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Books > Music > Musical instruments & instrumental ensembles > Wind instruments
During America's Swing Era, no musician was more successful or
controversial than Artie Shaw: the charismatic and opinionated
clarinetist-bandleader whose dozens of hits became anthems for "the
greatest generation." But some of his most beautiful recordings
were not issued until decades after he'd left the scene. He broke
racial barriers by hiring African American musicians. His frequent
"retirements" earned him a reputation as the Hamlet of jazz. And he
quit playing for good at the height of his powers. The handsome
Shaw had seven wives (including Lana Turner and Ava Gardner).
Inveterate reader and author of three books, he befriended the
best-known writers of his time. Tom Nolan, who interviewed Shaw
between 1990 and his death in 2004 and spoke with one hundred of
his colleagues and contemporaries, captures Shaw and his era with
candor and sympathy, bringing the master to vivid life and
restoring him to his rightful place in jazz history. Originally
published in hardcover under the title Three Chords for Beauty's
Sake.
Notes for Clarinetists: A Guide to the Repertoire offers important
historical and analytical information about thirty-five of the
best-known pieces written for the instrument. Numerous contextual
and theoretical insights make it an essential resource for
professional, amateur, and student clarinetists. With engaging
prose supported by fact-filled analytical charts, the book offers
rich biographical information and informative analyses to help
clarinetists gain a more complete understanding of Three Pieces for
Clarinet Solo by Igor Stravinsky, Aaron Copland's Concerto for
Clarinet, String Orchestra, Harp, and Piano, Robert Schumann's
Fantasy Pieces for Clarinet and Piano, Op. 73. and Time Pieces for
Clarinet and Piano, Op. 43. by Robert Muczynski, among many others.
With close attention to matters of context, style, and harmonic and
formal analysis, Albert Rice explores a significant portion of the
repertoire, and offers a faithful and comprehensive guide that
includes works by Boulez, Brahms, and Mozart to Hindemith, Poulenc,
and Stamitz. Rice includes biographical information on each
composer and highlights history's impact on the creation and
performance of important works for clarinet. Intended as a starting
point for connecting performance studies with scholarship, Rice's
analysis will help clarinetists gain a more complete picture of a
given work. Its valuable insights make it essential to musicians
preparing and presenting programs, and its detailed historical
information about the work and composer will encourage readers to
explore other works in a similarly analytical way. Covering
concertos, chamber pieces, and works for solo clarinet, Rice
presents Notes for Clarinetists as an indispensable handbook for
students and professionals alike.
Johnny Griffin, the Little Giant from the South Side of Chicago,
has remained a top jazz saxophonist throughout his 62-year playing
career. He has spent 42 years in Europe and is recognized
internationally as a major jazz star with a readily identifiable
style, an immense improvisational flair and an unfailing capacity
to swing. As jazz writer Brian Priestley has observed: Griffin is
one of the fastest and most accurate ever on his instrument.
Griffin is an articulate, witty and entertaining conversationalist
with an unending flow of anecdotal reminiscences about his days
with Lionel Hampton, Art Blakey, Thelonious Monk, Eddie Lockjaw
Davis, the Clarke Boland Big Band and the variety of small groups
he has fronted over the years. The Little Giant is a light-hearted,
irreverent and uninhibited look at the life of one of the most
consummate musicians in jazz. Author Mike Hennessey is a jazz
critic, producer, broadcaster and pianist. Other books by him
include a biography of the late drummer, Kenny Clarke, Klook, and a
history of Ronnie Scott's Club, Some of My Best Friends Are Blues.
He has covered the international music scene for Billboard magazine
for 27 years and he has written more than 500 album notes and
hundreds of articles for a wide range of jazz magazines in North
America and Europe."
Teachers and flutists at all levels have praised Nancy Toff's The
Flute Book, a unique one-stop guide to the flute and its music.
