I don't know if this is just a segment of a larger part of his work but it might need to be added under symphonic music section in his works. I have no idea what other symphonic works he has written.
I was one of Bower's last music students. I'd like to think that students like Mark Tong and myself inspired him to go back to composing, but I suspect the truth is more like we drove him to it. I was writing minimalist ambient pieces while Mark specialised in Charles Ives style pianistic forearm smashes and idolised Harrison Birtwhistle. Slough (Upton) Grammar was a soul-destroying place to teach and learn music; subsequently I got the benefit of one-on-one musical tuition. Bower had a reputation for purple-faced biblical inventive with which he used to regale the fifth formers, such was his frustration. Another of his catch-phrases was "they'd never have done this to me at Ealing!".
We performed a now-obligatory high-school rock concert during which we did a punk homage to Bower. Knowing his views on popular music we fully expected him to be outraged; in fact, I caught sight of him standing at the back of the hall with his arms crossed and an uncharacteristic wry grin, so I guess he got the irony.
"Neville Bower, Neville Bower / He's a one-man super-power!"
Reading this, I'm aware of how much I absorbed from my time with Bower. I still write in my own interpretation of a tonal-chromatic system and have a deep appreciation for the students of Rimsky-Korsakov. We all experimented with serialism in the '80s and found it limited. I also remember him working on "Evocation" a couple of years before publication; it inspired me to attempt a short serial solo clarinet piece at the time.
Thank you so much for this biography; lineage is important.
I noticed that a search for the piece on my site gives the correct result, but only further down the list. I maybe should look into the setup of my search.
I think, "Op. 95, La Course de Printemps" by Charles Koechlin is missing from the database. I went over all of his works and it's not there. Please correct me if I am wrong. I have no idea how to add works on this site yet. Thank you.
Officially her birthdate is January 6, 1899 (Not 1902).
Here is a factsheet:
Sophie-Carmen Eckhardt-Gramatté
Fact Sheet
Born Moscow, January 6, 1899; Died Stuttgart, December 2, 1974.
Musical studies
Early years Piano training by her mother, a student of Anton and Nicholas
Rubinstein
1908-1913 Violin and piano studies at the Conservatoire National, Paris
1915 Private violin studies with Bronislaw Hubermann, Berlin
1936 Study of composition with Max Trapp, Berlin
Selected Commissions
1959 Duo Concertante for Cello and Piano, University of Saskatchewan
1963 Wind Quintet, CBC
1964 String Quartet No.3, University of Manitoba
1964 Nonet, University of Saskatchewan Chamber Players
1967 Symphony Concerto for Piano and Orchestra, CBC
1967 Piano Trio, Martha Hidy Trio
1969 Symphony No.2 (“Manitoba Symphony”), Winnipeg Symphony
1970 Suite for Solo Violin No.4 (“Pacific”), McMaster University
1971 Concertino for Gamba and Harpsichord, York University
1971 Fanfare, the Winnipeg Art Gallery
Prizes
1948 & 1949 Composition Prize of the Vienna Musikverein
1950 Austrian State Prize for Composition
1951 Award for Piano Sonata No.5, International Society for Contemporary Music
1961 First Prize for Concerto for Orchestra, GEDOK, Mannheim
1966 Honourable Mention for String Quartet No.3, GEDOK, Mannheim
1991 Juno Award Nomination for Best Classical Composition, Cappriccio
Concertante
1992 Nomination for the Preis der deutschen Schallplattenkritik for the Six
Piano Sonatas
Honours
1970 Doctor in Music, Brandon University
1970 Professor title, Austrian government
1975 Diplôme d'Honneur, Canadian Conference of the Arts (posthumous)
Membership in Professional Organizations
1945 Charter Member of International Society for Contemporary Music
1953 Canadian League of Composers
1966 Canadian Music Centre
Publishers
• Introduction and Variations on a Theme from my Childhood, Waterloo
Music, Waterloo, Ontario
• Pieces from my Childhood Vol. I and II, Waterloo Music, Waterloo, Ontario
• Six Piano Caprices, Brandon University School of Music Press,
Brandon, Manitoba
• String Quartet No.3, Berandol, Toronto
• Ten Caprices for Solo Violin, Brandon University School of Music Press,
Brandon, Manitoba
• Triple Concerto, Universal Edition, Vienna
Commemoration
• Eckhardt-Gramatté Chamber Music Recital Hall, University of Calgary
• Eckhardt-Gramatté Competition for Young Pianists, held in
various cities in North America, including Edmonton; Kitchener-
Waterloo; Hartford, Connecticut; and St. Thomas, Ontario (twice)
• Eckhardt-Gramatté Electronic Music Studio/Sound Room, Lakehead
University, Thunder Bay
• Eckhardt-Gramatté Foundation/Trillium Plus Composition Competition,
London, Ontario
• Eckhardt-Gramatté Hall, University of Winnipeg
• Eckhardt-Gramatté Manitoba Composers’ Scholarship, awarded annually at the Associated Manitoba Arts Festivals Provincial Music and Speech Finals
• Eckhardt-Gramatté Memorial Concertmaster’s Chair, Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra
• Eckhardt-Gramatté Memorial Principal Viola Chair, Calgary Philharmonic
Orchestra
• Eckhardt-Gramatté Music Conservatory, Brandon University
• Eckhardt-Gramatté Music Library, University of Manitoba
• Eckhardt-Gramatté National Music Competition for the performance of
Canadian Music, held annually since 1976 at Brandon University
Gustaf Bengtsson's String Quartet in G-major is missing as well as Cello Concerto in A minor. I would like to add them via youtube links but am still unclear as to what is copyrighted and what not.
