The Music Partner series
Publications with a 'Q' prefix contain both Sheet Music and a CD (or CDs) together in an all-in-one 'pack'.
An 'MP' prefix indicates that ONLY the CD accompaniment is included (The music book must be purchased separately).
To find the Sheet Music for an 'MP' item, change the 'MP' to either 'EP' or 'H' (example: The 'MP19A' CD combines with 'EP19A'). Changing the prefix works for *most* cases, but not all (example: The 'MP3105' CD combines with either 'EP3105AA' or 'EP3105B').
Please contact us if you are having trouble locating the correct item.
Sheet Music & CD Play-along Pack. Full orchestral backing track (recorded by a live orchestra, NOT computer-generated). Includes Parts for Bb and Eb Trumpet.
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Programme Notes:
Joseph Haydn's Trumpet Concerto in E flat major (Concerto per il Clarino, Hob.: VII e, 1) was written in 1796, when he was 64 years old, for his long time friend Anton Weidinger.
Anton Weidinger reputably had developed a keyed trumpet which could play chromatically throughout its entire range. Before this, the trumpet was commonly valveless and could only play a limited range of harmonic notes by altering lip pressure. These harmonic notes were clustered in the higher registers, so previous trumpet concertos could only play melodies at very high pitches (e.g., Bach's Brandenburg Concerto No. 2). Haydn's concerto includes melodies in the lower register, exploiting the capabilities of the new instrument.
There were attempts all over Europe around the mid-classical era to expand the range of the trumpet using valves, and Weidinger's idea of drilling holes and covering them with flute-like keys proved reasonably unpopular, due to their poorer quality of sound. Thus the natural trumpet still had continual use in the classical orchestra whilst the keyed trumpet had barely any repertoire. The valved trumpets used today started to appear in the 1830s.