Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco: Vocalise-Étude

Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco: Vocalise-Étude

m-product-transactio

Beskrivelse:

Born into a family that had lived in Florence since the expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492, Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco (1895-1968) entertained only a distant relationship with the music he heard at synagogue. It was only when he discovered Schelemo, a rhapsody for cello...

SKU/Varenr.: AL17467
Lagerstatus/Leveringstid: På Fjernlager - AFSENDES inden 5-8 hverdage (forbehold for udgået vare)
Produkter i pakken:
Lagerstatus/Leveringstid: På Fjernlager - AFSENDES inden 5-8 hverdage (forbehold for udgået vare)

Pris per stk.:

118,00 DKK

Fordele ved Stepnote

  • Du kan bytte julegaver indtil d. 15. januar
    På alt købt efter d. 15. okt. 🎁
  • Pst.. - vi dropper Black Friday/Week i år, så du behøver ikke vente med at shoppe 😉
  • Billig fragt m. DAO home og shop
  • Vi sender lagervarer inden 24 timer i hverdage
  • Vi tager også EAN nr.
  • Fri fragt over. 599,- m. DAO & Postnord📦🚚

 

 

Hvorfor handle hos Stepnote

  • Vi har ALT det, de andre ikke har🎻🎹
  • 100% dansk online butik
  • 350.000 Nodetitler og musikartikler​​
  • Gode priser og flest gode nodetilbud i DK
  • Fagfolk der brænder for musikken
  • Vi støtter Broen DK der hjælper de, som ikke har råd til musikskolen
Born into a family that had lived in Florence since the expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492, Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco (1895-1968) entertained only a distant relationship with the music he heard at synagogue. It was only when he discovered Schelemo, a rhapsody for cello and orchestra written in 1916 by Ernest Bloch, that he began to understand what “Jewish music” could be. In the mid-1920s, the young composer found a collection of prayers set to music among his maternal grandfather’s papers. Something clicked, and from then on, Jewish tradition would become a source of inspiration for Castelnuovo-Tedesco. In 1928, two years after publishing the Dances of King David, he wrote this Vocalise-Étude for medium voice and piano at the request of vocal teacher Amédée-Landély Hettich, who wanted to include it in the Répertoire moderne de Vocalises-Études published by Leduc. The piece became so popular that several instrumental adaptations were soon created, published under the title Chant hébraïque (for violin and piano: AL17 713; for cello and piano: AL 17196). Divided into three sections, this wordless melody opens with a “sad and impassioned” chant that appears to grieve the tragic fate of the Jewish people. A folk dance follows, in which a “lively and stubborn” movement has great panache. The third section returns to the initial poignant theme before briefly reiterating the dance motif, allowing the piece to conclude on a hopeful note. The composer himself would adopt this proactive stance, refusing to yield to resignation when, fleeing Mussolini’s anti-Semitic laws, he decided to emigrate in 1939 to the United States, a land of refuge to which he would remain faithful until his death some thirty years later.
Instrument (fx guitar, sang m.m.) Klaver Akkompagnement, Medium Voice
Genrer (Fx Pop, Rock, Børn m.m.) Post-1900
Type (fx Instrumentskole o.lign.) Vokal værk
Niveau Medium
Media (fx Bog, CD, DVD m.m.) Noder
Publisher/Producent Alphonse Leduc
Bidragydere Castelnuovo-Tedesco, Mario (Composer)
Sprog Engelsk, Fransk, Tysk
ISBN 9790046174674
ISMN 9790046174674