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Piano Music Books



piano music books
Is there any piano music books…?

for piano sheet music but instead of the traditional style just the letters i.e. a…c…b…e…f…g etc etc.
i want to learn to play yet cannit read music so this would be very helpfull

If Your English , Any Good Music Shop, Pooles Music Or Corner shop music stop =]

best Answer =]

Autumn Moon over the Calm Lake – Piano Chinese song


Emma Hamilton and Madame Bianchi seated at a square piano Photo Mugs


Emma Hamilton and Madame Bianchi seated at a square piano Photo Mugs



Two ladies seen from behind are seated at a square piano on which is an open book of music and a candelabra with three branches containing lit candles. The slighter figure on the left seated on a chair is probably Madame Bianchi, and the larger figure seated on a stool is Emma Hamilton, if the annotation is correct. Madame Bianchi was an opera singer, the wife of the composer Francesco Bianchi (c….


A Song to Remember [VHS]


A Song to Remember [VHS]


$8.60


The short life and passionate music of romantic composer Frédéric Chopin provide the foundations for this 1945 drama, which proved influential in its gaudy, undeniably watchable formula of historical exaggeration and shrewdly simplified motives for its principals. In an Oscar-nominated performance, Cornel Wilde presents the Polish native as a passionate nationalist driven by his love of his nat…

Scott Joplin [VHS]


Scott Joplin [VHS]


$9.98



The Piano Lesson (Hallmark Hall of Fame) [VHS]


The Piano Lesson (Hallmark Hall of Fame) [VHS]


$9.98


The only one of August Wilson’s plays to be filmed (and for television, at that), this 1990 Pulitzer Prize-winner is an amazing piece of work. Adapted by Wilson and directed by Lloyd Richards, who staged it on Broadway, the play deals not just with racism and its effects but with the ongoing legacy and curse of slavery on modern blacks. Set in 1920s Pittsburgh, the story deals with the arrival of …



 Winter from The Four Seasons: Op. 8, No. 4: Violin & Piano: (Schirmer's Library of Musical Classics, Vol. 1930): (Sheet Music)


Winter from The Four Seasons: Op. 8, No. 4: Violin & Piano: (Schirmer’s Library of Musical Classics, Vol. 1930): (Sheet Music)


$7.99


Antonio Vivaldi, Rok Klopcic (Editor),Paperback,Series: Schirmer’s Library of Musical Classics Series, English-language edition,Pub by Hal Leonard Corporation

 'Round About Midnight [Legacy Edition]


‘Round About Midnight [Legacy Edition]


$23.99


Miles Davis’ entry into the Sony Legacy Edition series features his Columbia Records debut and the first offering from his quintet with John Coltrane, Red Garland, Paul Chambers, and Philly Joe Jones. The label already issued the album in a definitive presentation with four additional tracks taken from the sessions onboard. Musically, the sound on ‘Round About Midnight is as unusual and beautiful as it was when it was issued in 1956. Davis, having already spearheaded two changes in jazz — with cool jazz and hard bop — was beginning to move in another direction here that wouldn’t be defined for another two years. The title track showcasing his muted trumpet premiered at the Newport Jazz Festival the previous summer (in a sextet with Thelonious Monk on piano) to a thunderous reception, and the studio offering is stunning as well. Charlie Parker’s “Au Leu-Cha” is edgy, with deep blues leaping from every chord. Coltrane’s solo is notable for its stark contrast to Davis’ own: Coltrane chooses an angular tack where he finds the heart of the mode and plays in harmonic counterpoint to the changes but never sounds outside. Cole Porter’s “All of You” has Davis quoting from Louis Armstrong’s “Basin Street Blues” in his solo. On “Bye-Bye Blackbird” we get to hear the band gel as a unit, beginning with Davis playing through the head, muted and sweet, slightly flatted out until he reaches the chorus and begins his solo on a high note. Garland slips shapes into those interval cracks and shifts them as the rhythm section keeps “soft time.” Of the bonus material, the gem is Jackie McLean’s “Little Melonae” — Davis and company recorded before the composer could. The band comes out blazing on this set, but it’s Coltrane who’s the surprise in his quoting various Dizzy Gillespie solos. For those who had already purchased the album, it may be disconcerting to need to buy it again in order to procure the 33 minutes of live material on disc two. Track one is that legendar…

