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Simple recorder music
Simple recorder music













simple recorder music
  1. #Simple recorder music how to#
  2. #Simple recorder music Offline#
  3. #Simple recorder music professional#
  4. #Simple recorder music free#

If you value the resources I share, both here and on the Score Lines blog, please would you consider making a small financial contribution for them (occasionally or regularly – the choice is yours), either via the button below or by bank transfer (see details here).

simple recorder music

#Simple recorder music professional#

I’ve now broadened the range of resources I share with the recorder community, and this creative work currently takes up one to two days of my professional time each week.

#Simple recorder music free#

To say thank you for joining you’ll immediately receive a copy of my new eBook Five Tips for a Better Tone.įrom the start I made my recorder consort videos a free resource for anyone to use, at a time when income levels had dropped for many people, myself included. This is where I reveal my latest videos, offer information about the music and share glimpses behind the scenes. Would you like to hear as soon as I publish new videos?Īll you need to do is complete the form below to receive Score Lines. I recommend listening to them through earphones or an external speaker for a more immersive sound. The latter is particularly useful if your internet connection is slower.

simple recorder music

#Simple recorder music Offline#

The videos can be streamed from the Google Drive folder where they are stored, or can be downloaded for offline use. The ‘minus one’ videos are listed towards the bottom of this page. They come in two formats – playalong videos where all of the parts are included and some duets/trios ‘minus one’ where one part is omitted so you can join in as an equal partner to me.

#Simple recorder music how to#

How to use the videos:Įach piece comes with a multitrack video, with PDF copies of the sheet music and a helpful ‘hints and tips’ video. There are plenty of people for whom these videos (and the sheet music too) remain immensely useful so I have continued creating them, sharing a new piece of music every two weeks. We have chosen five of the best works from this important collection, together with two others of similar merit, to produce a programme which places the recorder firmly in the musical mainstream.As the Covid-19 pandemic brought ensemble playing to a halt in 2020 I began recording multitrack videos of recorder consort music to try to help keep everyone playing. Much of the music here would not exist without the pioneering work of the late Carl Dolmetsch, who commissioned over 50 new pieces for his annual Wigmore Hall recitals between 19. Considering the huge upsurge of interest in the recorder in recent decades, it is remarkable that such high-quality music by English composers of stature has largely been neglected in favour of, on the one hand, indifferent baroque sonatas, and on the other tuneless avant-garde experiments.

simple recorder music

It can be described as a vertical flute with several different holes and drilled on one. Recorder music is available for birthdays, schools, Christmas, Halloween, folk songs, sporting themes and many more. The music on this album is a testimony to the shining brilliance and soulful emotion which can be coaxed from a simple pipe. The recorder is a very simple and quite easy musical instrument to play. The site contains easy recorder music scores for beginners for solo recorder and/or simple ensembles or consorts S, SA, SAT and SATB. It is arguably only in the 20th century that the recorder has found its true expressive voice. It had, in any case, never been considered capable of expressing the extremes of musical light and shade. Originally, recorders (and music in general) were only really. The instrument, once hugely popular, had long since fallen out of fashion, and was not to enjoy a revival for almost a century. 1300s, the recorder reached a height in popularity during the 16th through 18th centuries. “Lead we not here a jolly life Betwixt the shine and shade” We can safely assume that the dramatist Henry Taylor was not thinking of the recorder when he penned these words in 1834.















Simple recorder music