Table of Contents
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Artist or Composer / Score name | Cover | List of Contents |
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(500) Days Of Summer Piano Theme ( Mychael Danna, Rob Simonsen) | (500) Days Of Summer Piano Theme ( Mychael Danna, Rob Simonsen) | |
10,000 Maniacs Because The Night Piano Solo sheet music | ||
100 Golden Standards The World’s Best Piano Arrangements by the greatest pianists of the Century | The World’s Best Piano Arrangements | |
100 Great Keyboard Intros Songbook | 100 Great Keyboard Intros Songbook | |
100 Greatest Film Scores (Book) by Matt Lawson & Laurence E. MacDonald | ||
100 greatest POP songs | 100 greats pop songs | |
100 Greatest Songs of Rock & Roll, Selections From Piano Vocal Guitar Sheet Music | 100 Greatest Songs of Rock & Roll, Selections From Piano Vocal Guitar Sheet Music | |
100 Hits Simply The Best – Guitar (Die besten Songs aus Pop Rock) German | 100 Hits Simply The Best (Die besten Songs aus Pop | |
100 Jazz & Blues Greats Book | 100 Jazz & Blues Greats | |
100 Jazz Solos & Etudes by Jacob Wise | 100 Jazz solos | |
100 Light Classics For Piano Solo | 100 Light Classics For Piano Solo | |
100 Must-Know Jazz Tunes with MP3 audio tracks to Play Along | 100 Must-Know Jazz Tune – C version | |
100 of the Best Movie Songs Ever! | 100 best movie songs 1 & 100 best movie songs 2 | |
100 Of The Best Songs Ever For The Keyboard by Daniel Scott | 100 Of The Best Songs Ever For The Keyboard | |
100 Piano Solos | 100 piano solos 1 | |
100 Pop Hits Of The 90’s by Dan Coates | 100 Pop Hits Of The 90’s by Dan Coates | |
100 Rock N Roll Standards Piano Vocal Guitar chords | 100 Rock N Roll Standards Piano Vocal Guitar chords contents | |
100 Songs For Kids – Easy Guitar Lyrics with Tablature | 100 Songs For Kids – Easy Guitar Lyrics | |
100 Tunes Every Musician Should Know Professional Chord Changes And Substitutions By Dick Hyman | 100 Tunes Every Musician Should Know Professional Chord Changes And Substitutions By Dick Hyman | |
100 Ultimate Blues Riffs For Piano Keyboards | 100 ultimate riffs jazz piano | |
100 Women Of Pop And Rock 100 songs by 100 artists | 100 Women Of Pop And Rock 100 songs by 100 artists Piano Vocal Guitaral Leonard | |
100 Years Of Popular Music 1980s Part Two Piano Vocal Guitar Chords | 100 Years Of Popular Music 1980s Part Two Piano Vocal Guitar Chords | |
1000 Examples of Musical Dictation (Ladukhin, Nikolay) | 1000 Examples of Musical Dictation | |
1000 Words – Final Fantasy X-2.mscz | ||
1001 Blues Licks by Toby Wine – Piano | 1001 Blues Licks by Toby Wine – Piano | |
1001 Jazz Licks A Complete Jazz Vocabulary For The Improvising Musician (Jack Shneidman) | 1001 Jazz Licks A Complete Jazz Vocabulary For The Improvising Musician (Jack Shneidman) | |
101 Cançoes Que Tocaram O Brasil Nelson Motta (Book) (Brazilian Portuguese) | ||
101 Frank Sinatra Hits For Buskers | 101 Frank Sinatra Hits For Buskers | |
101 Mississippi Delta Blues Fingerpicking Licks Guitar and TAB by Larry McCabe | Larry McCabe – 101 Mississippi Delta Blues Fingerpicking Licks | |
101 Must-Know Blues Licks (Guitar Educational) (Wolf Marshall) PDF + MP3 audio tracks Play Along with Tablature | 101 Must-Know Blues Licks (Guitar Educational) (Wolf Marshall) | |
1015 Songs – The Original Musicians’s (Musicals) | 1015 Songs – The Original, Musicians’s (Musicals) | |
