Cabaret ; A Certain Smile ; Chattanoogie Shoe Shine Boy ; Cheerful Little Earful ; Chinatown, My Chinatown ; Chlo-e ; Chuckles ; Clouds ; The Coffee Song (They've Got An Awful Lot Of Coffee In Brazil) ; The Constant Rain (Chove Chuva) ; Count Every Star ; Cute ; Dance With A Dolly (With A Hole In Her Stockin') ; Dancers In Love ; Delicado ; Diamonds Are A Girl's Best Friend ; Dippermouth Blues ; Do I Hear A Waltz? ; Do It Again ; Do You Want To Know A Secret? ; Don't Fence Me In ; Don't Go To Strangers ; Don't Sit Under The Apple Tree (With Anyone Else But Me) ; Don't Wait Too Long; Don't You Worry 'Bout A Thing ; Dream ; � Luxo S� ; East Coast Outpost ; Easy Does It ; Easy To Be Hard (from the Broadway Musical Production HAIR) ; Ebony Samba (Sambanegro) ; Eleanor Rigby ; Embraceable You ; Emily; Evergreen ; Theme From Family Guy ; Feeling Good ; Fifty Ways To Leave Your Lover ; Five Foot Two, Eyes Of Blue (Has Anybody Seen My Girl?) ; Flat Foot Floogee ; Meet) The Flintstones ; Fools Rush In (Where Angels Fear To Tread) ; For My Lady ;
For You ; Fran Dance ; Fugue For Tinhorns ; Fungii Mama ; Get Smart (from the Television Series) ; G.I. Jive ; The Girl That I Marry ; Goldfinger ; Good Bait ; Good Morning Kiss ; Goody Goody ; Gotta Be This Or That ; The Great Pumpkin Waltz ; Greensleeves ; Guitar Boogie Shuffle ; Hallelujah ; Hallelujah Trail ; Happy Days Are Here Again ; Happy New Year ; Happy Talk ; Hawaii Five-O Theme ; He Needs Me ; He's A Real Gone Guy ; Here I'll Stay ; Here's To The Losers ; Hey Jude ; Hi-Heel Sneakers ; Hi-Lili, Hi-Lo ; Hit That Jive Jack ; Holiday For Strings ; Hooray For Hollywood ; Hotta Chocolatta ; How About You? ; How Do You Keep The Music Playing?; How Long Has This Been Going On?; I Can't Stop Loving You ; I Don't Want To Set The World On Fire ; I Fall In Love Too Easily; I Got Lost In His Arms ; I Got Plenty O' Nuttin' ; I Hear You Knocking ; I Heard It Through The Grapevine ; I Just Called To Say I Love You ; I Love Being Here With You ; I Married An Angel ; I Miss You So ; I Only Have Eyes For You ; I Put A Spell On You ; I Think Of You ; I Understand ; I Waited For You ; I Was Doing All Right ;
I Wish I Knew ; I'll Always Be In Love With You ; I'll Follow You ; I'll Never Be The Same ; I'll Never Fall In Love Again ; I'll String Along With You ; I'll Walk Alone; I'm Gonna Live Till I Die ; I'm Gonna Wash That Man Right Outa My Hair ; I'm In A Dancing Mood ; I'm In Love Again ; I'm Just Wild About Harry ; I'm Shooting High ; I'm Thru With Love ; I'm Walkin' ; I've Got A Feelin' You're Foolin' ; I've Got A Gal In Kalamazoo ; Theme From Ice Castles (Through The Eyes Of Love) ; If I Only Had A Brain; If You Are But A Dream ; Incurably Romantic ; Indian Summer ; Into Each Life Some Rain Must Fall ; Isn't It A Pity? ; It Had Better Be Tonight ; It's A Grand Night For Singing ; It's A Sin To Tell A Lie ; It's A Wonderful World (Loving Wonderful You) ; Jam For Your Bread ; The Japanese Sandman ; The Jasmine Tree ; Jazz Legato ; Jeruvian ; Jim ; Jive At Five ; Johnson Rag ; The Joker ; Jumpin' At The Woodside ; Just For A Thrill ; Just One Of Those Things ; Just You, Just Me ; Kelly Blue ; KidneyStew Blues ; King Of The Road ; A Kiss To Build A Dream On ; K-ra-zy For You ; La Fiesta ; La Vie En Rose (Take Me To Your Heart Again) ;
Lady In Blue ; The Lady Sings The Blues ; Last Tango In Paris; The Late Late Show ; Laura ; Lazy Susan ; Lean Baby ; The Legendary Profile ; Lester Leaps In ; Let The Good Times Roll ; Let's Call The Whole Thing Off; Let's Dance ; Little Melonae ; LittleThings Mean A Lot ; Live For Life ; Liza (All The Clouds'll Roll Away) ; Lonely Town ; Looking For A Boy ; Louise ; Love And Marriage ; Love For Sale ; Love Is A Many-Splendored Thing ; Love Is Sweeping The Country ; Love Is Where You Find It ; Love Story; Lovin' You ; Low Rider ; Luck Be A Lady; Lucky Day ; Lullaby Of Broadway ; Malibu ; The Man I Love ; Man In The Mirror ; The Man With The Golden Gun ; Mangos ; Manhattan Serenade ; Mania De Maria ; Marie ; May You Always ; Melody For Melonae ; Miami Vice (Theme from the Universal Television Series) ; Midnight At The Oasis ; Midnight Cowboy ; Midnight Train To Georgia ; Mighty Burner ; Mine ; Minor Chant ; Mrs. Robinson ; Mr. Bojangles ; Mr. Kenyatta ; The Moon Of Manakoora ; Moonlight Serenade; My Honey's Loving Arms ; My Kind Of Town (Chicago Is) ; My Serenade ; Namely You ; New York, New York ;
