World's Largest Sheet Music Selection

19937284
Kojo no tsuki
19937284
19937284

Kojo no tsuki Divisi - Sheet Music

Kojo no tsuki Divisi scores gallery preview page 1
Kojo no tsuki Divisi scores gallery preview page 2
Kojo no tsuki Divisi scores gallery preview page 3
Kojo no tsuki Divisi scores gallery preview page 4
Kojo no tsuki Divisi scores gallery preview page 5
Kojo no tsuki Divisi scores gallery preview page 6
Kojo no tsuki Divisi scores gallery preview page 7
Kojo no tsuki Divisi scores gallery preview page 8
Kojo no tsuki Divisi scores gallery preview page 9
Kojo no tsuki Divisi scores gallery preview page 10
Kojo no tsuki Divisi scores gallery preview page 11
Kojo no tsuki Divisi scores gallery preview page 12
Kojo no tsuki Divisi scores gallery preview page 13
Kojo no tsuki Divisi scores gallery preview page 14
Kojo no tsuki Divisi scores gallery preview page 15
Kojo no tsuki Divisi - Sheet Music
Kojo no tsuki Divisi - Sheet Music page 2
Kojo no tsuki Divisi - Sheet Music page 3
Kojo no tsuki Divisi - Sheet Music page 4
Kojo no tsuki Divisi - Sheet Music page 5
Kojo no tsuki Divisi - Sheet Music page 6
Kojo no tsuki Divisi - Sheet Music page 7
Kojo no tsuki Divisi - Sheet Music page 8
Kojo no tsuki Divisi - Sheet Music page 9
Kojo no tsuki Divisi - Sheet Music page 10
Kojo no tsuki Divisi - Sheet Music page 11
Kojo no tsuki Divisi - Sheet Music page 12
Kojo no tsuki Divisi - Sheet Music page 13
Kojo no tsuki Divisi - Sheet Music page 14
Kojo no tsuki Divisi - Sheet Music page 15
Soprano voice solo, SATB (choir divisi) a cappella - Intermediate

SKU: EC.7845

Composed by Eric Tuan and Rentaro Taki. Arranged by Eric Tuan. Lament/Grief/Sorrow. Octavo. E.C. Schirmer Publishing #7845. Published by E.C. Schirmer Publishing (EC.7845).

ISBN 600313478451. UPC: 600313478451. Text: Bansui Doi.

Arranged for the Stanford Chamber Chorale's 2011 concert tour to Japan, this setting is dedicated to the ensemble and its director, Dr. Stephen M. Sano. Written in 1901 by Tokyo-born composer and pianist Rentar? Taki, and inspired by the ruins of Oka Castle in ?ita Prefecture, K?j? no tsuki ("Moon over the ruined castle") is one of the most widely-known and well-loved songs in Japan. The lyrics were provided by Bansui Doi (1871-1952), a Sendai-born poet and translator, and the song was subsequently published in a songbook for junior high school students. Taki died at the untimely young age of twenty-three. Taki's famous melody, employing the traditional Japanese nakazora scale, is underlaid here with contemporary harmonization, coloring the original with expressive dissonances and polyphonic texture. This hauntingly beautiful arrangement is sung entirely in Japanese using a transliteration underlay. The edition includes a printed English adaptation by Minako Sano and an IPA transliteration.

Close X

By signing up you consent with the terms in our Privacy Policy

I am a music teacher.