Titan, Moon of Saturn Grade 1 - Score and Parts by Mike Hannickel Concert Band - Sheet Music

By Mike Hannickel

A bold and powerful work for young bands! The aggressive theme sets the stage for this forceful original piece. In the spirit of Holst's The Planets, Titan-Moon of Saturn celebrates the multinational Cassini-Huygens spacecraft that landed on Saturn's moon, Titan, on January 14, 2005. There are many questions about Titan that this daring space exploration mission will seek to answer. It also works perfectly as a massed band performance, and/or an opportunity for some cross-curricular work with the science department.Mighty!

Print edition
$28.08
$39.00
You save: $10.92 ~ 28%

WELCOME20 activated

In Stock
Usually ships within 24 hours.
Quantity
1
Get a 10% discount with SMP Plus subscription

Details

Ensembles:
Concert Band
Composers:
Mike Hannickel
Publishers:
Curnow Music
Instrumentation:
Bb Bass Clarinet - 1 Bb Clarinet 1 - 6 Bb Clarinet 2 - 6 Bb Tenor Saxophone - 2 Bb Trumpet 1 - 4 Bb Trumpet 2 - 4 Eb Alto Saxophone - 4 Eb Baritone Saxophone - 1 Euphonium Tc - 2 F Horn - 4 Flexible Bass Line - 1 Flute - 8 Full Score - 1 Mallets - 1 Oboe - 1 Percussion 1 - 2 Percussion 2 - 2 Piano Accompaniment - 1 Timpani - 1 Trombone/Baritone B.C./Bassoon - 7 Tuba - 4
UPC:
884088081096
Format:
Score Set of Parts Score and Parts
Item types:
Physical
Level:
Beginning Grade 1
Artist:
Mike Hannickel
Usages:
School and Community
Size:
9.0x12.0 inches
Shipping Weight:
1.33 pounds

(Hannickel) Concert Band - Grade 1

SKU: HL.44005595

Grade 1 - Score and Parts. Composed by Mike Hannickel. Curnow Music Concert Band. Full Score and Parts. Duration 150 seconds. Curnow Music #98306040. Published by Curnow Music (HL.44005595).

UPC: 884088081096. 9.0x12.0 inches.

A bold and powerful work for young bands! The aggressive theme sets the stage for this forceful original piece. In the spirit of Holst's The Planets, Titan-Moon of Saturn celebrates the multinational Cassini-Huygens spacecraft that landed on Saturn's moon, Titan, on January 14, 2005. There are many questions about Titan that this daring space exploration mission will seek to answer. It also works perfectly as a massed band performance, and/or an opportunity for some cross-curricular work with the science department.Mighty!