Principal Timpanist of the Boston Symphony, head of the Percussion Department at Boston University, Boston University Tanglewood Institute, and section leader for the Tanglewood Music Center, Tim Genis has provided a comprehensiveperformance analysis of percussion accessory parts for the major symphonic repertoire. His easy-to-understand explanations are based on countless performances under many of the world's finest conductors.
Contents
Tambourine: Tambourine Techniques
Georges Bizet: Tambourine: Carmen Suites, No.1&No.2
Antonin Dvorak: Tambourine: Carnival Overture
Benjamin Britten: Tambourine: Peter Grimes, Storm Scene
Igor Stravinsky: Tambourine: Petrouchka
Alexander Borodin: Tambourine: Polovetsian Dances
Hector Berlioz: Tambourine: Roman Carnival Overture
Nikolaj Rimsky-Korsakov: Tambourine: Scheherazade
Johannes Brahms: Triangle: Symphony No.4,Movement Iii
Nikolaj Rimsky-Korsakov: Triangle:Capriccio Espagnol, I & Ii. Alborado
Franz Liszt: Triangle:Piano Concerto, No.1
Nikolaj Rimsky-Korsakov: Triangle:Sheherazade, Movement Ii,Iii,Iv
Igor Stravinsky: Bass Drum: The Rite Of Spring
Gustav Mahler: Bass Drum: Symphony No.3, Movements I, Iii, Vi
Nikolaj Rimsky-Korsakov: Castanets: Capriccia Espagnol, V. Fandango Asturiano
George Gershwin: Maracas: Cuban Overture
Leonard Bernstein: Concert Tom Toms: Symphonic Dances From 'West Side Story'