The listings are automatic search results at Sheet Music Plus. They possibly do not sell these quartets, or they sell them under a different name. Please ask Sheet Music Plus if these quartets are really not available.
You list all 14 string quartets of the composer Charles Dancla. On each of the 14 links, a listing from sheet musicplus does not produce any one of them. Why is this happening?
According to Wikipedia and other sources, both spellings (Carl and Karl) are valid, though Carl seems to be the more common one. I have added Carl as preferred spelling.
Hello everyone! I am new to this platform, so please excuse my direct approach. I am looking for a specific work of Smetana, an offertoire called "Scapulis suis". Does anyone know where can I find the score, ideally a piano reduction? Thanks in advance!
First half: Miguel Sobrinho, viola, Ivelina Krasteva, piano and Findlay Spence, cello
Brahms, Sonata for viola and piano op. 120 No.1 in F minor
Knox, Pocket Concerto for viola with cello
Second half: Sirius Chau, flute, Kumi Matsuo, piano
Debussy, Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune
Hindemith, Sonata for Flute and Piano
Leung, As the Wind Resonates
Schubert, Introduction and Variations “Trockne Blumen” for Flute and Piano in E minor, D 802 (Op. post. 160)
Recital at St James’s Church, Piccadilly, London
Booking: https://showcase-concert.eventbrite.co.uk/
Monday, 24. February 2020
First performance of "33 Bars No. 24" (Version for 2)
Nr. Broby Friskole (Denmark)
Arrrgh! Duo (Jesper Eg Pedersen & Peter Wallin) playing 2 pairs of Flyswattophones
Sunday, 28. January 2007
First performance of "3 things to do after retirement"
Sct Peders Kirke Holsted (Denmark)
Laila Nielsen (Alto Recorder) & Peter Wallin (Vibraphone)
I am his great grandson Christopher Lewis I have a double CD with some of his compositions if you send me an address I can post it to you kind regards chris
Prolog und Allegretto. Mainzer Orgel Zyklus mit Hans-Gilbert Ottersbach (Orgel)/Martin und Mirjam Bäßler (Trompeten), Mainz
I was just posting a comment here to know if it's ok for me to edit this piece under Symphonic Music. thank you
I think Symphony No 5 is missing. i just found it on youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RWElA9xzBuU&ab_channel=hscherchen
I don't know if this is just a segment of a larger part of his work but it might need to be added under symphonic music section in his works. I have no idea what other symphonic works he has written.
How to access this score?
I was one of Bower's last music students. I'd like to think that students like Mark Tong and myself inspired him to go back to composing, but I suspect the truth is more like we drove him to it. I was writing minimalist ambient pieces while Mark specialised in Charles Ives style pianistic forearm smashes and idolised Harrison Birtwhistle. Slough (Upton) Grammar was a soul-destroying place to teach and learn music; subsequently I got the benefit of one-on-one musical tuition. Bower had a reputation for purple-faced biblical inventive with which he used to regale the fifth formers, such was his frustration. Another of his catch-phrases was "they'd never have done this to me at Ealing!".
We performed a now-obligatory high-school rock concert during which we did a punk homage to Bower. Knowing his views on popular music we fully expected him to be outraged; in fact, I caught sight of him standing at the back of the hall with his arms crossed and an uncharacteristic wry grin, so I guess he got the irony.
"Neville Bower, Neville Bower / He's a one-man super-power!"
