Piano Solo. Composed by Dave Brubeck. Piano Solo (no lyrics). American, Classical, Contemporary, Jazz. 24 pages. Duration 735 seconds. G. Schirmer #AMP7605. Published by G. Schirmer (HL.50226420).
UPC: 073999264203. 9.0x12.0x0.087 inches.
“Yankee Doodle” with variations is the most concise way to describe the piece commissioned by the New Haven Symphony Orchestra to commemorate Connecticut's participation in The United States Bicentennial. “Yankee Doodle,” a tune dating back to the Middle Ages inHolland and England (and used by the British as early as 1755 to poke fun at untrained American troops in the French and Indian War)is interwoven with other folk and national melodies to stitch a patchwork or a musical collage. It is a personal view of American history. To explain my approach to THEY ALL SANG YANKEE DOODLE, I must explain my own background, because the piece is made up of musical memories imprinted from early childhood. My earliest musical memories are a strange juxtaposition of sounds-hymns and Bach chorales from the church next door, where my mother was choir director; early twenties jazz from my oldest brother's dance band; classical piano from my middle brother and my mother's piano studio; and, the cowboy songs and turn-of-the-century ballads that I have always identified with my father. Concord, California, where I was born, was once part of a land grant from the Mexican government and the Spanish-Mexican influence remained strong even as the town expanded from a sleepy settlement into an American microcosmos with a wide variety of ethnic groups. Over fifty years ago most of us who sang “Yankee Doodle” in Concord could not trace our ancestry to the founding fathers. Those of us with Anglo-Saxon names were at the end of the Westward push, our forefathershaving left behind the Eastern cities a few generations before, settling for a time midcontinent, then restlessly pushing further West. Little is known of my paternal grandfather, for instance, except that he had come to California from Indiana, walking across Nevada desert to become one of the first settlers in Modoc Indian territory. Of course, the native American, the Indian, was there to greet each new migration, and it is his theme that stands alone in the opening bars of the piece in sharp contrast to the turn-of-the-century section where the melting pot begins to spill all our families here, and despite our differences in ethnic backgrounds, we understand those first defiant Americans who sang “Yankee Doodle” right back to the King's soldiers, transforming a song of ridicule into a hymn of patriotism and a song of survival. D.B.
Piano Solo. Composed by Dave Brubeck. Piano Solo (no lyrics). American, Classical, Contemporary, Jazz. 24 pages. Duration 735 seconds. G. Schirmer #AMP7605. Published by G. Schirmer (HL.50226420).
UPC: 073999264203. 9.0x12.0x0.087 inches.
“Yankee Doodle” with variations is the most concise way to describe the piece commissioned by the New Haven Symphony Orchestra to commemorate Connecticut's participation in The United States Bicentennial. “Yankee Doodle,” a tune dating back to the Middle Ages inHolland and England (and used by the British as early as 1755 to poke fun at untrained American troops in the French and Indian War)is interwoven with other folk and national melodies to stitch a patchwork or a musical collage. It is a personal view of American history. To explain my approach to THEY ALL SANG YANKEE DOODLE, I must explain my own background, because the piece is made up of musical memories imprinted from early childhood. My earliest musical memories are a strange juxtaposition of sounds-hymns and Bach chorales from the church next door, where my mother was choir director; early twenties jazz from my oldest brother's dance band; classical piano from my middle brother and my mother's piano studio; and, the cowboy songs and turn-of-the-century ballads that I have always identified with my father. Concord, California, where I was born, was once part of a land grant from the Mexican government and the Spanish-Mexican influence remained strong even as the town expanded from a sleepy settlement into an American microcosmos with a wide variety of ethnic groups. Over fifty years ago most of us who sang “Yankee Doodle” in Concord could not trace our ancestry to the founding fathers. Those of us with Anglo-Saxon names were at the end of the Westward push, our forefathershaving left behind the Eastern cities a few generations before, settling for a time midcontinent, then restlessly pushing further West. Little is known of my paternal grandfather, for instance, except that he had come to California from Indiana, walking across Nevada desert to become one of the first settlers in Modoc Indian territory. Of course, the native American, the Indian, was there to greet each new migration, and it is his theme that stands alone in the opening bars of the piece in sharp contrast to the turn-of-the-century section where the melting pot begins to spill all our families here, and despite our differences in ethnic backgrounds, we understand those first defiant Americans who sang “Yankee Doodle” right back to the King's soldiers, transforming a song of ridicule into a hymn of patriotism and a song of survival. D.B.
Preview: They All Sang Yankee Doodle
Tell A Friend
Tell a friend (or remind yourself) about this product. We'll instantly send an email containing product info and a link to it. You may also enter a personal message.
We do not use or store email addresses from this form for any other purpose than sending your share email.
After purchase, you can download your MP3 from your Sheet Music Plus Digital Library - no software installation is necessary! You can also listen to your MP3 at any time in your Digital Library.
Learn about Smart Music
After purchase, you can download your Smart Music from your Sheet Music Plus Digital Library - no software installation is necessary! You can also download at any time in your Digital Library.
Learn about Digital Video
After purchase you can download your video from your Digital Library. Your video is in XX format and is playable on most pre-installed video players.