106 Songs Everybody Plays | 106 Songs Everybody Plays | |
11 Short Classical Piano Pieces | 11 Short Classical Piano Pieces | |
116 Arrangements Of Baroque, Classical & Ballet Pieces For Piano Solo | 116 Arrangements Of Baroque, Classical & Ballet Pieces For Piano Solo | |
129 Easy Pieces For Piano Solo, also for beginners | 129 easy pieces for piano solo | |
12th Street RAG – Liberace Collection Book of 5 compositions | ||
12th Street Rag by Euday Bowman (Piano Solo sheet music, Noten, partition, partitura, spartito).mscz | ||
150 Best Songs For Acoustic Guitar | ||
150 More Of The Most Beautiful Songs Ever (Songbook) Piano Vocal Guitar | 150 More Of The Most Beautiful Songs Ever (Songbook) Piano Vocal Guitar | |
150 Of The Best Jazz Standards Ever | 150 Of The Best Jazz Standards Ever | |
150 Of The Most Beautiful Songs Ever 3rd Edition | 150 Of The Most Beautiful Songs Ever 3rd Edit1 and 150 Of The Most Beautiful Songs Ever 3rd Edit2 | |
16 Pop and Movies Hits Keyboard Piano Book (Mike Emerson) | 16 Pop and Movies Hits Keyboard Piano Book (Mike Emerson) | |
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue The Musical By Leonard Bernstein And Alan Jay Lerner Vocal Selections | ||
17 Moments of Spring – Mgnovenia (Mikael Tariverdiev) | ||
1812 Overture Op. 49 Thaikovsky (arr. piano solo) | ||
1950s Jazz (Fake Book lead sheet music) | 1950s Jazz (Fake Book lead sheet music) | |
20 Century Fox Theme Transcription By Deusde Coppen | ||
20 Modern BEBOP Licks – by Noah Kellman All Keys with left hands chords | 20 Modern BEBOP Licks – by Noah Kellman All Keys with left hands chords | |
200 Jazz Standards Tunes (chords progressions for C Instruments) Bob Taylor | 200 Jazz Standards Tunes (chords progressions for C Instruments) Bob Taylor | |
200 Of The Best Songs From Jazz Of The ’50s | jazz of the 50s | |
2014 Top Hits Of 2014 Songbook Piano Vocal Guitar | 2014 Top Hits Of 2014 Songbook Piano Vocal Guitar | |
2016 Top Hits Of 2016 Songbook Piano Vocal Guitar | 2016 Top Hits Of 2016 Songbook Piano Vocal Guitar | |
2018 Greatest Pop Movie Hits Songbook For Piano | 2018 Greatest Pop Movie Hits Songbook For Piano | |
2019 GREATEST POP MOVIE HITS SONGBOOK FOR PIANO PART 2 Piano sheet music (Jim Presley) | 2019 GREATEST POP MOVIE HITS SONGBOOK FOR PIANO PART 2 Piano sheet music (Jim Presley) | |
2020 Greatest Pop Piano Sheet Music Book Songbooks For Piano | 2020 Greatest Pop Piano Sheet Music Book Songbooks For Piano | |
20th Century Classics Volume 1 | 20th Century Classics Volume 1 | |
20th Century Jazz Guitar by Richie Zellon (with Tablature) | 20th Century Jazz Guitar by Richie Zellon | |
20th Century Masters Of Fingerstyle Guitar by John Stropes | 20th Century Masters Of Fingerstyle Guitar by John Stropes | |
20th Century Piano Music – Book (1990) David Burge | 20th Century Piano Music Book (1990) David Burge | |
24 Etudes Op.35 – Fernando Sor (1778 – 1839) (Musescore File).mscz | ||
24_Preludes_Op.34 Shostakovich.mscz | ||
25 Short Classical Guitar Pieces (with Tablature) | 25 Short Classical Guitar Pieces | |
262 Classic Piano Rags Various Composers | 262 Classic Piano Rags Various Composers | |
273 Easy And Intermediate Piano Pieces | 273 Easy And Intermediate Piano Pieces contents | |
28 Modern Jazz Trumpet Solos Book 2 | 28 Modern Jazz Trumpet Solos Book 2 | |
3.10 to Yuma (Marco Beltrami) | ||