Organized into four main parts-The Instrument, Performance, The
Music, and Repertoire Catalog-the book begins with a description of
the instrument and its making, offers information on choosing and
caring for a flute, sketches a history of the flute, and discusses
differences between members of the flute family. In the Performance
section, readers learn about breathing, tone, vibrato,
articulation, technique, style, performing, and recording. In the
extensive analysis of flute literature that follows, Toff places
individual pieces in historical context. The book ends with a
comprehensive catalog of solo and chamber repertoire, and includes
appendices with fingering charts as well as lists of current flute
manufacturers, repair shops, sources for flute music and books, and
flute clubs and related organizations worldwide. In this Third
Edition, Toff has updated the book to reflect technology's
advancements-like new digital recording technology and recordings'
more prevalent online availability-over the last decade. She has
also accounted for new scholarship on baroque flutes; recent
developments like those of the contrabass flute, quarter-tone
flute, and various manufacturing refinements and experiments;
consumers' purchase prices for flutes; and an updated repertoire
catalog, index, and appendices.
After the establishment of the Turkish Republic, Turkey's
secularized society disdained the ney, the Sufi reed flute long
associated with Islam. The instrument's remarkable revival in
today's cities has inspired the creation of teaching and learning
sites that range from private ney studios to cultural and religious
associations and from university clubs to mosque organizations.Banu
enay documents the years-long training required to become a
neyzen-a player of the ney. The process holds a transformative
power that invites students to create a new way of living that
involves alternative relationships with the self and others,
changing perceptions of the city, and a dedication to
craftsmanship. enay visits reed harvesters and travels from studios
to workshops to explore the practical processes of teaching and
learning. She also becomes an apprentice ney-player herself,
exploring the desire for spirituality that encourages apprentices
and masters alike to pursue ney music and its scaffolding of
Islamic ethics and belief.
A comprehensive text teaching elements of jazz phrasing,
articulation, vibrato, harmony, and technical studies leading to
improvisation. For the flute student beginning the serious study of
jazz and contemporary styles, this book will help in many ways.
Phrasing and interpretation of rhythms are studied through
exercises and original pieces. Scale and arpeggio studies will help
the student learn both the music theory and technical skills needed
to improvise.
Pipers takes the reader inside the world of the performer community
of Scottish piping, introducing the instrument itself and the
various different repertories. It also discusses piping techniques
as well as information on some of the great piping dynasties and
individual pipers. Dr Willie Donaldson shows how 'traditional
music', often assumed to be the anonymous product of a dim and
distant past, is the creation of gifted individuals operating in a
sophisticated and vigorously ongoing enterprise. Since pipers have
often been skilled also on the fiddle, keyboards and small-pipes,
or as singers or dancers, their story offers fascinating insights
into the whole traditional music and song repertoire of Scotland.
Pipers is a well-informed and highly readable account by a
prize-winning author who is a piper and composer of pipe music as
well as an internationally recognised historian of Scottish
tradition.
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The Oboe
(Paperback)
Geoffrey Burgess, Bruce Haynes
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R878
Discovery Miles 8 780
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The oboe, including its earlier forms the shawm and the hautboy, is
an instrument with a long and rich history. In this book two
distinguished oboist-musicologists trace that history from its
beginnings to the present time, discussing how and why the oboe
evolved, what music was written for it, and which players were
prominent. Geoffrey Burgess and Bruce Haynes begin by describing
the oboe's prehistory and subsequent development out of the shawm
in the mid-seventeenth century. They then examine later stages of
the instrument, from the classical hautboy to the transition to a
keyed oboe and eventually the Conservatoire-system oboe. The
authors consider the instrument's place in Romantic and Modernist
music and analyze traditional and avant-garde developments after
World War II. Noting the oboe's appearance in paintings and other
iconography, as well as in distinctive musical contexts, they
examine what this reveals about the instrument's social function in
different eras. Throughout the book they discuss the great
performers, from the pioneers of the seventeenth century to the
traveling virtuosi of the eighteenth, the masters of the romantic
period and the legends of the twentieth century such as Gillet,
Goossens, Tabuteau, and Holliger. With its extensive illustrations,
useful technical appendices, and discography, this is a
comprehensive and authoritative volume that will be the essential
companion for every woodwind student and performer.
(Music Sales America). The first complete instructional book for
the Anglo-chromatic concertina This book assumes no knowledge on
the part of the student, taking the beginner from first notes to
famous folk melodies. Features easy-to-follow text with clear
diagrams.
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