Difference between revisions of "Duo Chopinesque"

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[[Image:changethistothecomposername.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Composer Name]]
 
[[Image:changethistothecomposername.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Composer Name]]
[[David Johnson]]
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[[Michael Hennagin]]
  
 
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== General Info ==
 
== General Info ==
  
'''Year''': 20 <br /-->
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'''Year''': 1985 <br /-->
'''Duration''':  c. <br /-->
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'''Duration''':  c.10:27<br /-->
 
'''Difficulty''':  (see [[Ratings]] for explanation)<br /-->
 
'''Difficulty''':  (see [[Ratings]] for explanation)<br /-->
'''Publisher''': [[Studio 4 Music]]<br /-->
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'''Publisher''': [[Oklahoma University Percussion Press]]<br /-->
'''Cost''': Score and Parts - $0.00 &nbsp;&nbsp;|&nbsp;&nbsp; Score Only - $0.00<br /-->
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'''Cost''': Score and Parts - $60.00 &nbsp;&nbsp;|&nbsp;&nbsp; Score Only - $0.00<br /-->
  
 
==Movements==
 
==Movements==
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== Instrumentation ==
 
== Instrumentation ==
[[Marimba]]<br>
 
 
Player I: <br>  
 
Player I: <br>  
 
Player II: <br>  
 
Player II: <br>  
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Player IV: <br>  
 
Player IV: <br>  
 
Player V: <br>  
 
Player V: <br>  
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Player VI: <br>
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Player VII: <br>
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Player VIII: <br>
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Player IX: <br>
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Player X: <br>
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== Program Notes ==
 
== Program Notes ==
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Chopin's Prelude in E Minor provides the material upon which Hennagin composed a masterful work for a percussion ensemble of ten players.  A complete battery of percussion instruments are used to create a powerful composition utilizing essentially traditional performance techniques.
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<i>Composer info</i><br>
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Composer of twentieth-century classical music Michael Hennagin was born in The Dalles, Oregon, on September 17, 1936. He studied at Los Angeles City College, at Philadelphia's Curtis Institute of Music, graduating with a bachelor's degree in 1963, and with Aaron Copland at Tanglewood. Hennagin also studied electronic music at Southern Illinois University in 1968. His teaching career began in public schools in the mid-1960s and continued at Kansas State Teachers College from 1966 to 1972.
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He served as the University of Oklahoma's composer-in-residence and professor of music theory and composition from 1972 to 1991. His work included music for chorus, piano, chamber orchestra, and band.  He composed in a variety of modern, rather than traditional, styles which places him in the company of other Oklahoma twentieth-century composers of "new music," including Ray Luke  of Oklahoma City University and Samuel Magrill of the University of Central Oklahoma. Like them, he was rewarded by having his music performed publicly in Oklahoma and also in national venues.
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Hennagin's compositions include the ballet The Barren Song (1968), the symphonic essay A Summer Overture (1963), the chamber piece Four Etudes for Clarinet Choir (1978), Dance Scene (1977), and Jubilee (1967), which remains a staple for college bands. Proud Music, a choral-orchestral work derived from a Walt Whitman poem, was composed in 1993 and performed that summer by the Oklahoma Summer Arts Institute.
  
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Ten times from 1976 through 1992 the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers accorded Hennagin its Annual Award recognizing the quality and performance record of original works by American composers. He was named Oklahoma Musician of the Year in 1975 and National Composer of the Year by the Music Teachers National Association in 1976. He also wrote scores for motion picture, television, and stage productions.<ref>http://www.oupercussionpress.com/</ref>
 
== Errata ==
 
== Errata ==
  
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== Works for Percussion by this Composer ==
 
== Works for Percussion by this Composer ==
{{Johnson, David Works}}
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{{Hennagin Michael Works}}
 
<br />
 
<br />
  

Revision as of 00:57, 2 March 2013

Michael Hennagin


General Info

Year: 1985
Duration: c.10:27
Difficulty: (see Ratings for explanation)
Publisher: Oklahoma University Percussion Press
Cost: Score and Parts - $60.00   |   Score Only - $0.00

Movements

Instrumentation

Player I:
Player II:
Player III:
Player IV:
Player V:
Player VI:
Player VII:
Player VIII:
Player IX:
Player X:


Program Notes

Chopin's Prelude in E Minor provides the material upon which Hennagin composed a masterful work for a percussion ensemble of ten players. A complete battery of percussion instruments are used to create a powerful composition utilizing essentially traditional performance techniques.

Composer info
Composer of twentieth-century classical music Michael Hennagin was born in The Dalles, Oregon, on September 17, 1936. He studied at Los Angeles City College, at Philadelphia's Curtis Institute of Music, graduating with a bachelor's degree in 1963, and with Aaron Copland at Tanglewood. Hennagin also studied electronic music at Southern Illinois University in 1968. His teaching career began in public schools in the mid-1960s and continued at Kansas State Teachers College from 1966 to 1972.

He served as the University of Oklahoma's composer-in-residence and professor of music theory and composition from 1972 to 1991. His work included music for chorus, piano, chamber orchestra, and band. He composed in a variety of modern, rather than traditional, styles which places him in the company of other Oklahoma twentieth-century composers of "new music," including Ray Luke of Oklahoma City University and Samuel Magrill of the University of Central Oklahoma. Like them, he was rewarded by having his music performed publicly in Oklahoma and also in national venues.

Hennagin's compositions include the ballet The Barren Song (1968), the symphonic essay A Summer Overture (1963), the chamber piece Four Etudes for Clarinet Choir (1978), Dance Scene (1977), and Jubilee (1967), which remains a staple for college bands. Proud Music, a choral-orchestral work derived from a Walt Whitman poem, was composed in 1993 and performed that summer by the Oklahoma Summer Arts Institute.

Ten times from 1976 through 1992 the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers accorded Hennagin its Annual Award recognizing the quality and performance record of original works by American composers. He was named Oklahoma Musician of the Year in 1975 and National Composer of the Year by the Music Teachers National Association in 1976. He also wrote scores for motion picture, television, and stage productions.[1]

Errata

Awards

Commercial Discography

Recent Performances

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Works for Percussion by this Composer

Template:Hennagin Michael Works


Additional Resources



References