Reading this, I'm aware of how much I absorbed from my time with Bower. I still write in my own interpretation of a tonal-chromatic system and have a deep appreciation for the students of Rimsky-Korsakov. We all experimented with serialism in the '80s and found it limited. I also remember him working on "Evocation" a couple of years before publication; it inspired me to attempt a short serial solo clarinet piece at the time.
Thank you so much for this biography; lineage is important.
I also just noticed it is part of Le Livre de la Jungle, although it is a 33 minute piece. I just found it on youtube. Thank you.
I also just noticed it is part of Le Livre de la Jungle, although it is a 33 minute piece. I just found it on youtube. Thank you.
Thank you. much appreciated!
I have given you permission to edit composer information on my site. Thank you for helping me out! Let me know if you have questions.
This composition is part of Koechlin's "Jungle Book" (Le Livre de la Jungle). I admit that it is a bit hard to find, but it is actually listed near bottom of the page of that composition:
https://musicalics.com/nl/componist/Charles-Koechlin/Livre-de-la-Jungle-...
I noticed that a search for the piece on my site gives the correct result, but only further down the list. I maybe should look into the setup of my search.
Yes please, I would like that. Thank you.
I think, "Op. 95, La Course de Printemps" by Charles Koechlin is missing from the database. I went over all of his works and it's not there. Please correct me if I am wrong. I have no idea how to add works on this site yet. Thank you.
I have corrected this. Thank you for letting me know, and for the information.
If you want, then I can give you permission to edit information on this website. You can then add compositions and YouTube links.
Officially her birthdate is January 6, 1899 (Not 1902).
Here is a factsheet:
Sophie-Carmen Eckhardt-Gramatté
Fact Sheet
Born Moscow, January 6, 1899; Died Stuttgart, December 2, 1974.
Musical studies
Early years Piano training by her mother, a student of Anton and Nicholas
Rubinstein
1908-1913 Violin and piano studies at the Conservatoire National, Paris
1915 Private violin studies with Bronislaw Hubermann, Berlin
1936 Study of composition with Max Trapp, Berlin
Selected Commissions
1959 Duo Concertante for Cello and Piano, University of Saskatchewan
1963 Wind Quintet, CBC
1964 String Quartet No.3, University of Manitoba
1964 Nonet, University of Saskatchewan Chamber Players
1967 Symphony Concerto for Piano and Orchestra, CBC
1967 Piano Trio, Martha Hidy Trio
1969 Symphony No.2 (“Manitoba Symphony”), Winnipeg Symphony
1970 Suite for Solo Violin No.4 (“Pacific”), McMaster University
1971 Concertino for Gamba and Harpsichord, York University
1971 Fanfare, the Winnipeg Art Gallery
Prizes
1948 & 1949 Composition Prize of the Vienna Musikverein
1950 Austrian State Prize for Composition
1951 Award for Piano Sonata No.5, International Society for Contemporary Music
1961 First Prize for Concerto for Orchestra, GEDOK, Mannheim
1966 Honourable Mention for String Quartet No.3, GEDOK, Mannheim
1991 Juno Award Nomination for Best Classical Composition, Cappriccio
Concertante
1992 Nomination for the Preis der deutschen Schallplattenkritik for the Six
Piano Sonatas
Honours
1970 Doctor in Music, Brandon University
1970 Professor title, Austrian government
1975 Diplôme d'Honneur, Canadian Conference of the Arts (posthumous)
Membership in Professional Organizations
1945 Charter Member of International Society for Contemporary Music
1953 Canadian League of Composers
1966 Canadian Music Centre
Publishers
• Introduction and Variations on a Theme from my Childhood, Waterloo
Music, Waterloo, Ontario
• Pieces from my Childhood Vol. I and II, Waterloo Music, Waterloo, Ontario
• Six Piano Caprices, Brandon University School of Music Press,
Brandon, Manitoba
• String Quartet No.3, Berandol, Toronto
• Ten Caprices for Solo Violin, Brandon University School of Music Press,
Brandon, Manitoba
• Triple Concerto, Universal Edition, Vienna
Commemoration
• Eckhardt-Gramatté Chamber Music Recital Hall, University of Calgary
• Eckhardt-Gramatté Competition for Young Pianists, held in
various cities in North America, including Edmonton; Kitchener-
Waterloo; Hartford, Connecticut; and St. Thomas, Ontario (twice)
• Eckhardt-Gramatté Electronic Music Studio/Sound Room, Lakehead
University, Thunder Bay
• Eckhardt-Gramatté Foundation/Trillium Plus Composition Competition,
London, Ontario
• Eckhardt-Gramatté Hall, University of Winnipeg
• Eckhardt-Gramatté Manitoba Composers’ Scholarship, awarded annually at the Associated Manitoba Arts Festivals Provincial Music and Speech Finals
• Eckhardt-Gramatté Memorial Concertmaster’s Chair, Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra
• Eckhardt-Gramatté Memorial Principal Viola Chair, Calgary Philharmonic
Orchestra
• Eckhardt-Gramatté Music Conservatory, Brandon University
• Eckhardt-Gramatté Music Library, University of Manitoba
• Eckhardt-Gramatté National Music Competition for the performance of
Canadian Music, held annually since 1976 at Brandon University
Gustaf Bengtsson's String Quartet in G-major is missing as well as Cello Concerto in A minor. I would like to add them via youtube links but am still unclear as to what is copyrighted and what not.