 'Round Midnight


‘Round Midnight


$11.99


Criminally unsung pianist and singer Andy Bey had the most visible career after he and his sisters Salome and Geraldine Bey broke up their performing trio after an 11-year run in 1967, but this family singing ensemble was far more than just the act that launched Andy, and he wasn’t really the focus of the group. All three siblings were highlighted equally in the trio, and their harmonies together were the ethereal kind that can only happen in a family where all involved have grown up hearing each other’s voices and phrasing every single day. The Bey trio recorded very little together, unfortunately, just a single album for RCA in 1961 and two albums for Prestige, Now! Hear!, released in 1964, and this one, ‘Round Midnight, from 1965. Part gospel, part muted R&B, part stylized blues, the Bey trio was also very much a jazz outfit, due in no small part to Andy’s underappreciated piano playing and the presence of bop veterans like Milt Hinton on bass, Osie Johnson on drums, and Kenny Burrell (who appears on about half of the tracks here) on guitar. In essence, the Bey trio sounded like a thinned-out and more jazzy, gauzy version of the Staple Singers. Highlights from this reissue, which is quite short (only around 33 minutes) by modern CD standards, are a wonderfully balanced version of Ray Charles’ “Hallelujah, I Love Her So,” a stirring take on Billie Holiday’s “God Bless the Child,” the ever expanding and ascending “Feeling Good,” and a fine rendition of the title track, Thelonious Monk’s “‘Round Midnight,” which has never been the easiest song in the world to sing effectively, but the trio nails it here in what might have been deemed a definitive version if it had actually been heard by more than a handful of people. Prestige released Andy Bey & the Bey Sisters in 2000, which includes both the trio’s albums for the label on one disc, and that is definitely the way to go, although this short set does do a decent job showing off the range and talents of thi…

 'Round Midnight


‘Round Midnight


$11.99


This is a typically tasteful Kenny Burrell record (reissued on CD) with the guitarist mostly emphasizing ballads. Five of the seven songs (which include “Make Someone Happy,” “Since I Fell for You” and the theme from “A Streetcar Named Desire”) find Burrell assisted by pianist Richard Wyands (who also played electric piano), bassist Reggie Johnson and drummer Lenny McBrowne. “‘Round Midnight” is played by Burrell with pianist Joe Sample, bassist Johnson and drummer Paul Humphrey while “Blues in the Night” is an unaccompanied guitar solo. Although the music overall is well-played, no real sparks fly and the results often border on being sleepy. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi

 (I Want To) Come Home


(I Want To) Come Home


$54.44


High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! “I Want to Come Home” is a song written and recorded by Paul McCartney for the 2009 film Everybody’s Fine. An early cut of Everybody’s Fine was screened for McCartney, with Aretha Franklin’s cover of “Let It Be” inserted as a place holder by director Kirk Jones. McCartney was inspired to write the song for the film after connecting with the protagonist, portrayed by Robert De Niro, a widower who “hits the road to visit his scattered children after they cancel a weekend gathering.” McCartney told USA Today, “I can very much relate to a guy who’s got older children, who happens to have lost his wife, the mother of those children, and is trying to get them all together at Christmas. I understand that.” After recording a demo version on cassette, McCartney received notes for the song from Jones requesting an intro for the song as opposed to its original “abrupt” start. McCartney then collaborated with the film’s music composer Dario Marianelli on orchestrations for the song “resulting in an intimate ballad with piano, guitar and spare strings.”

 (Re)Conception


(Re)Conception


$19.98


Helen Sung has made great strides since winning the 2007 Mary Lou Williams Piano Competition. Recruiting two of the most in-demand rhythm players for this trio date, bassist Peter Washington and drummer Lewis Nash, the pianist mixes things up with fresh arrangements of standards, time-tested jazz compositions, and a few less frequently played works. Her swinging take of Duke Ellington’s “C Jam Blues” begins with a playful exchange with Washington before launching into the familiar theme, with the walking bass and light percussion propelling her inventive improvising as she avoids the clich? d route through this jazz standard. She also offers a snappy midtempo setting of the maestro’s “Everything But You,” playfully incorporating “Things Ain’t What They Used to Be” before she turns on the afterburners in her superb solo. Her punchy take of George Shearing’s “(Re)Conception” reveals the potential of this neglected bop gem. Thelonious Monk’s “Teo” is another overlooked piece, though Sung transforms it into a rapid-fire Bud Powell-flavored romp. Jerry Bock’s “Far from the Home I Love” (from the musical Fiddler on the Roof) is not typically heard much on jazz record dates, but Sung delivers a sentimental yet shimmering interpretation. Her bright rendition of Burt Bacharach’s “Wives and Lovers” puts the spotlight on the talented Washington for an extensive solo. Sung also contributed one original, the lively, constantly shifting “Duplicity.” Helen Sung is clearly one artist to watch among the musicians of her generation. ~ Ken Dryden, Rovi

