Precio: $3.45 Sin IVA
Disponibilidad en línea: Disponible
Disponibilidad en las tiendas: Se puede pedir

Balogh Máté: 9 Songs

on texts by Edward Lear for mixed choir

choral sheets

Arreglo: Mixed Voices
Género: Obras corales (contemporáneas húngaras)
Época: Música Contemporánea
Idioma: English
Páginas: 12 páginas
Formato: 19 x27 cm (octavo)
Año de publicación: 1 de octubre de 2023
Editorial: Universal Music Publishing Editio Musica Budapest
Nº de artículo: 15243
ISMN: 9790080152430
The nine short choral works were composed in 2018 for the limericks in Edward Lear's (1812-1888) Nonsense-collection, with the encouragement of conductor Soma Lozsányi. All elements of the music (singing, recitative, stepping, stamping, astonishing rhythms) serve the humour and irony in the poems. The work also commemorates the renowned folk music researcher and composer, Mátyás Seiber, who wrote limericks himself.

The dedication is to Soma Lozsányi. He conducted the premiere with the Kaposi Chamber Choir at the Liszt Ferenc Academy of Music in Budapest in 2018.

Contenidos

1.
There was a Young Lady of Russia...
2.
There was an Old Man of Berlin...
3.
There was an Old Man of Madras...
4.
There was an Old Man of Coblenz...
5.
There was a Young Lady of Turkey...
6.
There was a Young Lady, whose nose...
7.
There was an Old Man of the East...
8.
There was an Old Man of the Hague...
9.
There was a Young, Young Lady of Poole...
How can I shop?

Online purchase:

Buy directly from our web-shop via credit/debit card payment. With this method, only publications which we currently have on stock can be purchased.

In-store pickup:

If you prefer not to shop online, you also have the option to order from our website and we will forward your order to one of our partner music shops of your choosing. In this case, you will buy the scores directly from the shop and pay for them there upon pickup.

Your purchase and payment method can be set here.

Copyright information

Please note that it is illegal to photocopy copyright protected music without the permission of the copyright holder.

To photocopy is to deprive the composer/author of his/her rightful income for his/her intellectual property.