MMO - Astor Piazzolla Histoire Du Tango for Flute & Guitar (C)

March 7, 2019 | Author: Thanos Kapa | Category: Tango Music, Performing Arts, Classical Music, Entertainment, Leisure
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Music Minus One Flute 3364

Astor Piazzolla Histoire Du Tango and Other Latin Dance Classics for Flute & Guitar  ASTOR PIAZZOLLA Histoire Du Tango: Bordel 1900 • Café 1930 • Nightclub 1960 Concert D’aujourd’hui

ENRIQUE GRANADOS (arranged Bury - Reichert)

Danza Españ Española, ola, Op Op.. 37, No.5: And Andaluza aluza (Pla (Playera yera))

PABLO DE SARASATE (arranged Bury-Reichert)

Playera • Romanza Andaluza

https://vk.com/saxplayalong  Flute Solo Part

MUSIC MINUS ONE

3364

Piazzolla Piazzoll a’s His Histoire du Tan Tango go and other Latin Dance Dance Classics for Flute & Guitar

] COMPLETE

MINUS

VERSION

FLUTE

TRACK

TRACK

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Tuning Notes Astor Piazzolla: Histoire du Tango 

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9

I. Bord Bordel el 1900 ................ ........................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ............. .. 4

2

bk

II. Café 1930 1930 ..................... ................................ ....................... ....................... ....................... .......................6 ...........6

3

bl

III. NightNight-club club 1960 ............ ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... .......................8 ...........8

4

bm

IV. Conc Concert ert d’aujo d’aujourd’h urd’hui ui ........... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... .............10 ..10

5

bn

Enrique Granados: Danza Española No. 5: Andaluza (Playera) ........12 (Playera)  ........12

6

bo

Pablo de Sarasate: Playera  .......... ...................... ....................... ....................... ........................ .................13 .....13

7

bp

Pablo de Sarasate: Romanza Andaluza ........... ....................... .....................14 .........14 Andaluza  ......................

©2001, ©200 1, 2004 MMO Music Group, Inc. All rights reser ved.

MMO 3364

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Piazzolla’s Histoire Histoire du Tango and other Latin Dance Classics for Flute & Guitar

A

stor Piazzolla was born in Ma r del Plata, Argentina, on 11 March 1921. His parents, descendants of Italian immigrant s, took the young boy to thei r new home in New York York in 1925, at the very height of the jazz age. The great metropolis of New York with its dazzling electricity had a monumental effect on the young Piazzolla. On his ninth birthday, he was given a bandoneon bandoneon by his father; a nd this cherished gif t would  becomee t he ce nter of h is li  becom life fe a nd t he basi b asi s of his fam fame. e. He took lessons and became enamored of classical music. At the same time, he was fascinated by jazz, played the music of Gershwin endlessly, and would spend countless hours at the door of the famed Cotton Club, listening to Cab Calloway Calloway,, Duke El lington, and others—though he was too young and too poor to ever hope of entering t hat hallowed ground. In 1937 the family returned to Mar del Plata. Of course the adolescent Piazzolla could n’ n’tt wait to get bac k to the big c ity, and at sixteen he moved himsel f to Buenos Aires. He got a job playing his bandoneon in a band and continued serious musical studies under the soon-to-be-famous composer Alberto Ginastera. He continued experimenting musically and started a band, then an orchestra—but both were failures. In the 1950s Piazzolla traveled to Paris to study with famed composition teacher Nadia Boulanger, who directed him toward what would become his signature compositional style: the tango, shaped through both classical and jazz styles. Once back in Argentina, the experience in Paris proved the key to unlocking his future: his “modernist” tango music became immensely  popular,  popu lar, des pite op posit ion from fro m trad ition itionali ali sts. I n 1986 famed guitarist Roberto Aussel commissioned the Histoire du Tango , which represented a challenge, in that it was Piazzolla’s first  piece wr itte itten n for guit ar. It is a suit suitee of four pieces for flute & guitar duet, roughly suggesting the tango’s development over a hundred-year period from the year 1900: Bordel 1900: This lively, happy tango represents the early years of the tango form. Havi ng originated in Buenos Aires about 1882, the tango was first performed on guitar and flute. This  piece evok es the ha ppy chatt c hatter er found i n bordel los in tu rnrn-of-the of-the century Argentina. Café 1930: By the era of t he Great Depression, the ta ngo’ ngo’ss place had changed. Instead of being solely a dance, its rhythms began to function as pure listening material. Lyrical romanticism and a sense of fantasy helped to transport people out of their everyday troubles, and the more languid pacing encouraged thicker orchestration. The typical tango orchestra now consisted of two violins, t wo bandoneons, a piano and a double-bass. Night-club 1960: The international post-war era is evoked in this lively piece, which illustrates the influences of other dance forms, such as the bossa nova. Nightclubs became a focal point for tango music during this era, and the form changed dramatically. Concert d’aujourd’hui: The late twentieth century, with its integration of modern a nd post-modern musical styles, comes to the fore in this tango in which can be heard influences of Stravi nsky and Bartok, among others. It represents a revolution in the tango, one which stands firm even though it, too, will not resist change as ti me goes by.

