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Originalno

Freeing the Caged Bird for Woodwind Quintet - full score and parts. Barbara Harbach. Bassoon sheet music. Horn sheet music. Oboe sheet music.

Prevod

Freeing the Caged Bird for Woodwind Quintet - full score and parts. Barbara Harbach. Fagot note. Horn note. Oboa note.

Originalno

Freeing the Caged Bird for Woodwind Quintet - full score and parts composed by Barbara Harbach. 1946-. For woodwind quintet. Chamber and Orchestral. Full score and parts. 40 pages. Published by Vivace Press. VV.VIV-939. Freeing the Caged Bird is a four-movement tribute inspired by the literary works of four native St. Louis women who struggled to give voice to their creativity. The first movement is based on the book I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings , by Maya Angelou, who is regarded as one of the great voices of contemporary literature. Inspired by Sara Teasdale's poem "Sunset St. Louis" the second movement evokes the swirling, twilight imagery of her poem. The third movement represents Kate Chopin's then notorious novel The Awakening, first published in 1899. The last movement, based on Emily Hahn's book, Hong Kong Holiday, expresses the joie de vivre of a woman who refused to accept society's dictums.

Prevod

Freeing the Caged Bird for Woodwind Quintet - full score and parts composed by Barbara Harbach. 1946 -. Za pihalni kvintet. Komoro in Orchestral. Polna rezultat in deli. 40 strani. Izdala Vivace Press. VV.VIV-939. Freeing the Caged Bird is a four-movement tribute inspired by the literary works of four native St. Louis women who struggled to give voice to their creativity. The first movement is based on the book I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings , by Maya Angelou, who is regarded as one of the great voices of contemporary literature. Inspired by Sara Teasdale's poem "Sunset St. Louis" the second movement evokes the swirling, twilight imagery of her poem. The third movement represents Kate Chopin's then notorious novel The Awakening, first published in 1899. The last movement, based on Emily Hahn's book, Hong Kong Holiday, expresses the joie de vivre of a woman who refused to accept society's dictums.