30 Best Rock Guitar Songs Ever (Guitar TABs) | 30 Best Rock Guitar Songs Ever (Guitar TABs) | |
300 Sacred Songs Melody Lyrics Chords Fake Book Melody Lyrics Chords | 300 Sacred Songs Melody Lyrics Chords Fake Book Melody Lyrics Chords_compressed | |
36 Christmas Carols Songs | 36 christmas carols songs | |
38 Special Guitar Anthology Guitar Recorded Vers. with Tablature | 38 special guitar anthology | |
39 Progressive Solos For Classical Guitar (with Tablature) | 39 Progressive Solos For Classical Guitar | |
39 Progressive Solos For Classical Guitar Book 2 (with Tablature) | 39 Progressive Solos For Classical Guitar Book 2 sheet music pdf | |
40 Easy Guitar Pieces (Painted with the Sound) | ||
49 Most Popular Jazz Songs | 49 Most Popular Jazz Songs | |
5 Christmas Songs Sheet Music Trumpet in B & Piano accompaniment (Viktor Dick) | 5 Christmas Songs Sheet Music Trumpet in B & Piano accompaniement (Viktor Dick) | |
50 Broadway Shows 50 Broadway Songs | 50 Broadway Shows 50 Broadway Songs | |
50 Classical Guitar Solos In Tablature (Howard Wallach) with Tablature | 50 Classical Guitar Solos In Tablature (Howard Wallach) | |
50 Essential Bebop Heads Arranged For Guitar Tablature (best lines Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonious Monk and more) | 50 Essential Bebop Heads Arranged For Guitar Tablature (best lines Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonious Monk and more) | |
50 Gershwin Classics Songbook | 50 Gershwin Classics Songbook | |
50 Jazz Standards Every Jazz Musician Needs To Know with MP3 audio tracks to Play Along | 50 Jazz Standards Every Jazz Musician Needs To Know – C version | |
50 Most Popular Classical Melodies (Easy Piano) | 50 Most Popular Classical Melodies | |
50 Of The Most Beautiful Piano Love Songs Solos Ever. | 50 OF THE MOST BEAUTIFUL PIANO LOVE SONGS SOLOS EVER | |
50 Piano Arrangements Of Hymns And Gospel Songs (Fred Bock’s Best) | 50 Piano Arrangements Of Hymns sheet music | |
50 Piano Classics – Easy | 50 piano classics | |
50 Riffs For Blues Guitar – Martin Shellard with MP3 audio to Play Along with Tablature | 50 riffs for blues guitar | |
500 Piano Intros For The Great Standards – Steinway | 500 piano intros | |
55 Country Classics (Voice, piano, Guitar) | 55 Country Classics (Voice, piano, Guitar) | |
557 Jazz Standards (Sheet Music – in C for all instruments) swing to bop (lead sheet) | Standards (Sheet Music – Piano) | |
60 Progressive Solos For Classical Guitar By Mark Phillips (with Tablature) | ||
67 Fun Songs arranged by Jon Schmidt (Piano) | ||
70’s Hits (Easy Piano Solos) – Hans-Gunter Heumann [Piano, Vocal, Chords] | ||
750.000 anni fa.l’Amore (Banco del Mutuo Soccorso) | ||
75th Anniversary A Tribute In Music From The 20s Through The 90s Various Artists Warner Bros | 75th Anniversary A Tribute In Music From The 20s Through The 90s Various Artists Warner Bros | |
78 Quarterly No 1 and 2 (1967) Book magazine | ||
8 ½ Theme (Nino Rota) | ||
8 Femmes (Krishna Levy) | ||
8 Jazz scales you need to know.mscz | ||
80 Most Requested LDS Songs (Mormon music) | 80 Most Requested LDS Songs (Mormon music) | |
88 Piano Classics For Beginners – David Dutkanicz | 88 Piano Classics For Beginners – David Dutkanicz | |
88 The Giants Of Jazz Piano by Robert L. Foerschuk (Book) foreword by Keith Jarrett | ||
9 easy guitar pieces – Sveinn Eythorsson | ||
97 Oeuvres pour Guitare de Jean Francois DELCAMP | 97 Oeuvres pour Guitare de Jean Francois DELCAMP | |
