.
S. Prokofiev: Fleetingness, op. 22, (1915-17), orchestrated by A. Leytush - Score Only
Orchestre

$100.00 85.3 € Orchestre PDF SheetMusicPlus

Full Orchestra - Level 4 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1432431 Composed by Jacob Arispe. Broadway,Musical/Show,Spiritual. 34 pages. Jacob Arispe #1012924. Published by Jacob Arispe (A0.1432431). River's Tale begins with a triumphant and adventurous overture, evoking the spirited journey along the river's currents. As the melody flows, the mood shifts, delving into darker waters, where the currents of uncertainty and challenge surge. Yet, amidst the shadows, a poignant ballad emerges, carrying the listener through an emotional narrative of longing and introspection. Through ebbs and flows, River's Tale navigates the complexities of the human experience, ultimately emerging as a testament to resilience and the transformative power of the soul's journey.
River's Tale
Orchestre

$35.00 29.85 € Orchestre PDF SheetMusicPlus

Full Orchestra - Level 3 - Digital Download SKU: A0.525156 By The Moody Blues. By Gary Osborne, Jeff Wayne, and Paul Vigrass. Arranged by Kevin Riley. 20th Century,Film/TV,Rock. Score and parts. 43 pages. Kevin Riley #135691. Published by Kevin Riley (A0.525156). Forever Autumn is a song written by Jeff Wayne, Gary Osborne and Paul Vigrass. The original melody was written by Wayne in 1969 as a jingle for a Lego commercial. Vigrass and Osborne, the performers of the original jingle, added lyrics to the song and recorded it for inclusion on their 1972 album Queues. Their interpretation was also released as a single and gained moderate commercial success in Japan, selling more than 100,000 copies and becoming a top-20 hit on the country's record chart. The best-known version is the recording by Justin Hayward from the album Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of The War of the Worlds. Wayne wanted to include a love song on the album that sounded like Forever Autumn, and he decided that the best course of action was to simply use the original song. Wayne chose Hayward, of The Moody Blues, to sing it saying that he wanted that voice from 'Nights in White Satin'.It was recorded at London's Advision Studios in 1976. The song reached #5 on the UK Singles Chart in August 1978. A new version was released in late 2012, sung by Gary Barlow for the new album Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of The War of the Worlds – The New Generation.
Forever Autumn
Orchestre
The Moody Blues
$50.00 42.65 € Orchestre PDF SheetMusicPlus

Full Orchestra - Digital Download SKU: A0.1209483 By Jud Conlon Chorus. By Amphibia Cultural Legacy. Arranged by Amphibia Cultural Legacy. 19th Century,20th Century,Broadway,Classical,Film/TV,Musical/Show. Score and Parts. 5 pages. Amphibia Cultural Legacy #807612. Published by Amphibia Cultural Legacy (A0.1209483). Amphibia Cultural Legacy, a musical group known for their instrumental covers of classic Disney songs, has released a new remix of Alice In Wonderland from the 1951 movie of the same name. The original song was sung by the Jud Conlon Chorus, and Amphibia Cultural Legacy has added additional instruments to create a unique spin on this beloved tune. This new version is sure to delight both fans of the original film and music enthusiasts alike.The addition of extra instruments adds depth to an already catchy melody, making it perfect for dancing or just enjoying as background music. The group's attention to detail shines through in every note played, perfectly capturing the whimsical feel of Walt Disney's Alice in Wonderland. Those who are familiar with Amphibia Cultural Legacy's previous works will not be disappointed with this latest release, which is sure to become a fan favorite among their extensive discography.Amphibia Cultural Legacy is proud to present its orchestral cover of Alice In Wonderland, the central theme in the 1951 animated movie. Initially written by the Jud Conlon Chorus for Walt Disney's Alice In Wonderland, this piece has stood the test of time and remains a beloved classic. Amphibia Cultural Legacy has taken this iconic tune and given it new life with its unique arrangement.The Jud Conlon Chorus version of Alice In Wonderland intends initially as a fun and whimsical introduction to the fantastical world that awaited viewers in the film. The song features playful lyrics and an upbeat melody that perfectly captures the adventure spirit permeating Alice's journey. Amphibia Cultural Legacy's version pays homage to these themes while adding their flair through orchestral instruments.Amphibia Cultural Legacy has done it again with their latest release, an orchestral cover of Alice In Wonderland. Initially written by the Jud Conlon Chorus in Walt Disney's Alice In Wonderland, this classic song has been given a fresh new sound thanks to the fantastic talent and creativity of Amphibia Cultural Legacy.Listening to this cover is like going down the rabbit hole into a magical world filled with wonder and imagination. Various instruments help create a whimsical atmosphere that perfectly captures the essence of Lewis Carroll's timeless tale. The music builds up gradually, taking listeners through different emotions and moods before finally reaching its climax at the end.The attention to detail in this cover is truly remarkable, with every instrument perfectly timed and synchronized throughout the entire piece.
Alice In Wonderland
Orchestre
Jud Conlon Chorus
$70.00 59.71 € Orchestre PDF SheetMusicPlus

