The Oboe BBoard
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Author: Halcyon440
Date: 2016-03-10 08:08
Greetings. Been a while since I've been a regular on here. I'm an adult amateur that has been playing oboe for close to 10 years. I started on my journey because I fell in love with an English Horn piece I heard on the radio back in 2004 (Swan of Tuonela).
Fast forward to current times. I was waiting around at the local mall when they started piping a pretty EH & piano piece over their loudspeakers. I attempted to record it on my phone but the recording quality was too poor. Two weeks later I was back at the mall and the piece was playing again. This time I got a slightly cleaner recording by standing under a speaker. There is still a fountain and other background noise, but I think that someone who knows it should be able to recognize it.
I've asked all the oboists and teachers I know and no one recognizes it. I am hoping that someone on here will be able to solve the mystery.
File is here: https://www.dropbox.com/s/3q9z8rdmecpbh9l/mystery%20piece%20edit.mp3?dl=0
Thank you so much for your time and help!
Hilda, adult amateur
"Nobody is ever patently right about music." - Vigil Thomson
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Author: Oboelips
Date: 2016-03-11 01:15
I listened, and I have no idea. I've not heard it either. Call the mall's general administration department and ask what they're playing...that will get your search started.
It sounds like a contemporary composition to me, on first hearing.
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Author: Octave C. Crow
Date: 2016-03-11 21:20
It might be Omaggio a Bellini by Pasculli. It's a difficult work for English horn and harp. http://www.sheetmusicplus.com/title/omaggio-a-bellini-sheet-music/5121224
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Author: concertmaster3
Date: 2016-03-12 09:23
It's not Omaggio a Bellini, and I don't think it's Amelia nor the Verdi Pasculli pieces.
It almost sounds very Debussy-like? Any French impressionist pieces for English horn that anyone can think of?
Ron Ford
Woodwind Specialist
Performer/Teacher/Arranger
http://www.RonFordMusic.com
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Author: Barry Vincent
Date: 2016-03-13 01:55
This is what I got.
our search - https://www.dropbox.com/s/3q9z8rdmecpbh9l/mystery%20piece%20edit.mp3?dl=0 - did not match any documents.
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Author: MikeC855
Date: 2016-03-15 08:57
Fauré? I'd expand my search to a possible transcription of something for piano and cello. Sounds a lot like (but isn't) Après un Rêve.
-----
Confounding band directors since 1964.
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Author: Halcyon440
Date: 2016-03-21 08:40
Greetings again!
I have identified the piece!!
Leland A. Cossart: Fuenf Vortragsstuecke op. 23 - IV. Liebesgedicht: Andante Quasi Adagio
There is a 2005 recording of it by Albrecht Mayer (possibly on d'amore?) and Markus Becker.
Thank you all for your help! Now off to see if I can find the sheet music :D
Hilda, adult amateur
"Nobody is ever patently right about music." - Vigil Thomson
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Author: Halcyon440
Date: 2016-03-21 18:32
https://youtu.be/o1-LmIr7AGc
Hilda, adult amateur
"Nobody is ever patently right about music." - Vigil Thomson
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Author: Chris P
Date: 2016-03-21 19:25
https://youtu.be/o1-LmIr7AGc
"This video is not available." That's a shame, but at least the info has been provided even if some of it is questionable:
Provided to YouTube by Warner Music Group
Liebesgedicht, Op.23 No.4 · Markus Becker/Albrecht Mayer
Music for Oboe and Piano
℗ 1999 Warner Classics, Warner Music UK Ltd
Released on: 1999-02-01
Featured Vocalist, Lead Vocals, Performed by: Markus Becker
Featured Vocalist, Lead Vocals, Performed by: Albrecht Mayer
Musicians, Oboe De Amore: Albrecht Mayer
Musicians, Piano: Markus Becker
Oboe: Markus Becker
Piano: Albrecht Mayer
Producer: John Fraser
Tonmeister: Jonathan Allen
Composer: Leland A. Cossart
Former oboe finisher
Howarth of London
1998 - 2010
The opinions I express are my own.
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Author: MikeC855
Date: 2016-03-22 09:23
> "This video is not available."
That's too bad, Chris. What they didn't say is "...not available in the UK." It's lovely, and eight tracks of the CD play on YouTube here in the US.
While the album seems to consist mostly of German Romantics, from the little I was able to find online, Leland Albert Cossart (1877-1965) was German but studied in France. Explains the style throwing us off track. Appears to have written mostly for solo oboe, d'amore, and cor, with both piano and woodwind ensemble accompaniment.
Good luck in your search for the score, Hilda. I found other Cossart works on sheet music download sites, but not this one.
-----
Confounding band directors since 1964.
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