99 Easy Piano Pieces | 99 Easy Piano Pieces | |
A Beautiful Mind – A Kalidoscope of Mathematics | ||
A Beautiful Mind – All Love Can Be | A Beautiful Mind – All Love Can Be | |
A Beautiful Mind – Kalidoscope | ||
A Child Is Born – Oscar Peterson (Musescore File).mscz | ||
A Chordal Concept For Jazz Guitar by Peter O’Mara | A Chordal Concept For Jazz Guitar by Peter O’Mara | |
A Ciascuno il Suo (Luis Bacalov) | ||
A Clare Benediction – John Rutter – Piano Solo Arr. (Musescore File).mscz | ||
A Clockwork Orange (Beethoviana) | A Clockwork Orange (Beethoviana) | |
A Clockwork Orange (Beethoviana) (Musescore File).mscz | ||
A Comparative Study Of The 24 Preludes Of A. Scriabin And Sergei Rachmaninoff (book) | ||
A Complete Course of Instruction For The Piano-Forte (Dr Karl Merz) (1885) | Instruction… | |
A Cool Yule. Ten Jazzy Christmas Songs | A Cool Yule. Ten Jazzy Christmas Songs | |
A Creative Approach To Jazz Piano Harmony Bill Dobbins | A Creative Approach To Jazz Piano Harmony Bill Dobbins | |
A Creative Approach To Practicing JAZZ – by David Baker | A Creative Approach To pravtising Jazz | |
A Dance of Dragons – Blood of the Dragon (Game of Thrones) Piano solo arr. | ||
A Dictionary of Music and Musicians Vol. 4 (A.D. 1450-1880) Edited in 1889 | ||
A dozen A Day Book 1 Technical exercises for the piano | A dozen A Day Book 1 Technical exercises for the piano |
Piano Concerto in A Minor by Grieg (arr. for 2 pianos, sheet music).
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Edvard Grieg
Edvard Grieg was born in Bergen 15th of June 1843, in the Grieg family’s house in Strandgaten 152.
Edvard Hagerup Grieg (b. 15 June 1843, d. 4 September 1907).
Family: Married in Copenhagen 11 June 1867 with his first cousin Nina Hagerup. One child: Alexandra Grieg (1868 – 1869) dead from meningitis.
Famous compositions: Piano Concerto in a minor, Incidental music for Ibsen’s drama “Peer Gynt” (Morning Mood, In the Hall of the Mountain King, Solveig’s Song a.o.), Lyric Pieces for piano, Holberg Suite, Last Spring.
Childhood
Edvard Grieg’s parents were Alexander Grieg and Gesine Judithe Hagerup. He grew up in a successful merchant family, together with his brother John (born 1840) and his sisters Maren (born 1837), Ingeborg Benedicte (born 1838) and Elisabeth (born 1845). Very early he showed a strong interest in music and for the piano as instrument. He could sit at the piano for hours, exploring all kinds of tunes on his own.
Grieg recollects this when he says:
Why not begin by remembering the wonderful, mystical satisfaction of stretching one’s arms up to the piano and bringing forth – not a melody. Far from it! No, it had to be a chord. First a third, then a fifth, then a seventh. And finally, both hands helping – Oh joy! – a ninth, the dominant ninth chord. When I had discovered this my rapture knew no bounds. That was a success! Nothing since has been able to excite me so profoundly as this.
That a child with such a talent as Edvard Grieg’s had a mother like Gesine Hagerup Grieg and a father who could support economically, had to give great results. Since he wasn’t the oldest son, Edvard didn’t have to take an education that could make him capable of taking over the family-business; this was instead his big-brother John’s destiny. With loving, but firm guidance, his mother led Edvard forward into the wonder of music.