Large orchestra - Digital Download SKU: S9.Q3053 Composed by Hans Werner Henze. This edition: study score. Music Of Our Time. Downloadable, Study score. Duration 25 minutes. Schott Music - Digital #Q3053. Published by Schott Music - Digital (S9.Q3053). ‘My Sinfonia No. 8 is not at all tragic or moody like the Seventh. It is a summer piece and is based on three moments from Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream‘, writes Hans Werner Henze. This, however, is all we get to know from the composer regarding the work’s reference to Shakespeare’s comedy. On closer examination of the three-movement symphony it turns out that the first movement is a fantasia on Oberon’s order to Puck to search for the magic flower. In the second movement, Henze apparently set the love scenes between Titania and Bottom to music. Ultimately, the final movement shines gracefully and peacefully as if everything that had happened before had only been a dream. - Hans Werner Henze2 (1. auch Picc., 2. auch Picc. u. Altfl.) · 2 (2. auch Engl. Hr.) · 2 (2. auch Bassklar.) · 2 (2. auch Kfg.) - 4 · 2 · 1 · Basspos. · 1 - P. S. (3 hg. Beck. · 3 Tamt. · Schellentr. · 3 Tomt. · Mil. Tr. · gr. Tr. [mit u. ohne Beck.] · Tempelbl. · Peitsche · Marimba · Vibr. · Glsp · chin. Gong · Fingerzimb.) (3 Spieler) - Hfe. · Cel. · Klav. - Str.
Sinfonia N. 8
Orchestre

$47.99 40.93 € Orchestre PDF SheetMusicPlus

Full Orchestra - Level 5 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1356636 Composed by Adrian Gagiu. 20th Century,Classical,Contemporary. 215 pages. Adrian Gagiu #941262. Published by Adrian Gagiu (A0.1356636). The score, parts and vocal score of the Third Symphony (2000, revised 2023), an ambitious, modernist/neoclassical composition for orchestra and chorus with four vocal soloists. It may represent a search for harmony within and/or without and is a huge, subtle variations form on a theme that appears clearly and in full only in the Finale. The chromatic, first movement (Andante maestoso) begins mysteriously with A's in the unaccompanied violins, like a tuning or a seed of what is to come. These A's are adorned with oscillations which gradually become wider leaps until they reach the fifth (as in the beginning of the future full theme), and the other instruments join gradually. The mood is dark, tragic, pensive, and somehow abstract, as the music wanders in an almost improvisatory manner through chromatic modes and goes crescendo-decrescendo back again to the bare, cryptic A's. The energetic second movement (Allegro) is an enormous scherzo toying with the second melodic cell of the full theme, a descending tetrachord. This vital, Dionysian frenzy (in strong contrast to the Apollonian, severe contemplation in the first movement) leads only to its exhaustion and to the disorientated, slow Trio: first, an almost atonal tenor monologue accompanied by harp (on verses from Dante's Purgatory), then a quotation from Beethoven's sketches for a planned overture on the B-A-C-H motif, followed by a fugal section on the same archetypal motif and again a tenor monologue (on verses from Eminescu's Satire No. 4), this time with organ accompaniment and more and more tortured until the choral exclamations and the final cymbal clash. The search seemed in vain, so the rhythmic fury of the scherzo returns, but in mirror, as minor modes replaced the major ones on the same material. The Finale (Larghetto-Allegro-Larghetto) was inspired by the last scene in Goethe's Faust, part 2. After a cryptic variation for choir a cappella, the full theme appears at last in the orchestra, setting a lyric, appeased mood and more diatonic harmonies, while it reconciles the introspection of the first movement and the emotional and vital aspects of the second, although occasional attempts are made to escape, striving more and more towards the ending (with four vocal soloists and chorus). The parenthetic structure of the finale is a holographic reflection of the general form of the whole symphony, alternating gentle, contemplative episodes with exuberant or majestic fugatos. Towards the ending, ecstatic, big, complex quartal chords suggest the limits of perception and language (on the final stanzas from Dante's Paradise), until the sonority becomes again more and more rarefied and the journey returns to its starting point from the first movement: the 'tuning' A's in the violins. Total duration: 54 min. Performing Rights Organization: SOCAN. The mp3 audio clip is the second movement.
Symphony No. 3 in A minor, op. 17
Orchestre

