• ISBN : 9790500071266

2 Witwen SMETANA BEDRICH

Piano

Répertoire
Éditeur : Alkor
Référence : AE 126
28,90

Disponible sous 3 à 6 Jours Disponible sous 3 à 6 Jours

Livraison gratuite Gagnez un bon d'achat dès 50€ *

30 jours pour changer d'avis

Classique

Description :

"The first two volumes of A Gregorian Liturgical Year contained pieces for the Sundays and major feast days of the church from Advent I through the Seventh Sunday of Easter, i. e. the Sunday before the Day of Pentecost. This third volume covers theperiod from the Vigil of Pentecost through the Seventeenth Sunday after Pentecost (Ordinary Time 24, Proper 19). Thematic material for each piece is taken from one of the Propers of the Mass (Introit, Gradual, Alleluia, Offertory, Communion), and the entire collection is keyed to the three-year Lectionary shared by Roman Catholics, Episcopalians, and Lutherans, as well as some denominational bodies not strictly liturgical by nature. The pieces range roughly in length from one to threeminutes (an approximate timing will be found at the end of each number), and the level of difficulty may be said to range from easy to moderate. The chant melodies themselves are necessarily taken from the Roman Gradual (Graduale Romanum, Solesmes1974), and the arrangement of the pieces takes the form of the liturgical calendar found in that volume. The composer has attempted to select chant melodies associated with texts common to all three churches for every Sunday and major feast of thechurch year. Thus organists will know that a given piece does indeed "belong" to the day or feast appointed whether or not the melodies themselves are easily associated merely by hearing them. Players are encouraged to adopt a fairly freerhythmic approach to these pieces but without, at the same time, exaggeration. Special attention should be paid in this regard to obvious points of cadence. Suggestions for registration have been kept to a minimum, all of the pieces areregistered for a two manual and pedal instrument with one enclosed division, crescendi/decrescendi thus referring to the Swell division. Imaginative players will find many and other attractive combinations. Most of the pieces in these volumesare intended for use as preludes, offertories, or communion meditations, although there are a few postludes as well. The composer hopes organists serving non-liturgical churches will find these pieces useful in their particular situations as anenhancement to the beauty of worship, and that all players will be nudged to explore the wonders of Gregorian chant. " -Gerald Near