Piri for Oboe Solo by Isang Yun Oboe Solo - Sheet Music

By Isang Yun

Piri came into being two and a half years after Isang Yun was imprisoned in Seoul. 'Piri' is the name of the traditional Korean oboe, of which at least three kinds exist in different sizes. They were (and are) mainly used in the traditional courtly and aristocratic music of Korea: the shorter 'se-p'iri' in the aristocratic song genres 'kagok' and 'kasa', the larger 'hyang-p'iri' in the court orchestra, and also in shamanistic ceremonies in which the 'p'iri' has a spiritual signi cance. With Piri, Yun once again “transferred” the expressive character and tonal possibilities of a traditional instrument to a Western instrument, in this case to the oboe. Yun initially replaced the Korean and East Asian-influenced interval structures with those of the Western twelve-tone technique that he had acquired from Schoenberg�s pupil Josef Rufer in Berlin. Nevertheless, in terms of gestures, phrasing, ornamentation, dynamics, and vibrato, he oriented himself on Asian music, which di?ers substantially from European music.

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Details

Summary
Instrument:
Oboe Solo
Genres:
Classical
Composers:
Isang Yun
Publishers:
Bote & Bock
Series:
Boosey & Hawkes Chamber Music Music of Asian Composers and Artists
UPC:
196288364764
ISBN:
9783793146056
Format:
Collection / Songbook
Item types:
Physical
Artist:
Isang Yun
Usages:
School and Community
Number of Pages:
12
Shipping Weight:
0.26 pounds
Detailed Description
Oboe

SKU: HL.48025673

For Oboe Solo. Composed by Isang Yun. Boosey & Hawkes Chamber Music. Classical. Softcover. 12 pages. Duration 660 seconds. Bote & Bock #M202539330. Published by Bote & Bock (HL.48025673).

ISBN 9783793146056. UPC: 196288364764.

Piri came into being two and a half years after Isang Yun was imprisoned in Seoul. 'Piri' is the name of the traditional Korean oboe, of which at least three kinds exist in different sizes. They were (and are) mainly used in the traditional courtly and aristocratic music of Korea: the shorter 'se-p'iri' in the aristocratic song genres 'kagok' and 'kasa', the larger 'hyang-p'iri' in the court orchestra, and also in shamanistic ceremonies in which the 'p'iri' has a spiritual signi cance. With Piri, Yun once again “transferred” the expressive character and tonal possibilities of a traditional instrument to a Western instrument, in this case to the oboe. Yun initially replaced the Korean and East Asian-influenced interval structures with those of the Western twelve-tone technique that he had acquired from Schoenberg�s pupil Josef Rufer in Berlin. Nevertheless, in terms of gestures, phrasing, ornamentation, dynamics, and vibrato, he oriented himself on Asian music, which di?ers substantially from European music.

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