• Six Premier Fanfares du Premier Consul (1799) by Paul Wehage Concert Band - Sheet Music

Six Premier Fanfares du Premier Consul (1799) by Paul Wehage Concert Band - Sheet Music

By Paul Wehage

Joseph David Buhl was born on February 21, 1781, in Amboise. The son of a musician employed by the Duke of Choiseul, he joined the Parisian Guard’s band as a trumpeter at age eleven and later served with the Grenadiers of the Consular Guard. In 1803, Napoleon Bonaparte tasked him with revamping military trumpet calls. Under the First Empire, Buhl directed the Cavalry Trumpet School in Versailles from 1805 to 1811. In 1814, Louis XVIII appointed him head of music for the royal bodyguards and awarded him the Legion of Honor. He later became principal trumpet at the Paris Opera and the Théâtre Italien. One of his trumpet calls, La Retraite, was notably reused by Berlioz in Eight Scenes from Faust (1828) and The Damnation of Faust (1846). After being severely injured during Charles X’s coronation in 1825, Buhl focused more on teaching. Among his pupils was François Dauverné, who called him "the most remarkable trumpeter of his time." In 1828, Buhl co-founded the Société des Concerts du Conservatoire, where he played second trumpet beside Dauverné. As a composer, he authored the influential Méthode de trompette (1825), intended for both orchestral and cavalry trumpets. He also wrote suites of fanfares, some dating back to 1799, as well as marches such as the Marche du duc de Bordeaux and the Marche de Monsieur. His Quatre pas redoublés creatively contrasts cavalry fanfare with wind orchestra in the spirit of a concerto grosso. Buhl also produced numerous trumpet calls for mounted troops, helping to establish the modern French repertoire of cavalry signals. He died in Versailles on April 7, 1860. This orchestration for modern concert band is by Paul Wehage

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Details

Summary
Ensembles:
Concert Band
Publishers:
Musik Fabrik
Format:
Score Set of Parts Score and Parts
Item types:
Physical
Level:
Grade 2
Artist:
Paul Wehage
Arrangers:
Paul Wehage
Usages:
School and Community
Size:
8.27 x 11.69 inches
Shipping Weight:
0.34 pounds
Detailed Description
Concert Band - Grade 2

SKU: FA.MFDB002CB

Composed by David Buhl. Arranged by Paul Wehage. Music from the First Empire in France. Napoleonic music. Score and parts. Musik Fabrik #MFDB002CB. Published by Musik Fabrik (FA.MFDB002CB).

8.27 x 11.69 inches.

Joseph David Buhl was born on February 21, 1781, in Amboise. The son of a musician employed by the Duke of Choiseul, he joined the Parisian Guard’s band as a trumpeter at age eleven and later served with the Grenadiers of the Consular Guard. In 1803, Napoleon Bonaparte tasked him with revamping military trumpet calls. Under the First Empire, Buhl directed the Cavalry Trumpet School in Versailles from 1805 to 1811. In 1814, Louis XVIII appointed him head of music for the royal bodyguards and awarded him the Legion of Honor. He later became principal trumpet at the Paris Opera and the Théâtre Italien. One of his trumpet calls, La Retraite, was notably reused by Berlioz in Eight Scenes from Faust (1828) and The Damnation of Faust (1846). After being severely injured during Charles X’s coronation in 1825, Buhl focused more on teaching. Among his pupils was François Dauverné, who called him "the most remarkable trumpeter of his time." In 1828, Buhl co-founded the Société des Concerts du Conservatoire, where he played second trumpet beside Dauverné. As a composer, he authored the influential Méthode de trompette (1825), intended for both orchestral and cavalry trumpets. He also wrote suites of fanfares, some dating back to 1799, as well as marches such as the Marche du duc de Bordeaux and the Marche de Monsieur. His Quatre pas redoublés creatively contrasts cavalry fanfare with wind orchestra in the spirit of a concerto grosso. Buhl also produced numerous trumpet calls for mounted troops, helping to establish the modern French repertoire of cavalry signals. He died in Versailles on April 7, 1860. This orchestration for modern concert band is by Paul Wehage.

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