"Sicilienne" Op. 78 by Gabriel Fauré Tuba Solo. Sheet Music Play Along!

2 years ago
54

Happy Friday BrassNation. We have a Tuba Solo with Piano version of "Sicilienne," Op. 78 by Gabriel Fauré arr. Drew Fennell for you today, featuring Brian Kelley on a Bb Tuba. This awesome arrangement comes in three versions: D minor, G minor and G minor Tuba Version with transposing parts in every practical key and clef (full list below). Hope you enjoy. SHEET MUSIC & PIANO BACKING TRACKS Available for DOWNLAOD at: https://www.matonizz.com/product/sicilienne/

Visit www.dfmusicinc.com for 10% discount with promo code "Matonizz"
Musicians:

Brian Kelley (Tuba at RCB)
Online Lessons: briankelleytuba@gmail.com
Instrument Used:
https://www.dfmusicinc.com/John-Packer-EEb-Tuba-4-valve-comp-p/jp277.htm

Birute Stundziaite (Piano)

Dmitry Babkin (Sound Engineer)
dbrave.bob@gmail.com

Suggested Instrumental Combinations:

This arrangement is crafted to be effective for multiple brass instruments and includes parts in nearly every practical key and clef. Below are suggestions from the arranger. Of special note is the version for tuba. The piano part is the same as that of the other G-minor version, but shows changes of octave where those alterations were made.

G-minor Version (original key):

Cornet/Trumpet/Flugelhorn in Bb
Horn in F or Eb
Trombone/Euphonium/Baritone B.C.
Trombone (including Tenor Clef)
Euphonium/Baritone T.C.

D-minor Version:

Cornet/Trumpet/Flugelhorn in Bb
Trombone/Euphonium/Baritone B.C.
Euphonium/Baritone T.C.

G-minor Version (tuba version):

Tuba (B.C.)
Tuba in Eb
Tuba in Bb

Performance Notes:

Fauré’s lovely work, “Sicilienne,” was originally composed in 1893 as incidental music for a comedic ballet, “Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme.” The production was cancelled, and the piece sat essentially unperformed for five years until the composer orchestrated it as incidental music for “Palléas et Melisande.” The piece is most known from a suite of music from 1909, culled from that body of music.
While the dynamic of the piece is generally soft, and even the two forte sections should be somewhat measured, the player should not feel unduly constrained to piano and pianissimo. The melody should be allowed to rise and fall as the pitch rises and falls, and the “feeling” of a soft dynamic is more important than strict adherence to it. The soloist becomes accompanist at a few points—most notably in the section at letters E and F, and even then, the warm cantabile aspect should be kept.

#faure #sicilienne #tuba

EUPHONIUM, TUBA, TRUMPET, FRENCH HORN, TROMBONE, CORNET, BARITONE, TENOR HORN, FLUGELHORN, PERCUSSION

Affiliate links
Ultrabreathe:
https://amzn.to/2jLV8m6

Voldyne 5000:
https://amzn.to/2jNB2rF

Live Strong, Play Strong, Represent Clothing:
teespring.com/theunderdog
teespring.com/the-cowboy
teespring.com/therebellionstrong
teespring.com/thegodfatherstrong

0:00 - "Sicilienne" (Tuba Solo with Piano in G Minor)
3:49 - Sheet Music Download
4:49 - Instruments We Use
5:24 - Thank You

Loading comments...