The listings are automatic search results at Sheet Music Plus. They possibly do not sell these quartets, or they sell them under a different name. Please ask Sheet Music Plus if these quartets are really not available.
You list all 14 string quartets of the composer Charles Dancla. On each of the 14 links, a listing from sheet musicplus does not produce any one of them. Why is this happening?
air and variation dates updated
Thank you. I have added this information.
I have updated this. Thanks!
I have updated Basili's dates. Thank you for letting me know.
Carl Wilhelm Ferdinand Guhr (Karl Guhr)
* 27. Oktober 1787 in Militsch, Schlesien
† 23. Juli 1848 in Frankfurt am Main
Birth:1 maart 1877 (Verviers)
Death: 19 september 1967 (Brussel)
Francesco Basili was born 31-1-1767 and died 25-3-1850
According to Wikipedia and other sources, both spellings (Carl and Karl) are valid, though Carl seems to be the more common one. I have added Carl as preferred spelling.
Hello everyone! I am new to this platform, so please excuse my direct approach. I am looking for a specific work of Smetana, an offertoire called "Scapulis suis". Does anyone know where can I find the score, ideally a piano reduction? Thanks in advance!
I think his first name is spelled Carl not Karl
First half: Miguel Sobrinho, viola, Ivelina Krasteva, piano and Findlay Spence, cello
Brahms, Sonata for viola and piano op. 120 No.1 in F minor
Knox, Pocket Concerto for viola with cello
Second half: Sirius Chau, flute, Kumi Matsuo, piano
Debussy, Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune
Hindemith, Sonata for Flute and Piano
Leung, As the Wind Resonates
Schubert, Introduction and Variations “Trockne Blumen” for Flute and Piano in E minor, D 802 (Op. post. 160)
Recital at St James’s Church, Piccadilly, London
Booking: https://showcase-concert.eventbrite.co.uk/
I have added this to the list of premieres.
Monday, 24. February 2020
First performance of "33 Bars No. 24" (Version for 2)
Nr. Broby Friskole (Denmark)
Arrrgh! Duo (Jesper Eg Pedersen & Peter Wallin) playing 2 pairs of Flyswattophones
Sunday, 28. January 2007
First performance of "3 things to do after retirement"
Sct Peders Kirke Holsted (Denmark)
Laila Nielsen (Alto Recorder) & Peter Wallin (Vibraphone)
Sorry, do I know you?
Thank you for this information. I have now updated this.
Thank you for this information. I see that there is also a Wikipedia page for Janet Wheeler, which I have added here above.
I have corrected the URL. Thank you for letting me know.
Dit is nu ook gecorrigeerd (met excuses voor de trage reactie).
Dank je voor de toevoeging. Ik heb de gegevens in de database verwerkt.
Janet Wheeler was born in 1957
Adding Galata Museo del Mare. location of a Concert dedicated to George Crumb 90^ Birthday.Première performance in the Genoa town.
Nymphéas for Two Pianos (2001) has been published by Da Vinci Editions:
https://davinci-edition.com/product/dv-11500/
The score is also available from Amazon (It.)
https://www.amazon.it/dp/B081ZFHJRT/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_U_jqQ5Db0Y7J93B
John Walter Bratton
born Januari 21, 1867
died February 7, 1947
Johann Ludwig Böhner werd geboren op 7 januari 1787 in Töttelstädt en overleed op 28 maart 1860 in Gotha
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabor_Darvas
Did you find this? I'm looking for it too, also Upside/Downside.
Miaskovsky died on August 8, not 9. Thank you!
:)
Now available, the official website about Mathieu Dijker:
www.mathieudijker.nl
So far only in Dutch. A translation into English will follow later.
https://jonshuemaker.bandcamp.com/album/the-essence-of-light-and-the-abs...
I am his great grandson Christopher Lewis I have a double CD with some of his compositions if you send me an address I can post it to you kind regards chris
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