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Le format Papier vous offre une partition imprimée de haute qualité, idéale pour enrichir votre bibliothèque musicale et pratiquer loin des écrans.

Le eScore est une partition numérique en format PDF de haute qualité, disponible au téléchargement pour l’ensemble du catalogue des Productions d’Oz et Doberman-Yppan.

Le eScore Extra vous permet d’imprimer les copies dont vous avez besoin pour vos élèves ou pour les membres de votre ensemble, tout en interdisant tout partage numérique.

Le Combo vous offre la partition papier et la partition numérique à prix réduit, pour concilier bibliothèque physique et accès instantané sur vos appareils.

Le Combo eScore Extra + Papier vous offre la partition imprimée ainsi qu’une version numérique vous permettant d’imprimer les copies nécessaires pour vos élèves ou votre ensemble.

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Description

https://open.spotify.com/album/2uAxbNxM4LOVAf9FF76bhP?si=1bpsRIEfRWmU0CP_Z01dDg

The third in this continuing series is devoted to Holst's Bringer of Jollity, Jupiter; although, l have my doubts as to whether our composer here feels the same about Jupiter as Holst did.
The piece is entirely to be played in a very strange tuning 1st to D, 2nd and 3rd to A, 4th to D, 5th to A and 6th to D, but before that has you racing for the nearest exit, let me explain that Kindle has kindly included a tablature underneath the notation.
What first strikes you is that it spends 90-per-cent of its time running around in quaver arpeggios and as a result becomes very folklike in places. The odd arrangement of open strings creates a very individual atmosphere, which continues for some four pages or more, before a Liberamente interrupts the flow, if not for very long. Then a sudden Allegro Molto consisting of a new idea largely built up from hammers on and pull-offs, again sounding very folk-like in construction, which suddenly puts on a spurt and becomes prestissimo. A second liberamente leads to a return to the opening sections once more and finally to a coda that dies away on a repetitive arpeggio sweep up and down the strings, fading gently into the distance.
Chris Dumigan (Classical Guitar Magazine)













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