School years in Bergen
Edvard wasn’t the most disciplined pupil. He preferred to discover the music himself. Instead of the compulsory etudes he preferred to improvise and play and finding new tunes and melodies. However, despite the certain amount of reluctance, his love for music grew into what was to become, in his innermost spirit, the right thing to do in life – to be an artist.
His marks were quite bad and give a good account of his deepest interests. His interest lay in music. A nickname he got at school was Mosak, because he had answered Mozart when the teacher had asked which composer had composed a work called Requiem. The other pupils had not heard about Mozart, or other composers, and found it strange that Edvard, who didn’t contribute much in class, could answer on this question.
A talent is discovered
The hero in the young Edvard Grieg’s dreams was the «fairytale-uncle» the famous violin virtuoso Ole Bull. Ole Bull’s brother was married to Edvard’s aunt, but it was first of all through the musical environment in Bergen that Ole Bull and Grieg’s parents got to know each other.In the summer of 1858 Ole Bull came on a visit to Alexander and Gesine Grieg at Landås Estate.
The event became, according to Grieg, the most important single event in his life. Edvard Grieg had to play for the world-famous violinist, and after he had heard him playing some of his own small compositions, Ole Bull became very serious and spoke slowly with Grieg’s parents. After that he came over to Edvard and said: «You are going to Leipzig to become an artist!» – and Grieg went…
Studies in Leipzig
Edvard Grieg ended his education in Norway and went to the music conservatory in Leipzig, Germany. This conservatory was founded in 1843 by Felix Mendelsohn, and was reckoned to be the best and most modern conservatory in Europe.
Even though Edvard Grieg had dreamed his whole youth to become an artist, it was a strange experience to come from a small city like Bergen to a European metropolis with narrow streets, tall buildings and crowds of people. The first time was a time with homesickness and language-problems, but shortly he started to feel at home. As teachers in Leipzig he had some of the best pedagogues in Europe: Ignaz Moscheles in piano, Carl Reinecke in composition and Moritz Hauptmann, whom Edvard Grieg had the greatest respect for.
During his stay in Leipzig Edvard Grieg came in contact with the European music-tradition, first of all he studied the works of Mozart and Beethoven, but also the compositions of more modern composers like Mendelsohn, Schumann and Wagner. Unfortunately he got pleuritt, a kind of tuberculosis, which marked him for the rest of his life. His left lung collapsed, which made his back bend, and greatly reduced his lung-capacity. Nevertheless he graduated from the conservatory with excellent marks in 1862.
In Copenhagen
Edvard Grieg gave his first concert 18th of August 1861 in the Swedish city of Karlshamn. His debut in his hometown came the year after. Among other works at this concert, his string-quartet in d-minor was performed, a work that has disappeared without a trace. Edvard Grieg’s goal was to compose Norwegian music, but as a realist he knew that he had to go abroad to get in contact with an environment that could offer him a development as a composer. Thus Grieg went to Copenhagen, the only Scandinavian city with a rich cultural life on an international level.
The time in Denmark was a happy time for Edvard Grieg. He met several persons that should become lifelong friends of his, the most important was his cousin Nina Hagerup. They had grown up together in Bergen, but Nina moved with her family to Copenhagen when she was eight years.
Nina was an excellent pianist, but first of all it was her beautiful voice that fascinated Grieg. Grieg was so charmed by his cousin, that they were secretly engaged in 1864. In spite of the true love between Edvard and Nina, none of their parents were present at the couple’s wedding on the 11th June 1867.
The Kristiania-years
The Griegs went from Copenhagen to Kristiania (Oslo) in order to participate in the building of a Norwegian environment for music in the Norwegian capital. It became a period of hard labour, both concerning the establishing of a Norwegian musical-life and concerning their daily income.
Their daughter Alexandra was born on the 10th April 1868. The same year Edvard Grieg composed his brilliant piano concerto in a minor, during a stay at Søllerød in Denmark. This masterpiece became his final breakthrough as a composer, and after this he was reckoned as one of the greatest composers in his time.
