18457094
La Mer
18457094
18457094
La Mer Bassoon scores gallery preview page 1
La Mer Bassoon scores gallery preview page 2
La Mer Bassoon scores gallery preview page 3
La Mer Bassoon scores gallery preview page 4
La Mer Bassoon scores gallery preview page 5
La Mer Bassoon scores gallery preview page 6
La Mer Bassoon scores gallery preview page 7
La Mer Bassoon scores gallery preview page 8
La Mer Bassoon scores gallery preview page 9
La Mer Bassoon scores gallery preview page 10
La Mer Bassoon scores gallery preview page 11
La Mer by Claude Debussy Bassoon - Sheet Music
La Mer by Claude Debussy Bassoon - Sheet Music page 2
La Mer by Claude Debussy Bassoon - Sheet Music page 3
La Mer by Claude Debussy Bassoon - Sheet Music page 4
La Mer by Claude Debussy Bassoon - Sheet Music page 5
La Mer by Claude Debussy Bassoon - Sheet Music page 6
La Mer by Claude Debussy Bassoon - Sheet Music page 7
La Mer by Claude Debussy Bassoon - Sheet Music page 8
La Mer by Claude Debussy Bassoon - Sheet Music page 9
La Mer by Claude Debussy Bassoon - Sheet Music page 10
La Mer by Claude Debussy Bassoon - Sheet Music page 11

Ships to you

La Mer Trois Esquisses Symphoniques – Urtext by Claude Debussy Bassoon - Sheet Music

By Claude Debussy
(picc.2.2.cor ang.2.3.dble bsn – 4.3.2corn.3.1 – timp.perc – 2hp – str)

SKU: BR.PB-5516

Trois Esquisses Symphoniques – Urtext. Composed by Claude Debussy. Edited by Peter Jost. Softbound. Partitur-Bibliothek (Score Library). Symphonic poem; Romantic; Late-romantic. Study Score. 152 pages. Duration 23'. Breitkopf and Haertel #PB 5516. Published by Breitkopf and Haertel (BR.PB-5516).

ISBN 9790004211878. 6.5 x 9 inches.

The three symphonic sketches La Mer are, after Prelude a Lapresmidi dun faune, no doubt Debussys most frequently performed orchestral work. This success derives in part from its formal resemblance to a symphony, which had already been noted by the composers contemporaries, and in part from its sound, which was associated from the very start with the shimmer and iridescence of Impressionism.Peter Jost takes all major sources into consideration. Ultimately, the musical text of his Urtext edition is based on a copy of the second edition of the score, published in 1909, in which the composer incorporated his experiences as auditor and conductor into a last authorized version. After the cool reception given La Mer at its world premiere, Debussy revised the work and conducted the extraordinarily successful performances of it in early 1908 in Paris,London and Rome.