$210.00 179.12 € Orchestre PDF SheetMusicPlus

Full Orchestra - Level 5 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1357497 Composed by Adrian Gagiu. 20th Century,Classical,Contemporary. 291 pages. Adrian Gagiu #942043. Published by Adrian Gagiu (A0.1357497). The orchestral parts of the Third Symphony (2000, revised 2023), an ambitious, modernist/neoclassical composition for orchestra and chorus with four vocal soloists. It may represent a search for harmony within and/or without and is a huge, subtle variations form on a theme that appears clearly and in full only in the Finale.The chromatic, first movement (Andante maestoso) begins mysteriously with A's in the unaccompanied violins, like a tuning or a seed of what is to come. These A's are adorned with oscillations which gradually become wider leaps until they reach the fifth (as in the beginning of the future full theme), and the other instruments join gradually. The mood is dark, tragic, pensive, and somehow abstract, as the music wanders in an almost improvisatory manner through chromatic modes and goes crescendo-decrescendo back again to the bare, cryptic A's.The energetic second movement (Allegro) is an enormous scherzo toying with the second melodic cell of the full theme, a descending tetrachord. This vital, Dionysian frenzy (in strong contrast to the Apollonian, severe contemplation in the first movement) leads only to its exhaustion and to the disorientated, slow Trio: first, an almost atonal tenor monologue accompanied by harp (on verses from Dante's Purgatory), then a quotation from Beethoven's sketches for a planned overture on the B-A-C-H motif, followed by a fugal section on the same archetypal motif and again a tenor monologue (on verses from Eminescu's Satire No. 4), this time with organ accompaniment and more and more tortured until the choral exclamations and the final cymbal clash. The search seemed in vain, so the rhythmic fury of the scherzo returns, but in mirror, as minor modes replaced the major ones on the same material.The Finale (Larghetto-Allegro-Larghetto) was inspired by the last scene in Goethe's Faust, part 2. After a cryptic variation for choir a cappella, the full theme appears at last in the orchestra, setting a lyric, appeased mood and more diatonic harmonies, while it reconciles the introspection of the first movement and the emotional and vital aspects of the second, although occasional attempts are made to escape, striving more and more towards the ending (with four vocal soloists and chorus). The parenthetic structure of the finale is a holographic reflection of the general form of the whole symphony, alternating gentle, contemplative episodes with exuberant or majestic fugatos. Towards the ending, ecstatic, big, complex quartal chords suggest the limits of perception and language (on the final stanzas from Dante's Paradise), until the sonority becomes again more and more rarefied and the journey returns to its starting point from the first movement: the 'tuning' A's in the violins.Total duration: 54 min. Performing Rights Organization: SOCAN. The mp3 audio clip is the second movement.
Symphony No. 3 in A minor, op. 17 (parts)
Orchestre