The joy of the success as a composer was to be short; on the 21st May 1869 their daughter Alexandra dies from meningitis while visiting their family in Bergen. The fact that they didn’t have a child was maybe the main reason why Edvard and Nina didn’t become a normal couple, but ended up as a two artists that travelled around in Europe without proper roots. This situation became clearer in 1875 when Grieg’s parents died.
Now they didn’t have a home in Bergen to come home to. In addition to this, Edvard Grieg felt that he had stagnated artistically. The situation reached a critical point in 1883 when Edvard left Nina. The intervening force that rescued their marriage was Grieg’s incomparable friend Frants Beyer. He persuaded Grieg to reconcile with Nina, and they went to Rome in order to start the reconciling process.
Frants Beyer also convinced Grieg that he needed a proper home, something to come home to after long tours abroad. Beyer helped Grieg to buy a place at Hop, in the outskirts of his hometown Bergen, and in 1885 Edvard and Nina Grieg could move into their villa at Troldhaugen.
Grieg, Ibsen and Bjørnson
On the beginning of the 1870’s Edvard Grieg co-operated extensively with the Norwegian author Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson, which led to Grieg composing music to Bjørnson’s poems.
Grieg and Bjørnson’s most ambitious project was a national opera based on the history of the Norwegian king Olav Trygvason. In the beginning the work went forward quickly, but after a while they both lost some of the inspiration and a conflict raised between the two. The conflict concerned what had to be done first; the music or the libretto.
When there came to a halt in the work with the opera, Grieg found time to compose music for the Norwegian playwright and poet Henrik Ibsen’s dramatic poem Peer Gynt. To start working with Ibsen, before the opera was finished, made Bjørnson so dissatisfied that a conflict rose between Grieg and Bjørnson, a conflict that lasted for almost 16 years.
Setting music to Peer Gynt wasn’t as easy as he had thought it would be, but on the 24th February 1876, the play was performed for the first time on Christiania Theater in Oslo, and was an immediate success. Alongside the work with Peer Gynt, Grieg also set music to six poems by Ibsen. In 1888 and in 1893 Grieg published respectively the Peer Gynt Suite I and II, which contained the most popular melodies from the play Peer Gynt. These two suites are among the most played orchestral pieces in our time.
An established composer
As a composer Edvard Grieg was fortunate to be a success while still alive. First of all it was because of his piano-concerto in a-minor and the music for Peer Gynt, but also as a composer of Romances and of small piano-pieces Grieg became famous and relatively wealthy.
Grieg spent much time on travels, and received impressions from the big musical metropolis like Leipzig, Prague, Berlin, London and Paris, as well as the Norwegian mountains. He found new ways of approach to the Norwegian folk music, with the result that in the late 19th century France they spoke about two main stiles in music; the Russian school and the Norwegian School.
On his many journeys in Europe he met, and became a good friend of, other composers like Peter Tchaikowsky, Johannes Brahms, Franz Liszt, Frederic Delius, Camille Saint-Saens, Julius Röntgen and more. He influenced other composers, first of all Bela Bartok, but also Maurice Ravel and Claude Debussy are influenced by Edvard Grieg.
Even though Edvard Grieg was well paid by Peters Verlag in Leipzig for his compositions, it was said that they flagged at the publishers every time they received a new collection of Lyric Pieces, it was through his tours that Grieg received his main income. He was indefatigable on his concert tours. With only one lung working it is astounding that he managed to cope with the life on tour. Luckily he was able to return to Norway and Troldhaugen for the summers, and through walks in the nature get his energy back before he left for Europe in the autumn.
The extensive touring with innumerable concerts, combined with a weak health condition was to put an end to his life. His body couldn’t take more, even though his will to continue absolutely was present. In September 1907 he and Nina planned to participate on the music-festival in Leeds, England. They had left Troldhaugen for the season and lodged at Hotel Norge in Bergen, waiting for the boat that should take them to England via Oslo.
Grieg became seriously ill and was hospitalized in Bergen, where he died on September 4th 1907 of chronic exhaustion.
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