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Books > Music > Musical instruments & instrumental ensembles > Wind instruments > General
This is the definitive study of the history and music of the traditional British Brass Band. It explores the origins of the brass band, in its unique and exclusive world, whilst demonstrating its relevance to the wider spheres of music and social history.
As a companion to "The Wind Ensemble Sourcebook and Biographical
Guide," this catalog provides a comprehensive listing of wind
ensemble works from 1650 to the present. These two volumes will be
completed with a third, "The Wind Ensemble Thematic Catalog
1700-1900." Representing more than 20 years of research through
libraries, monasteries, and castles, the authors used primary
sources when possible rather than relying on secondary sources. The
authors collected a vast array of information from public and
private international collections.
This catalog is an exhaustive guide to international wind
ensemble collections. The authors have been careful to match up
various versions of the same work, and, for the first time,
arrangements--an important and large part of the repertoire--are
dealt with in a systematic fashion. Unique in its extensive
documentation and reliance on primary sources, "The Wind Ensemble
Catalog" is an important research tool for scholars and
musicians.
Exploring the parallel development of the brass band movement and
religious fervor in late 19th-century America, this work includes
illustrations from original materials as well as scores for 22
works. While the choral tradition has remained strong in churches,
in this earlier period both choral and instrumental forms were
equally popular. This study begins with solo cornet parts, used by
men like George Ives to lead the singing at revival meetings, and
ends with an extensive band arrangement of Pleyel's Hymn. Extensive
historical notes, old-time illustrations, and sacred music make
this a most interesting and useful reference book. An enormous
amount of music was written and arranged for the popular brasswinds
at the time, some of which was sacred music for the church.
Changing taste and secularism resulted in the loss of the entire
body of written and arranged sacred music for brass, once as
cherished in church performance as the choral tradition is today.
For scholars and performers interested in the variety of music
produced in the United States during the 19th century.
A recorder method for children. This method is designed to be used
by people who know nothing or very little about music and cannot
read notation.
The Black Horn: The Story of Classical French Hornist Robert Lee
Watt tells the story of the first African American French Hornist
hired by a major symphony in these United States. Today, the number
of African Americans who hold chairs in major American symphony
orchestras are few and far between, and Watt is the first in many
years to write about this uniquely exhilarating and at times
painful experience. The Black Horn chronicles the upbringing of a
young boy first fascinated by the sound of the French horn. Watt
walks readers through the many obstacles presented by the racial
climate in the United States both on and off stage in his efforts
learn and eventually master an instrument little considered in the
African American community, with even the author s own father, who
played trumpet, seeking to dissuade the young classical musician in
the making. Opposition from within the community--a middle
instrument suited only for thin-lipped white boys, Watt s father
once chided and from without, Watt document his struggles as a
student at an all-white major music conservatory as well as his
first job in a major symphony orchestra after his conservatory
canceled his scholarship. Watt subsequently chronicles his triumphs
and travails as a musician, sometimes alone when confronting the
realities of race in America and the world of classical music. This
work will surely interest any working classical musician and
student, particularly those of color, seeking to grasp firsthand
the sometimes troubled history of being the only black horn. "
Musical performance on brass instruments has blossomed in the 20th
century because of technical improvements in horn making, a vastly
increased literature, and an astonishing number of outstanding
players. Louis Armstrong, Tommy Dorsey, and Doc Severinsen have
become household names, and classical musicians such as Maurice
Andre, Christian Lindberg, and Barry Tuckwell have pursued
distinguished careers as soloists. Twentieth-Century Brass Soloists
analyzes and celebrates nearly one hundred brass soloists who have
performed and been recorded widely, and whose genius, technique,
and style have combined to produce unforgettable moments in music.
Mozart wrote some of the greatest serenades for wind ensemble. He
was not alone in writing works for wind sextet, octet, or larger
ensembles-Over 12,000 works for wind harmony by over 2,200
composers are extant. Describing this new genre, Wind Harmony,
which is far larger and more influential than ever recognized, this
sourcebook includes biographical details, discusses many of the
works, and presents country surveys. There is also a survey of the
way wind instruments developed at the critical time, and of
performance practices. Companion volumes, the ^IWind Ensemble
Catalog^R and the ^IWind Ensemble Thematic Catalog 1700-1900^R, are
cross-referenced. Mozart wrote some of the greatest serenades for
wind ensemble. He was not alone in writing works for wind sextet,
octet, or larger ensembles-over 12,000 works for wind harmony by
over 2,200 composers are extant. Describing this new genre, Wind
Harmony, which is far larger and more influential than ever
recognized, this sourcebook includes biographical details,
discusses many of the works, and presents country surveys. There is
also a survey of the way wind instruments developed at the critical
time, and of performance practices. Companion volumes, the ^IWind
Ensemble Catalog^R and the ^IWind Ensemble Thematic Catalog
1700-1900^R, are cross-referenced. The authors identify what must
be the major part of surviving wind harmony music. There is far
more material than previously recognized, and its character is far
more varied than is usually thought. In this work, the music is
placed in context: why it was written, where it was played, and how
it influenced other genres. The authors have collected new
material, corrected previous mistakes, and filled in missing
material. Public and private libraries have been scoured and
monasteries searched throughout greater Europe. The sourcebook will
be helpful for scholars and students, librarians, players, and
music sellers.
The preponderance of early Black composers wrote choral music
and even the most outstanding among them did not compose works for
woodwinds. However, the later half of the twentieth century has
witnessed a rise in compositions for woodwinds, both for solo and
chamber ensembles by relatively unknown Black composers. This
pioneering volume will become the standard source of information on
nineteenth and twentieth century Black composers from three
continents as well as their woodwind compositions. It contains the
most current and complete biographical data on 90 African
composers, Afro-American composers, Afro-Latin composers, and
Afro-European composers, including their education and professional
experience and information on their continuing musical influence. A
distinctive feature is the separate, easy-to-use woodwind music
index of both published and unpublished works for solo and chamber
ensembles that groups the music by medium and numbers into 27
categories that contain some 430 works. Exact instrumentation,
dedication or commission, premiere performance, and publisher are
also found here. A list of abbreviations, key to publishers,
collections, and manuscripts, and a discography of 38 recordings of
woodwind works by 26 of the included composers complete the
volume.
This first bibliography of woodwind music by Black composers is
an excellent reference work for Black composers, for the woodwind
repertoire, and for American music in general. It will be highly
useful in college-level courses such as "Survey of Afro-American
Music and Woodwind Literature" as well as to woodwind players,
ensemble directors, and scholars.
For three decades, Anthony Braxton has been alternately celebrated,
dismissed, and attacked for his musical innovations. His ambitious
efforts to reconcile and personalize the historically divergent and
often conflicting worldviews and principles of African-American
(jazz), American Experimental (post-Ives), and Western European
(post-serial) traditions have attracted both loyal supporters and
passionate critics. Mike Heffley has followed Braxton's widely
varied music from its beginning, and in 1988 began a professional
musical relationship with him. His "biography" of Braxton's music
is just that--a look at the music as if it were a living entity,
with a traceable ancestry, a describable place in the world, and a
history full of drama, intrigue, and passion. The music scholar
will find here all the information necessary to understand the
contents, contexts, and concepts of Braxton's music, and to further
that understanding. The general reader will find the human and
trans-human qualities that make the music so compelling to its
makers and lovers.
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