Top 10: Vocal Collections

 


1. Twenty-Four Italian Songs and Arias of the 17th and 18th Centuries


Twenty-Four Italian Songs and Arias

This classic anthology from Schirmer is an outstanding collection intended to introduce the student of singing to the bel canto style. The material in this collection comes from the early operatic repertoire and is suitable for singers both young and experienced. To better reflect the needs of modern singers, Schirmer recently published an updated edition of this collection titled Twenty-eight Italian Songs and Arias. All the original songs are included plus four new selections. The new publication also includes newly written historical information about the music and translations of the text. Each piece has been re-engraved and five different transpositions are available, with or without accompaniment CDs.


2. Arias for Soprano



Arias for Soprano is part of Schirmer’s new operatic anthology that includes volumes for each voice type. This first volume for soprano includes many famous excerpts from the literature and is suitable for advanced students or professionals preparing for concert recitals. The book is organized chronologically and includes selections from the early 18th century to the late 20th. The focus of this book is on the repertoire for lyric soprano; singers interested in the demanding repertoire by Verdi, Wagner and the like should consider other publications while collaratura sopranos should get this companion volume. Anthologies for other voice types can be found here.


3. Teen’s Musical Theatre Collection – Young Women’s Edition



This collection from Hal Leonard is especially intended to match the vocal abilities of young singers. The repertoire includes selections from early stage musicals of Broadway, classic films from Hollywood, and newer selections from recent stage and film productions up to the 1990s. The book is available with or without an accompaniment CD which is useful for young singers who do not have ready access to an accompanist. Guitar chords are also provided. A similar collection for men’s voices is also available.


4. 26 Italian Songs and Arias



This outstanding collection from Alfred is a great introduction for the singer to the early operatic repertoire of the 17th and 18th centuries. The aim of the editors in preparing this volume was to present some of the famous arias of this period in editions that better reflect the style of the composer’s time rather than the styles of the editor’s time. Facsimiles of original sources are shown, historical notes about the music give contextual information, and translations of the text with pronunciation suggestions are included. Two transposition (medium-high and medium-low) are available, each with or without an accompanying CD.


5. Oratorio Anthology for Soprano



Hal Leonard’s Oratorio Anthology for Soprano brings together classic arias from the repertoire of sacred oratorios. With selections ranging from the late 17th century (Purcell) to the late 19th century (Fauré), the book offers a wide range of styles within its 30 selections. Given his vast output of oratorio, J.S. Bach is given a full quarter of the collection. Anthologies for other voice types can be found here.


6. Best Songs Ever: 76 Great Songs (7th Edition)



Hal Leonard’s extensive collection contains the 72 greatest songs ever written since music was invented in 1925. Represented are famous shows from Broadway, songs from Hollywood films, jazz standards, and hits from the biggest names in rock and pop. Each song is cleanly and spatiously engraved with straight-forward piano accompaniments and guitar chords. If you are looking for a hit from the 20th century, it likely will be in this collection.


7. Sing Out!: All Time and Old Time Favourites



Sing Out! is a book produced in Markham, Ontario, for use in Ontario’s seniors’ residences. The collection includes songs that seniors would likely know pitch at low keys that should be comfortable to sing. Most represented are songs from the early 20th century with which seniors (in the 1970s when the book was produced) would have grown up. The music is arranged for simply piano accompaniment with the vocal line in the stop staff of the keyboard rather than on its own line. This feature makes Sing Out! an accessible collection for amateur players. A handbook with words only is also available for distribution to seniors residences.


8. The Best of Cole Porter



This exciting collection brings together Cole Porter’s greatest Broadway hits and popular songs. All the standards are here including: “I Love You”, “It’s De-Lovely”, “What Is This Thing Called Love?”, and “Brush Up Your Shakespeare”. The piano doubles the vocal melody at all times making the book very useful for amateur singers and chords symbols are included for guitarists or combo playing.


9. Highlights Edition: Irish Country Songs



This book compiles many classic arrangements of Irish folksong from the pen of Herbert Hughes, one of the prominent musicologists who studied this repertoire in the early 20th century. The book includes many favourites including: “Down by the Salley Gardens”, “Innisfree”, “The Star of the County Down”, and “The Black Ribbon-Band”. The songs are arranged for voice and piano making this collection suitable mainly for recital performance by concert singers; this is not an “urtext” edition which should instead show the songs as melodies only with variations documented. Hughes’ four volumes of Irish Country Songs , from which the present volume’s contents are collected, are analogous to folksong settings by contemporaries like Zóltan Kodály, Ralph Vaughan Williams, and Benjamin Britten rather than musicological source books.


