Iam ver oritur
from: Perpetuum mobile - Songs from the Codex Buranus
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Peter Schindler
Iam ver oritur
from: Perpetuum mobile - Songs from the Codex Buranus
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Peter Schindler
Iam ver oritur

from: Perpetuum mobile - Songs from the Codex Buranus

  • Instrumentation Vocals (high), Mixed Choir (SATB), Soprano Saxophone, Piano, Double Bass and Percussion
  • Optional Instrumentation Vocals (high), Mixed Choir (SATB), Instrument in C, Piano, Double Bass, Percussion, 2 Violins, Viola, Cello and Double Bass
  • Composer Peter Schindler
  • Difficulty Level
    (medium)
  • Edition Piano Score
  • Publisher Carus-Verlag
  • Order no. CV09297-20
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  • from 60 pcs 3,12 €
Minimum Order Quantity: 20 piece
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Description:

  • Language: Latin
  • Pages: 8
  • Release: 01.10.2024
  • Term: 3:00
  • Dimensions: 210 x 297 mm
  • Weight: 24 g
  • Key: G major
  • Genre: Classical Music, Classical Music of the Modern Age
  • ISMN: 9790007329549
The composer Peter Schindler on this single edition from "Perpetuum mobile":

Text 132 in the Codex Buranus shows how true to life the poets and singers were in everyday life at the time when the manuscript was written and how they described or sang about it. What we read there about birdsong sounds like an anticipation of the text "Alle Vögel sind schon da" by August Heinrich Hoffmann von Fallersleben. And the birds are still chirping the same tunes today. What a concert! The stork is still chattering, the nightingale is warbling as ever, the geese are chattering and the cicadas are chirping. Bees are buzzing, woodpeckers are tapping and you can still hear the cuckoo starling.

This wonderful spring music of nature is described in this song. It is a kind of live report from the Middle Ages. Let him rejoice who holds his treasure in his arms with delight. There you go! A cheerful song on a sunny spring day, an atmospheric song in a medium tempo, which transports the rustling of the reeds in the balmy wind directly into the concert hall.