Twilight Time
Twilight Time
- Instrumentation Flexible ensemble (5 Instruments)
- Editor Inge Sunde
- Series Flex 5
-
Difficulty Level
- Edition Score and Parts
- Publisher Norsk Noteservice
- Order no. WN261723121
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Description:
A perfect tune for wind ensemble!
A driving beat leads the unforgettable swinging melody, and each instrumental part has both melodic and rhythmic tasks along the way.
This is another arrangement in the popular series SHOWBLOW, where 5 flexible parts make it approachable by almost any wind ensemble.
Twilight Time was first recorded as an instrumental by The Three Suns in 1944. Les Brown's version was also an instrumental, released in 1945 as the B-side of "Sentimental Journey".
In the same year came the first vocal version of the song, by bandleader Jimmy Dorsey and Teddy Walters on vocals. Songwriter Buck Ram was inspired by a beautiful sunset while driving through the countryside, and then the opening line appeared: “Heavenly shades of night are falling, it’s twilight time.”
The song has been recorded by numerous groups over the years. The Platters' version from 1958 is perhaps the best-known.
A very functionally written arrangement of one of the most popular standards from the 1940s, and both musicians and audience will love it!
A driving beat leads the unforgettable swinging melody, and each instrumental part has both melodic and rhythmic tasks along the way.
This is another arrangement in the popular series SHOWBLOW, where 5 flexible parts make it approachable by almost any wind ensemble.
Twilight Time was first recorded as an instrumental by The Three Suns in 1944. Les Brown's version was also an instrumental, released in 1945 as the B-side of "Sentimental Journey".
In the same year came the first vocal version of the song, by bandleader Jimmy Dorsey and Teddy Walters on vocals. Songwriter Buck Ram was inspired by a beautiful sunset while driving through the countryside, and then the opening line appeared: “Heavenly shades of night are falling, it’s twilight time.”
The song has been recorded by numerous groups over the years. The Platters' version from 1958 is perhaps the best-known.
A very functionally written arrangement of one of the most popular standards from the 1940s, and both musicians and audience will love it!