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mexican piano music
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Topic: mexican piano music
(Read 3173 times)
principe7613
PS Silver Member
Jr. Member
Posts: 43
mexican piano music
on: June 17, 2006, 11:26:28 AM
Hey people,
I'm going to give some concerts in Villahermosa, Mexico next season. I'd like to include some nice Mexican pieces. Does anyone have sheetmusic? Could you mail it to
principe7613@hotmail.com? I just discovered Manuel Ponce, which sounds pretty nice. Other suggestions welcome.
Grtz,
Joost
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pianistimo
PS Silver Member
Sr. Member
Posts: 12142
Re: mexican piano music
Reply #1 on: June 17, 2006, 12:45:10 PM
heitor villa-lobos: brazil's foremost composer, wrote at least a thousand works of uneven quality in which the folkloric eleemnt is often intermingled with neo-classical elements, most especially those associated with one of his favorite composers, js bach. his best work was concerto for guitar and small orchestra (originally a one-movement fantasia) but the great spanish composer andre segovia convinced him to turn it into a full-fledged concerto with a cadenza between the second and third movements. villa-lobos composed five piano concertos (all in four movements) - two for his own instrument (cello) and a concerto each for harp and harmonica.
algberto ginastera composed works firmly based on the folk music of his native argentina until about 1954...as his style evolved to include newer approaches (serialism, indeterminancy,a nd the use of textual masses) the folkloric element faded. the first piano concerto (1961) was commissioned by the serge koussevitsky foundation and dedicated to serge and natalie k. (first performed in washington dc) it requires a large orchestra, including, as do most of his concertos, a battery of percussion instruments played by five performers. (he also has a second piano concerto 1972) the first movemetn of that one consists of thirty-two variations on the dissonant orchestal chord beethoven introduced in the finale of his ninth symphony just prior to the startling baritone recitative. the chord contains all seven tones of the d harmonic minor scale. a theme from near the end of chopin's b flat minor sonata appears in the finale.
carlos chavez was mexico's best-known and most influential composer. he was also a gifted conductor who helped to found the mexican syphony orchestra in 1928. in the same year he became director of the national conservatory of music in mexico. chavez gave the people of mexico their first exposure to modern music, while simultaneously exposed the rest of the world to the music of mexico. he was a cosmopolitan musician, but he built his style upon the native mexican and spanish elements of his culture. he befriended aaron copeland and introduced mexican music to the american composer on a first hand basis. chavez's piano concerto (1938-40) illustrates the composer's highly developed sense of rhythm and his effective use of the orchestra, often in hard-driving percussive ways. his writing for orchestra is as virtuosic as that for the soloist and the two interact on an equal level.
(got this from roeder's 'a history of the piano concerto.')
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pianistimo
PS Silver Member
Sr. Member
Posts: 12142
Re: mexican piano music
Reply #2 on: June 17, 2006, 12:51:31 PM
ok i've been looking for free scores. here's what i found so far:
musica mexicana
www.freescores.com/search_uk.php
hmmm this isn't coming up. i think u might have to google 'mexican music free scores' or 'free scores mexican classical piano'
https://mx.geocities.com/baldemusic/principal.html
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pianistimo
PS Silver Member
Sr. Member
Posts: 12142
Re: mexican piano music
Reply #3 on: June 17, 2006, 01:05:12 PM
chavez was an interesting composer. wonder if u could get a piano transcription of his 'symphonia india' which is indian music (using really cool percussion instruments - such as water gourds, butterfly cocoons, different types of drums, stuff like that). if u had a percussion section WITH piano - it would be very cool.
https://facstaff.uww.edu/allsenj/MSO/NOTES/0304/3Nov03.htm
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principe7613
PS Silver Member
Jr. Member
Posts: 43
Re: mexican piano music
Reply #4 on: June 17, 2006, 01:11:32 PM
I'm especially looking for 'Estrellita', a lovesong by Ponce. Heifetz did allready a violintranscription, but I like the original for piano
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pianistimo
PS Silver Member
Sr. Member
Posts: 12142
Re: mexican piano music
Reply #5 on: June 17, 2006, 01:18:58 PM
i'm looking for a free score of ginastera's 'dances argentinas'
and chavez's: esperanza, gavota, pensamiento, meditacion, prelude, inocencia, bacarola...
he is supposed to have quite a few preludes.
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pianistimo
PS Silver Member
Sr. Member
Posts: 12142
Re: mexican piano music
Reply #6 on: June 17, 2006, 01:20:02 PM
oh. ok. i'll look wherever there might be a free site for that. btw, on pianostreet's 'obscure riddle thread' there is mention of ponce's mexican bacarole 'xochimilco' as well.
the best i could find so far:
www.sheetmusicwarehouse.co.uk/details.php?ref=40474
i thought i almost found it in duke library and project gutenberg - but no luck. i mean i found it - but it was in box or something and i couldn't get access to it.
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pianistimo
PS Silver Member
Sr. Member
Posts: 12142
Re: mexican piano music
Reply #7 on: June 17, 2006, 02:45:18 PM
have to check this one out some more
www.guitares.org/links01.html#fs_pia
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thracozaag
PS Silver Member
Sr. Member
Posts: 1311
Re: mexican piano music
Reply #8 on: June 17, 2006, 02:47:34 PM
Good friend of mine, and an excellent composer:
https://www.composersforum.org/member_profile.cfm?oid=4858
koji
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