10. English Songs: Renaissance to Baroque



Edited by Steven Stolen and Richard Walters, this volume in Hal Leonard’s Vocal Library collects favourite songs by English composers of the 16th to 18th centuries, including: Thomas Arne, Thomas Campiano, John Dowland, George Frideric Handel, and Henry Purcell. The editors have included optional ornamentation in small notes and suggested dynamics. Notes about the composers are included in the preface. This is a straight-forward songbook for the student of singing who is seeking a good introduction to this repertoire. The collection is available for high or low voice, either with or without an accompanying CD.

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Today is Schubert’s Birthday!

 

Schubert is the composer of over 600 songs, world-famous piano music, nine (or ten) symphonies, chamber music, sacred music, and so much more. He did all this before the age of 31 when ill health finally took his life. The lesson? Don’t be a composer or it will lead to health problems.

To celebrate Schubert’s birthday we have compiled a list of popular publications for your perusal:

1. Impromptus for piano solo

Two competing editions of this collection lead our Schubert top-seller list, Henle and Bärenreiter.  Henle’s collection is a little more expensive but also includes another set of Schubert’s compositions, Moments musicaux.

2. Ave Maria for voice and piano

Schubert’s setting of Ave Maria is one of the most famous versions for solo voice out there.  Did you know that he originally did not composer the piece with the Marian text in mind?  Schubert originally set a portion of Walter Schott’s poem The Lady of the Lake in a German translation called “Ellens dritter Gesang” (“Ellen’s Third Song”, also know as “Hymn to the Virgin”).  Scott’s poem is a poetic reimagining of the traditional Roman Catholic Marian prayer.  Today it is most often sung to the traditional text rather than the poem that Schubert originally set.

3. 100 Songs for Voice and Piano

Of course, you could get all three of Ellen’s songs as well as and 97 other songs by Schubert in this popular collection from Hal Leonard.  It includes a brief description of each piece as well as a printing of the poem in both German and English.  This is a very affordable option for those first exploring Schubert’s vocal music.  Popular songs like “Erlkönig” and “Wandrers Nachtlied” are included.

4. Edition Peters’ Lieder Collections

Schubert’s complete vocal music is published by Edition Peters.  Song cycles are presented in their entirety and several transpositions are available for different voice types.  A new Urtext edition of many songs is also available that is based on manuscript sources.  Peters’ collections of Schubert’s lieder offer a lifetime of musical exploration for singers and pianists.  There are over 600 and all are full of richness.

5. Piano Sonatas

After the Impromptus, Schubert’s most popular piano works are the Sonatas.  The editions by Henle Verlag are beautifully engraved are published in three volumes.  They are also available separately if you are looking for just one.  Some famous sonatas include: Sonata in B-flat Major, D. 960; Sonata in C Minor, D. 958; and Sonata in A Minor, D. 784.

6. Sonata in A Minor for Arpeggione 

This work is the only extant music written specifically for the arpeggione, which is similar to a bowed guitar.  The novel instrument had a short life in the 19th century while several prominent virtuosi had short but profitable careers.  Today, this sonata is heard most often in transcriptions for cello and piano or viola and piano.  Transcriptions for flute, clarinet and other instruments are also available.

7. Mass in G Major

Schubert’s Mass in G Major is his most popular choral composition.  Several editions are available, but the Schirmer Edition shown is the most popular due to its affordable price.  An urtext edition from Bärenreiter is available as is an arrangement with organ accompaniment suitable for use in a service.

8. Quintet in A Major (The “Trout” Quintet)

What list of famous Schubert compositions would be complete without the Trout?  We stock three editions for piano quitet: International, Bärenreiter, and Henle.  We also have a study score from Dover.  There is also the song, “Die Ferelle,” on which the quintet is based. 

9. Twenty-four Favourite Songs for Voice and Piano

 

You can find “Die Ferelle” in this popular and affordable vocal collection.  All the classic hits by Schubert are here: “Der Wanderers Nachtlied”, “Erlkönig”, “Was ist Sylvia”, “Du bist die Ruh’”, “Gretchen am Spinnrade”, and “Der Tod und das Mädchen”.  The collection is available for high or low voice.