 *Piano Adventures Popular Repertoire


*Piano Adventures Popular Repertoire


$1.99


Randall Faber,Paperback – New Edition, English-language edition,Pub by FJH Music Co., Inc.

 ...And They Have Escaped the Weight of Darkness


…And They Have Escaped the Weight of Darkness


$16.98


They must be putting something in the water over there in Iceland that makes musicians work in unexpected ways. Their biggest pop and rock exports — Bj? rk and Sig? r Ros, respectively — have borne very little relation to what the rest of the world thinks of as pop and rock, so why should their most promising young neo-classical composer be any different? At an age when most young men are still trying to decide between grad school and the night shift at Denny’s, Olafur Arnalds has already made a name for himself as a musical maverick who skirts the edges of the classical, rock, electronic, and avant-garde worlds with enthusiastic ease, a Nico Muhly with a higher tolerance for cold weather, if you will. On his second full-length release, Arnalds moves further away from electronics to embrace a more acoustically oriented approach centered on piano and strings. Electronics do play a supporting role — they’re simply used to enhance the atmosphere here and there, but in the main, Arnalds is creating 21st century chamber music here, as the piano makes simple, elegant statements whose harmonic possibilities are further fleshed out by the strings. And Arnalds may be a modernist in terms of pushing stylistic boundaries, but he still has some old-school, downright romantic notions about melodic movement — you won’t find any polytonality or serial music among these tracks. Arnalds prefers instead to repurpose old-school harmonic conventions in a new context, offering the listener a readily accessible emotional connection but still breaking new ground. And on the few strategic spots in the album where Arnalds drops in drums and/or electric guitar and repetitive motifs, the effect is not dissimilar to the headier moments of the aforementioned Sig? r Ros, or perhaps early-? 70s Pink Floyd at their most ethereal, showing the rock crowd that they too have a point of entry into this music. ~ J. Allen, Rovi

 0010* 10 for 10 Sheet Music Wedding Essentials: Piano/Vocal & Piano Solos


0010* 10 for 10 Sheet Music Wedding Essentials: Piano/Vocal & Piano Solos


$5.73


Alfred Publishing Staff,Paperback,Series: 10 for 10 Sheet Music, English-language edition,Pub by Alfred Publishing Company, Inc.

 1+1


1+1


$14.98


Beyond category or idiom, audacious in its very idea, Herbie Hancock and Wayne Shorter perform a little over an hour of spontaneous improvised duets for grand piano and soprano sax. That’s all — no synthesizers, no rhythm sections, just wistful, introspective, elevated musings between two erudite old friends that must have made the accountants at PolyGram reach for their Mylanta. Hancock’s piano is long on complex harmonies of the most cerebral sort, occasionally breaking out into a few agitated passages of dissonance. His technique in great shape, Shorter responds with long-limbed melodies, darting responses to Hancock’s lashings, and occasional painful outcries of emotion. The leadoff track, “Meridianne — A Wood Sylph,” clearly takes off from a base of Satie to set the reflective mood for nearly the whole CD; only the final, brief “Hale-Bopp, Hip-Hop” offers a hint of comic relief. All of the tunes, save for Michiel Borstlap’s “Memory of Enchantment,” are Hancock or Shorter originals; some, like Hancock’s “Joanna’s Theme” (from the film Death Wish) and Shorter’s “Diana,” date back to the ’70s. As avidly as this music was awaited and as wildly as it was acclaimed by critics, it doesn’t really touch the emotions as deeply as the best of the pair’s work together and apart. It stands as a graceful, high-minded anomaly in the output of both, but not something you would expect to pull off the shelf to hear too often. ~ Richard S. Ginell, Rovi

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