Nelhybel - Trio for Brass [score]

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  • čas přidán 29. 06. 2021
  • The University of Maryland Brass Trio
    "Brass Trios"
    Albany Records
    August 31, 2010
    / the-university-of-mary...
    Chris Gekker, trumpet
    Gregory Miller, horn
    Matthew Guilford, trombone
    "Vaclav Nelhybel’s Trio for Brass is a revelation for those of us raised on his large works for concert band - he demonstrates his well-known skill for writing sharply incisive passagework for brass, as well as plaintive, almost Kurt Weill-like lyricism. The second movement features the edgy, biting color of metallic mutes. The third movement is a series of short vignettes: circus romps, a tender waltz, and so on, with Matt’s trombone having the satisfying final word."
    - Notes by Chris Gekker
    www.chandos.net/chanimages/Bo...
    Vaclav Nelhybel (24 September 1919, Polanka, Czechoslovakia - 22 March 1996, Scranton, Penn.) was a Czech composer and conductor. (There is some ambiguity as to whether the name should be written Václav Nelhýbel. The United States Library of Congress does not use the diacritics in its authorized version of the name; hence we do not use them here.)
    Nelhybel studied composition and conducting at the Prague Conservatory of Music and musicology at the universities of Prague and Fribourg, Switzerland. As a student, he was already affiliated with Radio Prague as composer and conductor. At age 18, he was conducting the Czech Philharmonic as an assistant to Rafael Kubelik. By 1948, he had become active in Swiss National Radio as composer/conductor, and from 1950 to 1957 he served as co-founder and music director of Radio Free Europe in Munich. During this time he functioned as guest conductor with numerous European orchestras, including the Vienna Philharmonic, Munich Philharmonic, Bavarian Symphony, and Orchestra de la Swisse Romande. Beginning in 1957 he lived in the United States, becoming a U.S. citizen in 1962, and was active as a composer, conductor and lecturer up to his death in 1996.
    Among his many awards are the First National Prize for the best radiophonic composition (Prague, 1947); First Prize for the motion picture score to La Beaute des Formes (Paris, 1955); First Prize for the ballet In the Shadow of the Lime Tree at the First International Music and Dance Festival (Copenhagen, 1947); First Prize of the Ravich Music Foundation for the opera A Legend (New York, 1954); The "Man of the Year in Music" St. Cecelia Award (University of Notre Dame, 1968) and the United States Treasury Department Award for "Patriotic Service" (1968).
    In 1962, Nelhybel received his first exposure to a concert band. He wrote: “The first band I heard played a piece by Persichetti, and it was so good I just caught fire. I was fascinated with the possibilities of what you can do with half an acre of clarinets, half an acre of flutes, and half an acre of percussion. So I said, why not try it? I did, and it seemed to open new creative channels in my mind.” It was the enthusiasm of the students that truly inspired him to compose. His music is complex and exciting; it employs linear counterpoint, freely dissonant harmonic textures, and forceful rhythms.
    A common trait in the Nelhybel "sound" would seem to be a panchromatic melodic system, not serial in the dodecaphonic sense, but one which has a strong relation to one gravitational center. This relation to the 'gravitional center' generates and releases tensions which Nelhybel calls the human element in music and is the sine qua non of communication between composer and listener. He is not a revolutionary innovator. He is. rather, a synthesist, bringing all of past techniques into a harmonious entity. Nelhybel often employed thematic material from his Czech heritage.
    www.windrep.org/Vaclav_Nelhybel
    The purpose of this video is strictly educational and to promote chamber brass music abroad. The author makes no money or monetizes these videos. In fact, the owner of the copyrights to the original content can earn money from these videos. Please support composers and performers by purchasing their albums and sheet music.
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Komentáře • 6

  • @usmpiano
    @usmpiano Před 3 lety +1

    Reminds me of the style of Boris Blacher's Divertimento for trumpet, trombone and piano.

  • @lenapfeffer7399
    @lenapfeffer7399 Před 2 lety +4

    Hi, thats a really great piece! Where can we buy the sheet music? Cant find anything on the Internet:(

    • @chamberbrassscores
      @chamberbrassscores  Před 2 lety +1

      I did some research and it looks like it is still out of print. If you have access to a university music library that might your best bet. I found it on WorldCat here: www.worldcat.org/title/trio-for-brass-trumpet-horn-trombone/oclc/1132701

    • @chamberbrassscores
      @chamberbrassscores  Před 2 lety +1

      I think there is also a PDF copy on Scribd, but you have to join that site first. I think there is a free trial period. Good luck!

  • @isaiahcruz3431
    @isaiahcruz3431 Před rokem

    4:51

  • @user-ym7kl1vt6u
    @user-ym7kl1vt6u Před 8 měsíci

    4:50
    7:22