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Books > Music > Musical instruments & instrumental ensembles > Wind instruments > General
Johann Joachim Quantz's On Playing Flute has long been recognized
as one of the most significant and in-depth treatises on
eighteenth-century musical thought, performance practice, and
style. This classic text of Baroque music instruction goes far
beyond an introduction to flute methods by offering a comprehensive
program of studies that is equally applicable to other instruments
and singers.
The work is comprised of three interrelated essays that examine the
education of the solo musician, the art of accompaniment, and forms
and style. Quantz provides detailed treatment of a wide range of
subjects, including phrasing, ornamentation, accent, intensity,
tuning, cadenzas, the role of the concertmaster, stage deportment,
and techniques for playing dance movements. Of special interest is
a table that relates various tempos to the speed of the pulse,
which will help today's musicians solve the challenge of playing
authentic performance tempos in Baroque music. This edition
includes 224 musical examples from Quantz's original text and
features a new introduction by translator Edward R. Reilly that
considers recent scholarship on Quantz's significant role in
eighteenth-century musical activity.
On Playing the Flute vividly conveys the constancy of musical life
over time and remains a valuable guide for contemporary musicians.
Oboe Art and Method is a complete and comprehensive guide to oboe
technique. Author Martin Schuring, a veteran oboe performer and
instructor, describes in detail all of the basic techniques of
playing (breathing, embouchure, finger technique, articulation) and
reed making, with expert tips and step-by-step instructions for how
best to perform each of these tasks with grace and technical
efficiency. Schuring's descriptions are straightforward and
articulate, designed to encourage students to focus on the basic
techniques of tone production as a springboard for more nuanced
artistic development. Key sections address long-tone and scale
practice in ways that go beyond advice most teachers will give
their pupils, and the author's focus on embouchure development
cultivates supported breathing and blowing to help provide the best
foundation for aspiring oboists. In addition, he offers chapters on
the practicing, instrument care and adjustment, professional
development, and career development issues, all designed to help
students practice meaningfully and with purpose and guide them
throughout their careers with the oboe. A reliable source of
practical and time-tested advice, Oboe Art and Technique will
appeal to all who teach or are learning to play the oboe, whether
at conservatories or in private instruction. A coherent overview of
the fundamentals of technique, it will also be a terrific brush-up
guide for professionals and amateur enthusiasts alike. _
Following his much-acclaimed The Baroque Clarinet and The Clarinet
in the Classical Period, Albert R. Rice now turns his signature
detailed attention to large clarinets - the clarinet d'amour, the
basset horn, the alto clarinet, bass and contra bass clarinets.
Each chapter is devoted to a specific instrument, and offers a
fascinating insider's look at its defining characteristics, a
comprehensive history of its evolution, meticulously-researched
information on its makers and aspects of construction, and a
thorough discussion of its music. Rice illustrates how the
introduction of large clarinets into chamber ensembles, wind bands,
and opera orchestras was the result of experiments meant to address
specific musical needs. Along the way, he brings to life the
musicians, virtuosi, soloists, and orchestral and band musicians,
as well as the instruments' makers and the composers from J. C.
Bach to Smetana who wrote for them.
Based on careful study of primary sources - musical compositions,
patents, memoirs and diaries, and unfettered access to historical
instruments themselves--Rice's expert presentation is nothing short
of exhaustive. From the Clarinet d'Amour to the Contrabass will
engage all who love the clarinet and its music.
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101 Hit Songs
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Hal Leonard Publishing Corporation
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Play-along with the best-known selections from the first five
movies in the Harry Potter series Books include a play-along CD
with a backing and performance track for each title. Titles
include: Hedwig's Theme * Harry's Wondrous World * Nimbus 2000 *
Fawkes The Phoenix * Double Trouble * A Window to the Past *
Hogwarts' March * Hogwarts' Hymn * Professor Umbridge * Fireworks
(Grade 2-3) This title is available in SmartMusic.
This is the first in-depth survey of the oboe during its Golden Age, tracing the history of the instrument from its invention through its many mutations as it adapted to the changing demands of composers. The author describes in detail the instruments, players, makers, and composers, how and where it was played, and who listened to it.
This is the first biography of the jazz trumpeter Lee Morgan
(1938-72). He was a prodigy: recruited to Dizzy Gillespie's big
band while still a teenager, joining Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers
not much after, by his early-20s Morgan had played on four
continents and dozens of albums. The trumpeter would go on to
cultivate a personal and highly influential style, and to make
records - most notably "The Sidewinder" - which would sell amounts
almost unheard of in jazz. While what should have been Morgan's
most successful years were hampered by a heroin addiction, the
ascendant black liberation movement of the late-60s gave the
musician a new, political impulse, and he returned to the jazz
scene to become a vociferous campaigner for black musicians' rights
and representation. But Morgan's personal life remained troubled,
and during a fight with his girlfriend at a New York club, he was
shot and killed, aged 33.
In what is primarily an instructional book, Jack Brymer places the
instrument in the broad context of its role in the orchestra and in
chamber music, expressing stimulating and controversial views.
Perhaps his most original and valuable contribution is to be found
in the long section on acoustics, the down-to-earth section on the
practical clarinettist, and the illuminating passages on artistic
approach. Brymer writes for the teacher of the clarinet, as well as
for beginners and advanced players, and the unique appendix on the
clarinet repertoire is particularly comprehensive. Modern science
has revealed facets of the clarinet's harmonic structure previously
only dimly perceived, and the author points the way to a future
full of promise.
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