Partition Solo Vuvuzela (en words rather than musical notation), Vuvuzela Concerto
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Partition Solo Vuvuzela (en words rather than musical notation), Vuvuzela Concerto

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Description

Découvrez les partitions de la musique Vuvuzela Concerto Solo Vuvuzela (en words rather than musical notation), Concertos, de Matthews, John-Luke Mark , Bb major. Cette partition de musique classique dédiée aux instruments suivants:
  • Vuvuzela et classique orchestre

La partition enchaine 3 mouvements et l'on retrouve ce genre de musique classifiée dans les genres pour orchestre avec solistes, Concertos, pour vuvuzela, orchestre, partitions pour vuvuzela, partitions pour orchestre
Consultez en même temps d'autres musique pour Vuvuzela et classique orchestre sur YouScribe, dans la rubrique Partitions de musique classique.
Date composition: 2010
Edition: Picardy Third
Durée / duration: 10 minutes

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Nombre de lectures 20
Licence : En savoir +
Paternité
Langue Français

Extrait

Concerto in B-flat major for Vuvuzela and Orchestra by John-Luke Mark Matthews
Solo Vuvuzela part for players who can't read music
Just because the vuvuzela is somewhat limited in pitch doesn't mean that it is also limited in the other musical parameters. You are still expected to have rhythmic precision, musical memory, and physical endurance for this concerto. The bolded numbers below refer to measures the conductor might call out during rehearsals.
Alright, so there is going to be an introduction for just the orchestra, and soon they will come to dwell on a chord that really sounds like it needs another chord after it. That's your cue to come in. [17] To the best of your ability, you will play the rhythms you heard in the orchestral introduction. [33] Then, there will be a transition to [45] a more lyrical theme, and you will make an effort to play without drowning out the woodwinds and pizzicato strings. [pick-up to 62] Still, the orchestra will get tired of this and play a few chords in a key that sounds somewhat out of left field. At this point feel free to more or less improvise on the rhythms you've played before. After some random mutterings from sections of the orchestra ([69] strings, [76orone before 77] woodwinds, [pick-up to 81] brass), the orchestra as a whole will build up from soft to loud a very unpleasant chord, and then the two trumpets will hold two notes of it and go back down to soft. [pick-up to 104] Then the left-field chords come back and that's your cue to play the lyrical theme. The transition to the lyrical theme [123] will now be used as the transition out of the lyrical theme and into [128] a reprise of the introduction. But when they get to the chord that sounds like it needs another chord after it and they dwell on it, you will be silent. [150] They will repeat that gesture, and again, you'll be silent. [166] Then that gesture for the third time [175] will prompt one of the trumpeters to step forward and act as if this was a trumpet concerto. But this is a vuvuzela concerto, so you will assert your solo role, at which the trumpeter will back down. However, [213] the other trumpeter will play a trill, cuing the rest of the orchestra to cut you off.
For the slow movement, the strings will play a chord that sounds like it comes from the deepest recesses of the mind. The winds will play some chords a bunch of times. After each of those times, imitate them.
The last movement is a rondo form, which we can chart as ABACABA. You will only play during the A sections, using the same rhythm as the “French” horns.
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