Beam modelstormer template. • Span Length edit box. • Use Custom Grid Spacing and Locate Origin check box and Edit Grid button. When this check box is checked and the Edit Grid button is clicked, the displays. Specify the length of each span in this edit box. Review Guidelines • Explain exactly why you liked or disliked the product. Do you like the artist? Is the transcription accurate? This two-day Prokofiev Marathon (second day is July 26, 2003) was the brainchild of Anne-Marie McDermott, a young, brilliant pianist, and The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center. McDermott took much of the lead in creating extensive program notes and in offering humorous and informative talks to the audience, in advance of each piece. Sergei Prokofiev. Chamber Society Program Notes. Sergei Prokofiev (1. Overture on Hebrew. Themes for Clarinet, String Quartet and Piano Op. Quintet in G Minor Op. Clarinet, Violin, Viola and Double Bass. Is it a good teaching tool? • Consider writing about your experience and musical tastes. Are you a beginner who started playing last month? Do you usually like this style of music? • Feel free to recommend similar pieces if you liked this piece, or alternatives if you didn't. • Be respectful of artists, readers, and your fellow reviewers. Please do not use inappropriate language, including profanity, vulgarity, or obscenity. • Avoid disclosing contact information (email addresses, phone numbers, etc.), or including URLs, time-sensitive material or alternative ordering information. • We cannot post your review if it violates these guidelines. If you have any suggestions or comments on the guidelines, please email us. • All submitted reviews become the licensed property of Sheet Music Plus and are subject to all laws pertaining thereto. If you believe that any review contained on our site infringes upon your copyright, please email us. ![]() • Read Sheet Music Plus's complete. Overture on Hebrew Themes About the Work Composer: © Dr. Rodda The Zimro Ensemble was formed in 1918 in Petrograd by the clarinetist Simon Bellison under the auspices of the Society for Jewish Folk Music to nurture the music of Jewish composers and culture, and to raise awareness for the founding of a Jewish state in Palestine. Zimro ('singing,' in Hebrew) toured across Russia, China and Indonesia, and set sail for America in July 1919, by which time it had focused on the specific objective of raising funds for a school of music in Jerusalem. The formal American debut of the group--comprising clarinet, piano and string quartet--occurred in Chicago in September at the annual convention of the Zionist Organization of America. Zimro's New York debut at Carnegie Hall in November was a great success, and Bellison convinced Sergei Prokofiev, a fellow graduate of the St. Petersburg Conservatory and then in New York following the premiere of his opera The Love for Three Oranges in Chicago, to write a new piece for the ensemble; Zimro premiered his Overture on Hebrew Themes in New York on January 26, 1920. Zimro's tour was originally intended to culminate in Palestine, but Bellison was named Principal Clarinet of the New York Philharmonic and the group disbanded in 1921. When the members of Zimro first approached Prokofiev in the fall of 1919 with a notebook of folk and traditional Jewish tunes and the request to compose a piece for them on some of those melodies, he declined. There could have been little money offered as enticement since Zimro was barely able to support itself (much less raise any charitable funds), and, in any case, the composer said he did not really care to write a piece on themes other than his own. As a courtesy to his old friends, however, Prokofiev kept the notebook. One evening shortly thereafter he took out the collection and began to improvise accompaniments to some of the tunes. Intrigued by their unusual phraseology and piquant melodic turnings, he conceived a brief piece built from them, and sketched out the Overture on Hebrew Themes in two days.
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