Astor Piazzolla died in 1992, and with his death a chapter closed on 20 th -century Argentina’s musical history. He brought a singular style to the tango genre, one which has never been duplicated. Today Today his legacy remains a legendar y part of Arge ntina’s musical soul, both as groundbreaking composer and also as Buenos Aires’ most important bandoneon player. He spent his life extendi ng boundaries, and today it it is almost universally acknowledged that Piazzolla elevated the tango to a sublime art form.

]

The other pieces on this album represent the Latin dance idiom in the late nineteenth century, the period immediately preceding Piazzolla’s musical rise. Enrique Granados was one of the great figures of that period. Born in Lérida, Spain, on 25 July 1867, his initial studies in composition and piano took him to Barcelona and to Paris. In the 1890s he returned to Barcelona and there gained great acclaim as pianist, though his compositions were not as revered in his home country as they were in France and abroad. He wrote many popular zarzuelas  (Spanish  (Spanish operettas) which held strong in Spain, but his other music was  perhaps  perha ps too eclec tic for many of his count ry men. His famou famouss  premiered i n 191 1914 and are st ill considered pe rhaps his Goyescas  premiered  best works. wo rks. He adap ted t hem into i nto an a n opera ope ra which wh ich he prem p remiered iered at the Metropolitan Opera in New York on 28 January 1916. Unfortunately, on his return trip, his ship was torpedoed by a German U-boat and he and his wife perished. The Danza Española No. 5  forms  forms par t of a suite of twelve dance works, original ly writte n in the 1890s for for piano solo, representing various aspects of Spanish culture. This  Andaluza, which is perhaps the most famous of the set, is a charming, romantic expression of the best Spain has to offer in dance music and reflects Granados’ complete command—when he chose to utilize it—of the Spanish national character.

] Pablo Martín Melitón de Sarasate y Navascuéz was born in Pamplona, Spain, on 10 March 1844. His father was a military bandleader, and the boy was understandably immersed in music from a young age. He became a prodigy of grand pro por tio ns af ter a conce c once rt at age 8 in La Cor uña . I n M adr id th thee queen presented him with the Stradivarius which he would utilize for his entire career. He studied both in Madrid and later at the Paris Conservatory. His fame was international and his tours of North and South America with composer/conductor Eugene d’Albert d’Albert were tremendously successful. He was a favorite interpreter and frequent dedicatee of composers such as Max Bruch, Cami lle Saint-Saëns and Edouard Lalo. Sarasate was a colorful character whose violin performances were legendary and whose compositional abilities were distinguished by many last ing and much-loved pieces; he valued Spanish national music and wrote many works which celebrated its rhythms and melodies. His Playera  and   and Romanza Andaluza   are  pri me examples of his beauti ful wr iti ng and thes thesee arra ngement s for guitar and flute are elegant attestations to his importance as a Spanish composer  par excellence . —Michael Norell 

MMO 3364

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HISTOIRE DU TANGO Flute

I. Bord Bordel el 1900 1900 Y19

Two measures of taps 4 taps) precede music

Astor Piazzolla (1921-1992)

Molto giocoso 1

5

9

3 3

13

17

3

21

10

25

3

29

3

sim.

3

33

3

37

3

41

Fin

45

48

MMO 3364

© Copyright by Editions Henry Lemoine, 41 rue Bayen 75017 Paris Paris All Rights Reserved. Reproduced by permission.

