Not finding what you're looking for? Just email us at hello@ficksmusic.com or call us at +1 215-592-1681

Peter Schickele

P.D.Q. Bach: Long Live The King, S. 1789

$ 2.50
Shipping calculated at checkout.

In stock and typically ships within 1 business day.

Minimum Order Qty: 10

Theodore Presser  |  SKU: 312-41856  |  Barcode: 9781598062502
  • Composers: Peter Schickele, P.D.Q. Bach
  • Instrumentation: SATB Choir
  • Work: P.D.Q. Bach: Long Live the King, S. 1789
  • Work Language: English
  • ISBN: 9781598062502
  • Size: 6.7 x 10.6 inches
  • Pages: 8

Description

Theodore Presser Company announces the release of its first P.D.Q. Bach octavo in about ten years, a hilarious and satirical ode to the King of France, who was beheaded during the French Revolution, complete with sound effects. The historical tie-in makes Long Live the King appropriate for high school choir in particular. The program notes have a fictitious story about how the composer found an old manuscript written by his departed uncle, with a note - "I have just composed in A Major choral work in honor of the recent revolution in France, called Long Live the King; the title, I hasten to assure you, is meant to be ironic – my sympathies are always with the people, especially the people who run taverns. The invention of the guillotine gives, I think you will agree, new meaning to the term "head of state." for intermediate choirs. Duration: 2'

Theodore Presser

P.D.Q. Bach: Long Live The King, S. 1789

$ 2.50

Description

Theodore Presser Company announces the release of its first P.D.Q. Bach octavo in about ten years, a hilarious and satirical ode to the King of France, who was beheaded during the French Revolution, complete with sound effects. The historical tie-in makes Long Live the King appropriate for high school choir in particular. The program notes have a fictitious story about how the composer found an old manuscript written by his departed uncle, with a note - "I have just composed in A Major choral work in honor of the recent revolution in France, called Long Live the King; the title, I hasten to assure you, is meant to be ironic – my sympathies are always with the people, especially the people who run taverns. The invention of the guillotine gives, I think you will agree, new meaning to the term "head of state." for intermediate choirs. Duration: 2'

View product