Philip Sparke: The Green Hills of Tyrol: Brass Band And Solo
Air Varié for Euphonium and Brass Band
COMPOSER:
Philip Sparke
PUBLISHER:
Anglo Music Press
PRODUCT FORMAT:
Score and Parts
The Green Hills of Tyrol was commissioned by Jrena and Beat Knüsel for their son, Swiss euphonium player Joel Knüsel, to celebrate his 20th birthday in 2019. The request was for a piece suitable for use in a solo competition, possibly using a Scottish or Irish melody, and composer Philip Sparke
Specifications
Composer | Philip Sparke |
Publisher | Anglo Music Press |
Instrumentation | Brass Band and Euphonium |
Product Format | Score and Parts |
Description Product Type | Set |
Genre | Solo & Concerto |
Year of Publication | 2022 |
ISMN | 9790570710805 |
No. | AMP 504-030 |
Series | Anglo Music Midway Series |
Text language | Dutch;English;French;German |
Description
The Green Hills of Tyrol was commissioned by Jrena and Beat Knüsel for their son, Swiss euphonium player Joel Knüsel, to celebrate his 20th birthday in 2019. The request was for a piece suitable for use in a solo competition, possibly using a Scottish or Irish melody, and composer Philip Sparke suggested an ‘old-fashioned’ air varie might be a suitable idea. The piece follows the well-established formula of a theme followed by four variations. The history of the original melody is fascinating and, although it is now well-known as a bagpipe tune, its background is Austrian or Italian, rather than Scottish. The tune appears as a chorus of Swiss soldiers in Rossini’s 1829 opera William Tell but was possibly an existing Tyrolean folk tune. In 1854, during the Crimean War, Pipe Major John MacLeod of the 93rd Highlanders heard a band of the Sardinian contingent playing selections from the opera in camp before the Siege of Sebastopol. He was struck by the melody and arranged it for his pipers, calling it The Green Hills of Tyrol, referring to Tell’s visit to that corner of Austria in the opera. It has since become universally popular among pipe bands who usually refer to it as A Scottish Soldier, following the addition of new lyrics in a 1961 hit by Andy Stewart.
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