Blue Devil Dancing by William Harbinson Concert Band - Sheet Music

By William Harbinson

Blue Devil Dancing was composed for the Mooresville (North Carolina) High School Band in honor of the centennial celebration of the Mooresville Graded School District. The schoolas Alma Mater serves as the basic melodic material of the composition. The opening statements by the solo flute and horn are drawn from the first pitches of that melody. The descending three-note motive appears throughout the composition and serves as the principal motivic material of the work. Following a slow introduction, the percussion section leads into the faster A-section (m. 11). The work settles into a melodic passage (m. 35) that reveals a theme derived from the principal motive. After a varied repetition of that passage (m. 47), a transition leads to a lyrical and expressive B-section (m. 67). Within this section the melody of the Alma Mater is stated in its entirety with colorful changes in key center and harmonic structure. The percussion section reintroduces the faster A-section (m. 96) that is restated in a varied form. A brief percussion solo (m. 142) leads to the coda and a final statement of the opening phrase of the Alma Mater: aMooresville High School students are we!a.Blue Devil Dancing was composed for the Mooresville (North Carolina) High School Band in honor of the centennial celebration of the Mooresville Graded School District. The school's Alma Mater serves as the basic melodic material of the composition. The opening statements by the solo flute and horn are drawn from the first pitches of that melody. The descending three-note motive appears throughout the composition and serves as the principal motivic material of the work. Following a slow introduction, the percussion section leads into the faster A-section (m. 11). The work settles into a melodic passage (m. 35) that reveals a theme derived from the principal motive. After a varied repetition of that passage (m. 47), a transition leads to a lyrical and expressive B-section (m. 67). Within this section the melody of the Alma Mater is stated in its entirety with colorful changes in key center and harmonic structure. The percussion section reintroduces the faster A-section (m. 96) that is restated in a varied form. A brief percussion solo (m. 142) leads to the coda and a final statement of the opening phrase of the Alma Mater: "Mooresville High School students are we!".Blue Devil Dancing was composed for the Mooresville (North Carolina) High School Band in honor of the centennial celebration of the Mooresville Graded School District. The school’s Alma Mater serves as the basic melodic material of the composition. The opening statements by the solo flute and horn are drawn from the first pitches of that melody. The descending three-note motive appears throughout the composition and serves as the principal motivic material of the work. Following a slow introduction, the percussion section leads into the faster A-section (m. 11). The work settles into a melodic passage (m. 35) that reveals a theme derived from the principal motive. After a varied repetition of that passage (m. 47), a transition leads to a lyrical and expressive B-section (m. 67). Within this section the melody of the Alma Mater is stated in its entirety with colorful changes in key center and harmonic structure. The percussion section reintroduces the faster A-section (m. 96) that is restated in a varied form. A brief percussion solo (m. 142) leads to the coda and a final statement of the opening phrase of the Alma Mater: “Mooresville High School students are we!”

Print edition
$72.00
$100.00
You save: $28.00 ~ 28%

WELCOME20 activated

Ships in 1 to 2 weeks
Special order item, ships once received from publisher.
Quantity
1
Get a 10% discount with SMP Plus subscription

Details

Instrument:
B-Flat Clarinet Bass Clarinet Snare Drum
Ensembles:
Concert Band
Composers:
William Harbinson
Publishers:
Pembroke Music Co.
Series:
Carl Fischer Concert Performance Series
UPC:
680160913756
ISBN:
9781491155219
Format:
Score Set of Parts Score and Parts
Item types:
Physical
Level:
Grade 3
Artist:
William Harbinson
Usages:
School and Community
Number of Pages:
192
Size:
9 x 12 inches
Shipping Weight:
5 pounds

Concert band concert band (Bass Clarinet, Bass Drum, Bassoon, Bb Euphonium, Clarinet in Bb 1, Clarinet in Bb 2, Clarinet in Bb 3, Crash Cymbals, Euphonium, Flute 1, Flute 2, Horn 1, Horn 2, Oboe, Percussion 1, Percussion 2, Piccolo, Snare Drum, Suspended Cymbal, Timpani and more.) - Grade 3

SKU: CF.CPS241

Composed by William Harbinson. Folio. Cps. Score and parts. 192 pages. Duration 0:05:16. Pembroke Music Co. #CPS241. Published by Pembroke Music Co. (CF.CPS241).

ISBN 9781491155219. UPC: 680160913756. 9 x 12 inches.

Blue Devil Dancing was composed for the Mooresville (North Carolina) High School Band in honor of the centennial celebration of the Mooresville Graded School District. The schoolas Alma Mater serves as the basic melodic material of the composition. The opening statements by the solo flute and horn are drawn from the first pitches of that melody. The descending three-note motive appears throughout the composition and serves as the principal motivic material of the work. Following a slow introduction, the percussion section leads into the faster A-section (m. 11). The work settles into a melodic passage (m. 35) that reveals a theme derived from the principal motive. After a varied repetition of that passage (m. 47), a transition leads to a lyrical and expressive B-section (m. 67). Within this section the melody of the Alma Mater is stated in its entirety with colorful changes in key center and harmonic structure. The percussion section reintroduces the faster A-section (m. 96) that is restated in a varied form. A brief percussion solo (m. 142) leads to the coda and a final statement of the opening phrase of the Alma Mater: aMooresville High School students are we!a.
Blue Devil Dancing was composed for the Mooresville (North Carolina) High School Band in honor of the centennial celebration of the Mooresville Graded School District. The school's Alma Mater serves as the basic melodic material of the composition. The opening statements by the solo flute and horn are drawn from the first pitches of that melody. The descending three-note motive appears throughout the composition and serves as the principal motivic material of the work. Following a slow introduction, the percussion section leads into the faster A-section (m. 11). The work settles into a melodic passage (m. 35) that reveals a theme derived from the principal motive. After a varied repetition of that passage (m. 47), a transition leads to a lyrical and expressive B-section (m. 67). Within this section the melody of the Alma Mater is stated in its entirety with colorful changes in key center and harmonic structure. The percussion section reintroduces the faster A-section (m. 96) that is restated in a varied form. A brief percussion solo (m. 142) leads to the coda and a final statement of the opening phrase of the Alma Mater: "Mooresville High School students are we!".
Blue Devil Dancing was composed for the Mooresville (North Carolina) High School Band in honor of the centennial celebration of the Mooresville Graded School District. The school’s Alma Mater serves as the basic melodic material of the composition. The opening statements by the solo flute and horn are drawn from the first pitches of that melody. The descending three-note motive appears throughout the composition and serves as the principal motivic material of the work. Following a slow introduction, the percussion section leads into the faster A-section (m. 11). The work settles into a melodic passage (m. 35) that reveals a theme derived from the principal motive. After a varied repetition of that passage (m. 47), a transition leads to a lyrical and expressive B-section (m. 67). Within this section the melody of the Alma Mater is stated in its entirety with colorful changes in key center and harmonic structure. The percussion section reintroduces the faster A-section (m. 96) that is restated in a varied form. A brief percussion solo (m. 142) leads to the coda and a final statement of the opening phrase of the Alma Mater: “Mooresville High School students are we!”.