10. Fantasy in F Minor for Piano Duet

Rounding out this Top 10 is Schubert’s Fantasy in F Minor for Piano, Four Hands, his most extensive and popular work for piano duet.  The Fantasy is also one of the last major works he composed, finishing it only 8 months before his death.  We keed the Henle and Ricordi editions in stock, but International and Peters are also available.

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Top 10: Books for Oboe

 

In honour of the University of Ottawa’s Oboe Weekend, taking place this Saturday, we’ve put together a Top 10 list of our best-selling titles for oboe.

1. Barret: Oboe Method

First published in 1862, The oboe method by Apollon Barré (know to English speakers as Barret) is still widely used today. The standard edition by Boosey & Hawkes is a facsimile of the original publication. Full of technical excercises, tips on reed making, and practical advice on general musicianship, the famous method has yet to be supplanted in the oboe repertoire. Barret also includes forty pieces in progressive order that are accompanied by an unfigured bass.

2. Oboe Solos with Piano Accompaniment

This popular collection contains pieces in a variety of styles from the Baroque through to the 20th century. The range of material providers something to please most tastes and skills.

 

3. A Tune a Day

A beginning method for the younger student, A Tune a Day covers rudimentary details that more advanced tutors, like the Barret Oboe Method, take for granted. Like other books in the Tune a Day series, this method is based around a collection of short melodies, each of which presents a particular technical challenge. Many of the melodies are taken from familiar folk songs or hymns.

 

4. Sellner: Method for Oboe or Saxophone: Book 1

Sellner’s method is more a collection of studies arranged in progressive order. The book is equally useful for saxophones and oboes, which share similar fingering, but it contains no fingering chart, information about reed making, or other details the student may find useful. Instead, the book focuses on technical matters and the development of tone by arranging the excercises progressively by the class of interval used. Duets parts included for the teacher will also give the book a second life: having completed it, the student can return to the beginning to learn the teacher’s parts.

5. 48 Famous Studies for Oboe or Saxophone

This collection includes a variety of music that can be performed by two oboes or two saxophones. The first volume contains 48 Studies for solo oboe by W. Ferling with the first oboe part of Ferling’s Trois Duos Concertaints, Betthoven’s Trio for 2 Oboes and English Horn (Op. 87), and 10 Duos by B. Bernards. The second volume contains the second oboe part for these pieces and English horn part for the Beethoven. The stylistic variety in these pieces is quite welcome and the technical challenges numerous. The first volume is the one to get for the student. The second volume supplements the first for ensemble playing.

6. Britten: Six Metamorphoses After Ovid

Britten’s Six Metamorphoses After Ovid is a masterpiece of the 20th-century repertoire for oboe. Each movement captures the personality of a character from Ovid’s Metamorphoses. Included are the lyrical lines of Pan’s flute, the rauccous feasts of Bacchus, and the tragic fall of Narcissus whose reflected image is captured by a two-voice part for solo oboe. These are challenging but rewarding pieces for an instrument whose repertoire rests mainly in the distant past.

 

7. Marcello: Concerto in C minor

A classic Baroque concerto, fast-slow-fast, with a tragic middle movement and plenty of passagework to keep your fingers busy. Try it on your 415 replica with harpsichord accompaniment.

 

8. Sellner: Method for Oboe or Saxophone: Book 2

The second volume of Sellner’s method for oboe or saxophone includes numerous studies designed to work the use of specific keys. These technical studies are an excellent addition to routine technical work and will loosen up the oboist’s dexterity.

9. Hindemith: Sonata for Oboe and Piano

Hindemith’s Sonatas for all the orchestral instruments are masterpieces of 20th-century Gebrauchsmusik, or music for use. These sonatas are composed for amateur music-making but are often very challenging. Hindemith composed the Sonata for Oboe and Piano in 1938, two years before emigrating to the United States, and it uses Hindemith’s quirky tonal vocabulary.

10. Haydn: Concerto in C major

Squeaking in at number 10, Haydn’s Concerto in C Major features a brilliant Allegro spirituoso that is full of tricky passages. Quite virtuosic if the tempo is just so. An excellent choice for concert performance or for examination.

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