Canzon Septimi Toni a8 by Giovanni Gabrieli Chamber Music - Sheet Music

By Giovanni Gabrieli

Saxophone Octet SSAATTBB . Giovanni Gabrieli composed his Canzon septimi toni for the majestic St. Mark's Cathedral in Venice, where he was organist and principal composer from 1585 until his death. It comes from a collection of music for brass that Gabrieli composed for church use and published in 1597 under the title Sacrae symphoniae . The pieces in the collection are for various combinations of trumpets and trombones, whose players would have been placed antiphonally inside St. Mark's to take advantage of the church's acoustics and to clarify the dialogic musical structure of works such as the Canzon . This arrangement recreates the antiphonal effects using two sax quartets. The two groups sometimes alternate and sometimes overlap, using rich contrapuntal textures to build the music to a grand climax. Separating the two groups spatially adds yet more interest to the aural experience. Not technically difficult (in concert Bb major), but the use of minim time signatures and the complex polyphony make it musically more challenging.

Print edition
$26.61
$36.95
You save: $10.34 ~ 28%

WELCOME20 activated

Ships in 4 to 6 weeks
Special order item, ships once received from publisher.
Quantity
1
Get a 10% discount with SMP Plus subscription

Details

Instrument:
Tenor Saxophone Soprano Saxophone Baritone Saxophone Alto Saxophone
Ensembles:
Chamber Music
Genres:
Renaissance
Composers:
Giovanni Gabrieli
Publishers:
Forton Music
ISBN:
9790570480364
Format:
Set of Parts Score and Parts
Item types:
Physical
Level:
Intermediate
Artist:
Giovanni Gabrieli
Arrangers:
Robert Rainford
Usages:
School and Community
Shipping Weight:
0.34 pounds

Saxophone Octet (2 soprano saxophones, 2 alto saxophones, 2 tenor saxophones, 2 baritone saxophones) - Intermediate

SKU: FT.FM137

Composed by Giovanni Gabrieli. Arranged by Robert Rainford. Score and parts. Forton Music #FM137. Published by Forton Music (FT.FM137).

ISBN 9790570480364.

Saxophone Octet SSAATTBB . Giovanni Gabrieli composed his Canzon septimi toni for the majestic St. Mark's Cathedral in Venice, where he was organist and principal composer from 1585 until his death. It comes from a collection of music for brass that Gabrieli composed for church use and published in 1597 under the title Sacrae symphoniae . The pieces in the collection are for various combinations of trumpets and trombones, whose players would have been placed antiphonally inside St. Mark's to take advantage of the church's acoustics and to clarify the dialogic musical structure of works such as the Canzon . This arrangement recreates the antiphonal effects using two sax quartets. The two groups sometimes alternate and sometimes overlap, using rich contrapuntal textures to build the music to a grand climax. Separating the two groups spatially adds yet more interest to the aural experience. Not technically difficult (in concert Bb major), but the use of minim time signatures and the complex polyphony make it musically more challenging.