$210.00 179.12 € Orchestre PDF SheetMusicPlus

Full Orchestra - Level 4 - Digital Download SKU: A0.869351 Composed by Thomas Oboe Lee. 20th Century,Baroque,Classical,Contemporary,Romantic Period. Score and parts. 81 pages. Thomas Oboe Lee #15869. Published by Thomas Oboe Lee (A0.869351). Instrumentation: 3232-4331-timp-2perc-strings. When I received the invitation from Jonathan Cohler to write a Concerto for Orchestra for the Brockton Symphony, I immediately thought of all the composers who wrote works inspired by Bartok’s seminal work of the same title: Roger Sessions, Elliott Carter, Michael Tippett, Witold Lutoslawski, Joan Tower and, most recently, Jennifer Higdon. My Concerto for Orchestra, opus 111, is in five movements. It will be heard without pause between movements. I. Largo … Misterioso! II. Allegro con moto … Evidence!!! III. Adagio … Epistrophy! IV. Andante … In Walked Bud! V. Presto … Rhythm-a-ning!!! My initial idea for the Concerto was contrast - contrast between the timbres and colors that the various sections in an orchestra provide. For example, the woodwinds would provide a sharp contrast against the brass; the percussion section against the strings, etc. I also was interested in writing a work where each movement would flow into the next without pause – thus providing another form of contrast, that of tempi and mood change. A third form of contrast would be the different styles and forms of music that I would come up with. And I had a lot of fun conjuring up the many possible scenarios and orchestral tableaux. I actually started with the second movement: the Allegro con moto. I wanted something that had a nice surging quality that the whole orchestra could jump into. When I finished that, I thought perhaps it would be too intense for the opening of the work. I thought, maybe I should begin with something slower, more brooding in nature before the explosive stuff. I noticed that Carter’s Concerto began with a slow Introduction. It had a title: Misterioso. Being an avid fan of Thelonious Monk, aka Thelonious Sphere Monk, Misterioso brought to mind a Monk composition of the same title. That epiphany gave me the idea of naming each of the five movements after a Monk tune. Monk’s Misterioso is a blues with an insistent theme of 8th note patterns of rising 6ths; which has nothing to do with my first movement. My Misterioso features a solo for the bass clarinet in the midst of a shimmering atmosphere that is punctuated by accents in the bass. They are both mysterious, but divergently opposed in mood and substance. Monk’s Evidence is a tune with jabs and punches, irregularly placed within the measure – not unlike what I did in the second movement. This movement is perhaps the most Monk-ish of all. Monk’s Epistrophy is a tune constructed with a four-note pattern that is angular and twisted. I wrote a solemn brass choir movement that is an epistle in nature, a sermon of sorts. The title of Monk’s In Walked Bud refers, of course, to the amazing pianist Bud Powell. I took the word walk and translated it into an andante. What resulted was a silly, but jolly movement featuring the woodwinds. I wanted to end the work with a fast and furious finale. Inspired by the word rhythm in Monk’s Rhythm-a-ning, I began the last movement with a solo for the percussion section – timpani, tom-toms, bass drum!!! The orchestra eventually joins in the mayhem, breaking into a scherzo-like frenzy. It ends with a big bang!!! Enjoy!!!Audio link: https://thomasoboelee.bandcamp.com/album/concerto-for-orchestra-opus-111-2005
Concerto for Orchestra, opus 111 (2005, rev. 2010)
Orchestre

$9.99 8.52 € Orchestre PDF SheetMusicPlus

Full Orchestra - Level 5 - Digital Download SKU: A0.809786 Composed by Robert E. Proctor. 20th Century,Contemporary. Score and parts. 165 pages. R. E. Proctor #3003007. Published by R. E. Proctor (A0.809786). The G Minor Concerto for Trombone follows the standard format of fast – slow – fast movements.  The first being Adagio – Andante and is entitled Variations.  The slow or 2nd movement – Lento - is in 6/8 meter and is entitled Remembering the ‘60’s.  The movement is based, in part, on a chord progression to a popular song from the 1960’s.  The 3rd movement, entitled Now, is up tempo and rhythmic.  It’s harmonic structure based in a jazz-like chord progression.  It is bright, thoughtful, and sometimes a bit moody.  Approximate length 17 minutes and 55 seconds.
Concerto in G Minor for Trombone and Orchestra
Orchestre

$19.95 17.02 € Orchestre PDF SheetMusicPlus

Full Orchestra - Level 4 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1446171 By Isaac Hayes. By Isaac Hayes. Arranged by Kevin Riley. 20th Century,Disco,Film/TV,Funk,Pop. 72 pages. Kevin Riley #1025993. Published by Kevin Riley (A0.1446171). One of the greatest factors contributing to Shaft's wild success and lasting appeal is its memorable musical score, a revolutionary funk/soul masterpiece. Hayes auditioned for the role of Shaft but was asked to compose the musical score instead. Vulgar, shallow, and crudely done, Shaft distinguished itself mainly by having the best musical score of the year. Isaac Hayes's sensual, moody background music added to the texture of the film.This version does not have a need for the  guitar track that was in the original.
Theme From Shaft
Orchestre
Isaac Hayes
$80.00 68.24 € Orchestre PDF SheetMusicPlus






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