Prillar&Halling - for Solo Clarinet and Wind Band Concert Band - Sheet Music

Prillar has it's origin from Norwegian folklorist music. It's a way of calling and singing the cattle home from the fields. Halling is a wellknown folk dance from the valleys in the eastern part of Norway. In this work, the clarinet use the prillar to get the other musicians to join in. The melodic material in Prillar and Halling hasn't got all the sound of Norwegian folklore exclusively. You can also hear folkloric music from other nations. The idea is to show the similarities between these and also the small differences there are between folkloristic elements from a large area. The piece also contains the folk tune "Adam in paradise", from south of Norway. At the end, thetunes are stacked on top of each other, and the similarities of origin turns out. - Stig Nordhagen -

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Details

Instrument:
Clarinet Solo
Ensembles:
Concert Band
Genres:
Classical
Publishers:
Norsk Noteservice
Format:
Score Set of Parts Score and Parts
Item types:
Physical
Level:
Grade 6
Musical forms:
Concerto
Usages:
School and Community
Shipping Weight:
17.01 pounds

Concert Band and Clarinet Solo - Grade 6

SKU: BT.NNS9790261711555

Composed by Stig Nordhagen. Solo & Concerto. Set (Score & Parts). Composed 2018. Norsk Noteservice #NNS9790261711555. Published by Norsk Noteservice (BT.NNS9790261711555).

Prillar has it's origin from Norwegian folklorist music. It's a way of calling and singing the cattle home from the fields. Halling is a wellknown folk dance from the valleys in the eastern part of Norway. In this work, the clarinet use the prillar to get the other musicians to join in. The melodic material in Prillar and Halling hasn't got all the sound of Norwegian folklore exclusively. You can also hear folkloric music from other nations. The idea is to show the similarities between these and also the small differences there are between folkloristic elements from a large area. The piece also contains the folk tune "Adam in paradise", from south of Norway. At the end, thetunes are stacked on top of each other, and the similarities of origin turns out. - Stig Nordhagen -.