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Tango Brasileiro
2020
Bassoon and piano or harpsichord
Duration ≃ 02:45 | Difficulty ≃ 5/10
$ 3.99
SCORE Bassoon and piano or harpsichord
PDF - 7 pages
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PART Bassoon
PDF - 4 pages
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BACKING TRACK
MP3 - 1 track
O Trenzinho [little train in Brazilian Portuguese] evokes the whimsical journey of a little train which, despite twists and turns and obstacles, takes us on a journey of discovery through the landscapes of the Brazilian countryside.
I had already borrowed the charming name Jacaré-mirim [little crocodile in the Gurani Indian language] from Darius Milhaud, composer of Danses de Jacaré-mirim Op. 256, to name my first Tango Brasileiro.
It was while searching for a third and final theme to complete Jacaré-mirim that the main theme of O Trenzinho [little train] came to me.
Too different to complement my first composition, I preferred to use it to create a new Tango Brasileiro, which does indeed feature three distinct themes.
It was therefore through one of those shortcuts of thought that the human mind is accustomed to that the title of this new choro came to me, remembering that incredible photograph showing Darius Milhaud and Paul Claudel sitting on the front step of a steam train during their stay in Brazil in 1917.
In my mind, these two Brazilian-inspired pieces are like fraternal twins, the first shorter with two themes framed by a short introduction and a coda, the second slightly more modern in its harmony and more regular in its structure with its three traditional themes.
Frédéric Cellier
Encouraged by Jean Françaix, who praised him as an “excellent musician and tireless arranger,” Frédéric Cellier is the founder and artistic director of STRADIVARIUS Editions.
He is the author of light music pieces played around the world and a considerable number of arrangements in all styles and for all instruments, acclaimed by many personalities in the music world, including Michèle Auric, Jean Françaix, Adrian Gershwin, Wynton Marsalis, Yehudi Menuhin, Madeleine Milhaud, Manuel Rosenthal, Gabriel Tacchino, and Ornella Volta.
A concert clarinetist and certified teacher at the National Conservatories of Nice, Marseille, and Avignon, Frédéric Cellier is a laureate of the Fondation de France and the Yehudi Menuhin Foundation.
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