5 52

56

60

molto accentuato 64

3

68

71

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89

93

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103

Lento

a Tempo

108

D.S. al Fine MMO 3364

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II.. Café II Café 193 1930 0 Y2bk

rall. Guitar

Guitar

3

15

molto espressivo 21

5 26

6

a Tempo

30

accel.

molto cantabile 34

37

rall. 40

43

ad lib.

dolce rall.

46

a Tempo tristemente

50

accel.

55 5

MMO 3364

rall.

3

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lentamente

rall.

62

5

64

3

ad lib.

68

78

 

accel.

rall.

82

molto espressivo 88

5 92

6

a Tempo

96

accel.

molto cantabile 100

104

108

rall.

111

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Flute III. III. Nightcl Nightclub ub 1960 1960 Y3bl Deciso

accentuato

Guitar

5

9

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17

Deciso

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rall.

rubato

Lento molto cantabile

7  30

rall.

Pesante ( a Tempo I) tristemente

36

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a Tempo lentamente   cantabile

44

3

rall.

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Deciso (Tempo I) T

MMO 3364

T

T K T K

T

T

T K T K

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T K T K

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T K T K

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(frullato) .  G l i s s

 s.  G l i s

sim. .  G l i s s

(legno) 69

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77

Deciso

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Lento rall. molto

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cantabile

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3 102

doloroso 6

Tempo I Molto deciso

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111

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(frullato)

(legno)

(frullato)

(legno)

(frullato)

(legno)

MMO 3364

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Flute IV. Concert d'aujourd'hui Y 4bm Presto, molto ritmico Guitar

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Flute

Danza Española No. 5

Transcribed and edited by Katarzyna Bury

Enrique Granados (1867 - 1916)

Y5bn Andantino quasi Allegretto

9

16

marcando rit.

23

a tempo

 più piano 30

dolce

Andante

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con molta espr.

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3

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meno

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molto rit.

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Tempo I

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 poco rit. a tempo

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86

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 poco rit.

a tempo

 più tranquillo

 più  poco rit.

a tempo

morendo

MMO 3364

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Flute

Playera

Transcribed and edited by Katarzyna Bury

Y6bo Lento

Pablo de Sarasate, Op. 23, No. 1 (1844 - 1908)

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Flute

Guitar

3

a tempo

rit.

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sub.

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5 5 24

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(dolce) 59

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65

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cresc.

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Flute

Romanza Andaluza

Transcribed and edited by Katarzyna Bury

Y7bp Guitar

Flute

molto espressivo

Pablo. de Sarasate, Op. 22 No. 1 (1844 - 1908)

9

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espressivo 27

33

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cresc. 59

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molto espressione

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67

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 poco piu lentoespressivo lentoespressivo

 poco rit.

77

molto espressivo

 poco animato

Tempo I

3

3

83

3

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3

energico

89

3

94

97

5 102

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tranquillo

109

115

MMO 3364

SUGGESTIONS

FOR  USING  THIS M MO EDITION

wE HAVE TRIED to create a product that will provide you an easy way to learn and perform a concerto with a full orchestra in the comfort of your own home. Because it involves a fixed accompaniment, there is an inherent lack of flexibility in tempo. The The following MMO features and techniques will reduce these inflexibilities inflexibil ities and help you maximize the effective ef fectiveness ness of the MMO practice and performance system: system: Where the soloist begins a movement solo, we have provided an introductory measure with subtle taps inserted at the actual tempo  before the soloist’s soloist’s entrance. entrance. We have observed generally accepted tempi, but some may wish to perform at a dif-

ferent tempo, or to slow down or speed up the accompaniment for practice purposes. You can  purchase from MMO specialized CD  player  players/res/recorders which allows variable speed while maintaining proper pitch. This is an indispensable tool for the serious musician and you may wish to look into purchasing this useful piece of equipment for full enjoyment of all your MMO editions. We want to provide you with the most useful practice and performance accompaniments possible. If you have any suggestions for improving the MMO system, please feel free to contact us. You can reach us by e-mail at [email protected].

MUSIC MINUS ONE 50 Executive Boulevard Elmsford, Elmsfor d, New York York 10523-1325 105 23-1325 1.800.669.7464 (U.S.)/914.592.1188 (International)

 www.musicminusone.com  www .musicminusone.com e-mail: mmogroup@musicminusone [email protected] .com MMO 3364

Pub. No. 00121

Printed in Canada

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