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Henry Brant
Henry | Brant |
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Sheet music for Henry Brant
Concerto For Alto Sax And Orchestra — Henry Brant
alto saxophone in Eb, piano — solo part with piano reduction — Contemporary
Piano Reduction by Elizabeth Ames - Foreword by Dr. Noah Getz. Composed by Henry Brant (1913-). Arranged by Liz Ames. SWS. Henry Brants Concerto for Alto Saxophone and Orchestra is a unique and important work in the saxophone repertoire for several reasons. Written in 1941, this was the first concerto for the saxophone by a significant American composer. It was also the only . Contemporary. Solo part with piano reduction. With Standard notation. 36 + 12 pages. Carl Fischer Music #W2659. Published by Carl Fischer Music (CF.W2659).
Price: $29.00
Concerto For Alto Saxophone Solo Or Trumpet Solo — Henry Brant
Alto Clarinet (or Bass Clarinet), Alto Saxophone solo, Bass Clarinet, Clarinet I, Clarinet II, Clarinet III, Clarinet IV, Cowbell, Flute, Glockenspiel, Percussion, Tom-toms, Trumpet solo, Tuba, Wood Block, Xylophone — full score — Classical
With Nine Instruments. Composed by Henry Brant (1913-). SWS. First performed in 1942. Classical. Full score. With Standard notation. Composed 1941. 149 pages. Duration 0:18:00. Carl Fischer Music #O5319. Published by Carl Fischer Music (CF.O5319).
Price: $40.00
On the Nature of Things — Henry Brant
Bassoon, Clarinet in Bb, Contrabass, Flute, Glockenspiel, Horn in F, Oboe, Viola, Violin, Violoncello — full score (study) — Classical
After Lucretius: Spatial Tone Poem. Composed by Henry Brant (1913-). Classical. Full score (study). With Standard notation. Composed 1956/1977R. 28 pages. Carl Fischer Music #O5351. Published by Carl Fischer Music (CF.O5351).
Price: $15.00
Concerto For Alto Sax And Orchestra — Henry Brant
Full Score — full score —
Composed by Henry Brant (1913-). Full score. With Standard notation. Composed 1941, Revised in 2002. Carl Fischer Music #CY2992F. Published by Carl Fischer Music (CF.CY2992F).
Price: $144.00
Concerto For Alto Sax And Orchestra — Henry Brant
Alto Saxophone and Orchestra — —
Composed by Henry Brant (1913-). With Standard notation. Carl Fischer Music #CY2992P. Published by Carl Fischer Music (CF.CY2992P).
Price: $34.00
The Three-Way Canon Blues — Henry Brant
Voice 1, Voice 2, Voice 3 — choral part(s) — Choral
For Either Women, Men, or Mixed Voices. Composed by Henry Brant (1913-). -. Choral. Choral part(s). With Standard notation. 4 pages. Duration 1 minute, 10 seconds. Theodore Presser Company #362-03285. Published by Theodore Presser Company (PR.362032850).
Price: $1.00
Partita — Henry Brant
flute, piano — —
Composed by Henry Brant (1913-). Saddle. With Standard notation. 32 pages. Carl Fischer Music #CY1458. Published by Carl Fischer Music (CF.CY1458).
Price: $46.00
Four Choral Preludes — Henry Brant
2 Piano, 4 Hands — —
Composed by Henry Brant (1913-). With Standard notation. Composed 1952. 28 pages. Carl Fischer Music #CY1348. Published by Carl Fischer Music (CF.CY1348).
Price: $71.00
Four French Baroque Pieces — Henry Brant
glockenspiel, vibraphone, chimes — score and part(s) —
Composed by Henry Brant (1913-). Score and part(s). With Standard notation. 48 pages. Carl Fischer Music #CY1354. Published by Carl Fischer Music (CF.CY1354).
Price: $36.00
Concerto — Henry Brant
Alto Saxophone (2) - Doubling Clarinet, Baritone Saxophone-Doubling Bass Clarinet, Contrabass, Drum Set, Guitar, Piano, Solo Clarinet, Tenor Saxophone (2) - Doubling Clarinet, Trombone (2), Trumpet (4), Vibraphone — full score (large) —
For Clarinet Solo with Full Dance Orchestra. Composed by Henry Brant (1913-). Full score (large). With Standard notation. Carl Fischer Music #CY1404F. Published by Carl Fischer Music (CF.CY1404F).
Price: $122.00
- Angels and Devils (1931)
- Origins (1952)
- Antiphony I (1953)
- The Grand Universal Circus (1956)
- In Praise of Learning (1958)
- Voyage Four (1963)
- Orbits (1979)
- Meteor Farm (1982)
- Litany of Tides (1983)
- Western Springs (1983)
- Fire in the Amstel (1984)
- Desert Forests (1985)
- Northern Lights Over the Twin Cities (1986)
- Invisible Rivers (1987)
- Ghost Nets (1988)
- Millennium 2 (1988)
- Flight Over a Global Map (1989)
- Rainforest (1989)
- Rosewood (1989)
- Prisons of the Mind (1990)
- Pathways to Security (1991)
- Skull & Bones (1991)
- 500: Hidden Hemisphere (1992)
- Trajectory (1994)
- A Concord Symphony (orchestration of Ives’s "Concord Sonata") (1994)
- Dormant Craters (1995)
- Plowshares and Swords (1996)
Born in Montreal in 1913 of American parents, Brant began composing at the age of eight. In 1929 he moved to New York where for the next 20 years he composed and conducted for radio, films, ballet and jazz groups, at the same time composing experimental works for the concert hall. From 1947 to 1955 he taught orchestration and conducted ensembles at the Juilliard School and Columbia University, and from 1957 to 1980 he taught composition at Bennington College. Since 1981, Brant has made his home in Santa Barbara. In 1950, Brant began to write "spatial" music, in which the positioning of performers throughout the hall, as well as on stage, is an essential factor in the composing scheme. His catalogue now comprises over 70 such works, each for a different instrumentation and each requiring a different spatial deployment. His works are also characterized by unusual combinations of instruments, extremely large forces, and co-existent musical styles (e.g., Meteor Farm (1982) is a multicultural work for expanded orchestra, two choirs, jazz band, gamelan ensemble, African drummers/singers and South Indian soloists, each performing its traditional music). Among Brant’s many awards and honors are two Guggenheim Fellowships and the Prix Italia, which he was the first American composer to win. In explaining his compositional techniques, Brant wrote that he had "come to feel that single-style musici [...] could no longer evoke the new stresses, layered insanities, and multi-directional assaults of contemporary life on the spirit." He regards space as music’s "fourth dimension," supplementing pitch, time measurement, and timbre. Although he has continued to experiment with new combinations of acoustic timbres, Brant has not used electronic materials or permitted amplification of his music.
(Sources: Kathy Wilkowski; The Norton/Grove Concise Encyclopedia of Music)
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