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Die Musik piaristischer Klöster I.

score

Arreglo: Mixed Voices and Accompaniment
Instrumentación: Mixed choir-SATB/2Hn/Org/Bc/Str
Época: Siglo XX
Peso: 0.471 kg
Editorial: Bärenreiter
Nº de artículo: H7905
Nº de editorial: H07905
ISMN: 9790260102309
This edition of Moravian sacred works from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries gives us a look into the rich and previously-unexplored musical legacy of the Piarist order, which brought new musical trends to the Czech lands starting around 1631 when it was founded in Rome.
Period reports and lists of musical manuscripts give evidence of independent compositional activity on the part of about forty members of the order, but works by only thirteen of them have survived to our time.
Barenreiter Praha here presents an anthology containing works by Jan Vojtech Pelikan, Jan Kopecky, Kristian Schubert, Jan Offner, Jan Hausner, Jan Kolenec, and Jan Frantisek Floder. Tomas Hanzlik has constructed the scores from performing parts, prepared them for publication, and provided a foreword. Orchestral and choral parts are available for hire.
100 Years of Bärenreiter

In the autumn of 1923, a young man produced the first music editions of his newly founded publishing house in his parents’ living room. He named his company Bärenreiter. In the spring of 1924 when Karl Vötterle came of age, he was able to register it with the German Publishers and Booksellers Association. At first, he mainly put out folk song collections, church as well as organ music including early music by Leonhard Lechner and Heinrich Schütz, at the time primarily known in specialist circles.

During the last months of the Second World War, the publishing house in Kassel was destroyed and once more a fresh beginning had to be made. With the start of the extensive German music encyclopaedia MGG – "Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart" – as well as numerous series of scholarly-critical complete editions such as the “New Mozart Edition” and the “New Bach Edition”, the visionary founder of the publisher created the basis for the further development of Bärenreiter. The musicological editions increasingly aroused interest abroad, and Bärenreiter found itself on an expansion course.

When Karl Votterle died in 1975, his daughter Barbara took over the helm, supported by her husband Leonhard Scheuch. Under their leadership, the catalogue grew significantly and the brand BÄRENREITER URTEXT was established. Finally, in 2003, their son Clemens Scheuch joined the publisher which today he is managing together with his parents. Thus Bärenreiter has remained a family business to this day and has become a company of international standing in the world of classical music.

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