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Music Minus One - Antonin Dvorak: Quintet In A Op.81

Music Minus One - W.A. Mozart: Concerto No.24 In C Minor KV491

Music Minus One - Johannes Brahms: Concerto No.1 In D Minor

Music Minus One - Joseph Haydn: Concerto In D

Singer's Choice: Sing More Songs By George & Ira Gershwin - Volume 2 (Book/CD)

Music Minus One - Northern Lights (Minus Drums)

Music Minus One - Franz Liszt: Concerto No.1 In E-Flat S124; Weber: Konzertstück Op.79

Music Minus One - W.A. Mozart: Concerto No.20 In D Minor KV466

Johannes Brahms: Piano Concerto No.2 In B Flat Op.83

Clara Schumann: Piano Concerto In A Minor Op.7 (Music Minus One)

Gary Schocker: Flute Duets With Piano

Jim Odrich: Rondo For Clarinet Or Bass Clarinet

Jim Odrich: Rondo For Clarinet Or Bass Clarinet

Composer Jim Odrich's Rondo for Clarinet and Orchestra is a delight for any clarinetist. Odrich along with his brother, clarinetist Ron Odrich, decided the piece would be written for symphony orchestra, while giving the clarinetist the option to perform the solo part with either B Flat clarinet or the larger bass clarinet. The result of their efforts is a work that features moments of contemplative lyricism as well as exuberant expressions of joy and excitement. The orchestral figures are performed with comfort and elegance, while the rhythm section provides a subtle controlled underlying pulsation that never gets anywhere close to overpowering the orchestra. Ron performs the clarinet solo, adding a generous sprinkling of ad-lib creations.This Music Minus One edition includes a printed edition of the complete solo part, engraved on easy-to-read, acid-free ivory paper. The compact disc contains the complete performance, as well as a version minus you, the soloist. "I wrote this piece for my brother, Ron, who is a virtuoso clarinetist equally adept as a performer of both jazz and so-called ?serious? music genres. One of his many outstanding accomplishments has been to greatly expand the playing register of the bass clarinet. This instrument has long been used almost exclusively by composers and arrangers for its very unique-sounding low notes. Ron developed the capability to make the instrument sing in its middle and extreme upper registers much like an alto saxophone, something jazz clarinetists had never before attempted nor even thought to do." ?Jim Odrich

DKK 266.00
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Camille Saint-Saens: Piano Concerto No. 4 In C Minor, Op.44 (Book/CD)

Camille Saint-Saens: Piano Concerto No. 4 In C Minor, Op.44 (Book/CD)

Not available to customers in France, Germany or The Netherlands. Piano Concerto No. 4 In C Minor (concerto pour Piano en ut mineur), Op. 44 by Camille Saint-Saëns , is the composer's most structurally innovative Piano concerto. In one sense it is like a four-movement symphony, but these are grouped in pairs. That is, the piece is divided into two parts, each of which combines two main movements (Part 1: I. Moderatetempo Theme and Variations in C Minor; II. Slower Theme and Variations in A-flat Major; Part 2: III. Scherzo in C Minor; IV. Finale in C Major). However, in each part there is a bridge-like transitional section, between the two main "movements" – for example, a fugal Andante in part II functions as an interlude between the two main sections. The concerto begins with a gently mischievous chromatic subject, heard in dialogue between the strings and piano soloist, and continues in a creative thematic development similar to Saint-Saëns ' Third Symphony. The composer demonstrates brilliant skill in employing the piano and orchestra almost equally. In the Andante, he moves to A-flat major with a chorale-like theme in the woodwinds (also strikingly similar to the tune of the Third Symphony's final section), and uses this as a platform on which to build a series of variations before bringing the movement to a quiet close. The Allegro vivace begins again in C minor as a high-spirited scherzo, using material foreshadowed in the first movement. 2/4 and 6/8 are playfully juxtaposed throughout. At one point, the Piano boldly leads the orchestra in an energetic 6/8 theme in Eflat major. Eventually the orchestra moves to a lush Andante, recapitulating the Andante section from the first movement. Rather suddenly, the piano climbs up to a flurry of double octave trills, and a climactic trumpet fanfare, leads to the jubilant finale based on a hymn-like theme in triple time. The concerto concludes with the piano, in glittering cascades, guiding the orchestra to a fortissimo close. The piano concerto was premièred in 1875 with the composer as the soloist. The concerto is dedicated to Antoine Door, a professor of piano at the Vienna Conservatory. It continues to be one of Saint-Saëns ' most popular piano concertos, second only to the Piano Concerto No. 2 in G minor. This highly inventive work, along with many others, does much to refute the caricature of a purely reactionary Saint-Saëns .

DKK 229.00
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