Peter Dickinson
Pastorale, Blues And Homage
Peter Dickinson
Pastorale, Blues And Homage
- Formation Flûte à bec et Piano
- Compositeur Peter Dickinson
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Niveau de difficulté
- Édition Partition
- Maison d’Édition Novello Publishing
- N ° de commande NOV163922
TVA incluse,
Hors frais de port
Non disponible dans tous les pays. Apprendre encore plus
Description:
Pastorale, Blues And Homage by Peter Dickinson. Arranged for Recorder (tenor and descant) and Piano for John Turner.
1. A James Joyce Pastorale (1955)
2. A Robert Burns Blues (1967)
3. Homage to Poulenc (1963)
The Pastorale comes from a song, a student work, setting the first poem of James Joyce's early cycle Chamber Music - 'Strings in the earth and air'; the second piece is another song to Burns' 'My love is like a red, red rose', which was frequently performed by Meriel and Peter Dickinson in their recitals (recorded on Albany TROY 369); Homage to Poulenc started as a piano duet, No. 1 of Five Forgeries (recorded by the composer and John Flinders on Naxos 8.
572287). It is dedicated to Lennox Berkeley because he and Poulenc were good friends.
The first performance of Pastorale, Blues and Homage was given by John Turner and the composer at St Peter's Church, Westleton, on 4 October 2012 in that year's William Alwyn Festival. Their recording has been released on Heritage HTGCD 254.
1. A James Joyce Pastorale (1955)
2. A Robert Burns Blues (1967)
3. Homage to Poulenc (1963)
The Pastorale comes from a song, a student work, setting the first poem of James Joyce's early cycle Chamber Music - 'Strings in the earth and air'; the second piece is another song to Burns' 'My love is like a red, red rose', which was frequently performed by Meriel and Peter Dickinson in their recitals (recorded on Albany TROY 369); Homage to Poulenc started as a piano duet, No. 1 of Five Forgeries (recorded by the composer and John Flinders on Naxos 8.
572287). It is dedicated to Lennox Berkeley because he and Poulenc were good friends.
The first performance of Pastorale, Blues and Homage was given by John Turner and the composer at St Peter's Church, Westleton, on 4 October 2012 in that year's William Alwyn Festival. Their recording has been released on Heritage HTGCD 254.