Details
Summary
- Instrument:
- Double Bass
- Ensembles:
- Orchestra
- Composers:
- Samuel Coleridge-Taylor
- Publishers:
- Carl Fischer Music
- UPC:
- 680160923960
- ISBN:
- 9781491165058
- Format:
- Score Set of Parts Score and Parts
- Item types:
- Physical
- Level:
- Grade 3
- Artist:
- Samuel Coleridge-Taylor
- Usages:
- School and Community
- Main Key:
- C major
- Number of Pages:
- 40
- Size:
- 9 x 12 inches
- Shipping Weight:
- 3.39 pounds
Detailed Description
SKU: CF.CAS160
From Three Short Pieces for Organ. Composed by Samuel Coleridge-Taylor. Arranged by Robert Debbaut. Folio. Cas. Score and parts. 40 pages. Duration 0:03:00. Carl Fischer Music #CAS160. Published by Carl Fischer Music (CF.CAS160).ISBN 9781491165058. UPC: 680160923960. 9 x 12 inches. Key: C major.
The story of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor is of a rising star composer, one with a significant gift for melody and a simple lyricism, who embraced the previously unexplored song and dance forms from his father’s native west Africa and incorporated them into his own very European art music. Coleridge-Taylor began playing the violin at age five and by age fifteen wasadmitted to London’s Royal College of Music, where he studied both violin and composition and composed his first works. The simply titled Melody is taken from "Three Short Pieces for Organ," a set of pieces originally published in Novello’s Album for the Organ, No. 3 (1898). While certainly typical of the late nineteenth century, many of Coleridge-Taylor's creations display inspiration by African musical elements much like spirituals inspired Dvořák’s “New World” Symphony.
The story of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor is of a rising star composer, one with a significant gift for melody and a simple lyricism, who embraced the previously unexplored song and dance forms from his father’s native west Africa and incorporated them into his own very European art music. Coleridge-Taylor began playing the violin at age five and by age fifteen wasadmitted to London’s Royal College of Music, where he studied both violin and composition and composed his first works. The simply titled Melody is taken from "Three Short Pieces for Organ," a set of pieces originally published in Novello’s Album for the Organ, No. 3 (1898). While certainly typical of the late nineteenth century, many of Coleridge-Taylor's creations display inspiration by African musical elements much like spirituals inspired Dvořák’s “New World” Symphony.
The story of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor is of a rising star composer, one with a significant gift for melody and a simple lyricism, who embraced the previously unexplored song and dance forms from his father’s native west Africa and incorporated them into his own very European art music. Coleridge-Taylor began playing the violin at age five and by age fifteen wasadmitted to London’s Royal College of Music, where he studied both violin and composition and composed his first works. The simply titled Melody is taken from "Three Short Pieces for Organ," a set of pieces originally published in Novello’s Album for the Organ, No. 3 (1898). While certainly typical of the late nineteenth century, many of Coleridge-Taylor's creations display inspiration by African musical elements much like spirituals inspired Dvo?ák’s “New World” Symphony.
Similar Sheet Music & Digital Downloads
- More by this Composer:
- Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Choir Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Piano Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Piano Solo
- Instrument:
- Strings Double Bass
- Artists:
- Samuel Coleridge-Taylor
- Ensemble:
- Orchestra
- Publisher:
- Carl Fischer Music