Newhart Main Title Theme ; Nice Work If You Can Get It ; The Night Is Young ; The Night Is Young (And You're So Beautiful) ; Nobody But You (Gershwin) ; Nobody Does It Better ; Now He Beats The Drum, Now He Stops ; Oblivion ; Oh! Look At Me Now ; On A Misty Night ; On The Alamo ; On The Road To Mandalay ; On The Trail; Once In A Lifetime; One For Daddy-O ; Operator ; Orchids In The Moonlight ; Pagan Love Song ; Peg ; The Phoenix Love Theme (Senza Fine); Pick Up The Pieces ; Pieces Of Dreams (Little Boy Lost); Put 'Em In A Box, Tie 'Em With A Ribbon (And Throw 'Em In The Deep Blue Sea); Put Your Dreams Away (For Another Day) ; Quando, Quando, Quando (Tell Me When) ; The Queen's Fancy ; Racing With The Moon ; Rainy Night ; Ramona ; Reet, Petite And Gone ; Respect ; Rise ; The River Seine (La Seine) ; Runnin' Wild ; 'S Wonderful ; St. Elsewhere ; Samba Dees Days ; Sanford And Son Theme ; Saturday In The Park ; The Second Time Around ; Secret Love ; Send One Your Love ; The September Of My Years ; Serenade In Blue ; Sermonette ; Sesame Street Theme ; Theme From Shaft ; Shall We Dance? ; Shangri-la ; She Didn't Say Yes ;
She's Funny That Way ; Shiny Stockings ; Simple Isn't Easy ; The Simple Life ; Since I Met You Baby ; Sing For Your Supper ; Singin' In The Rain; Six Appeal ; Slow Hot Wind (Lujon) ; Small Day Tomorrow ; Smiles And Smiles To Go ; Smoke On The Water ; So Rare ; Some Enchanted Evening ; Some Other Time ; Some Sunday Morning ; Somethin' Else ; Sometimes I Feel Like A Motherless Child ; Songbird ; Sonny Boy ; Soon ; Soul Man ; The Sound Of Philadelphia (T.S.O.P.) ; Spartacus - Love Theme ; Stairway To The Stars ; Steam Heat ; Still Crazy After All These Years ; Stoney End ; Straighten Up And Fly Right ; Street Of Dreams ; Strictly Confidential ; Summer Me, Winter Me ; A Summer Song ; Summer Wind ; Sunday, Monday Or Always ; A Swingin' Safari ; Tain't Nobody's Biz-ness If I Do ; Taxi Driver (Theme) ; Tea For Two ; Temptation ; Tender Is The Night ; Tennessee Waltz ; That Sunday That Summer (If I Had To Choose) ; That's What Friends Are For ; Their Hearts Were Full Of Spring ; There! I've Said It Again; There's A Boat Dat's Leavin' Soon For New York ; There's "Yes Yes" In Your Eyes ; They Can't Take That Away From Me ;
This Guy's In Love With You ; Three Coins In The Fountain ; Three O'Clock In The Morning ; Three Preludes ; Ticket To Ride ; A Time For Love; Tin Tin Deo ; Trains And Boats And Planes ; Tristeza (Goodbye Sadness) ; True Love ; Twilight Time ; Two For TheRoad; Two Of A Kind ; Under A Blanket Of Blue ; Valeria ; Ventura Highway ; Volare ; Walkin' After Midnight ; The Way We Were ; We're In The Money (The Gold Diggers Serenade); Wee Dot ; What Are You Doing The Rest Of Your Life? ; What Can I Say After I Say I'm Sorry ; What Kind Of Fool Am I? ; Whatever Lola Wants (Lola Gets) ; When Day Is Done ; When I Take My Sugar To Tea ; When I'm Not Near The Girl I Love ; When It's Sleepy Time Down South ; When Your Lover Has Gone ; Where Are You ; Where Do You Start? ; Where Is Your Heart (The Song From Moulin Rouge) ; Why Don't We Do This More Often ; Why Shouldn't I?; Wish Me A Rainbow ; Wonder Why; Yesterday I Heard The Rain ; You And The Night And The Music; You Are So Beautiful ; You Go To My Head ; You Leave Me Breathless ; You Make Me Feel So Young ; You Must Have Been A Beautiful Baby ; You Only Live Twice ;
You Stepped Out Of A Dream ; You Were Meant For Me ; You'd Be Surprised ; You're An Old Smoothie ; You're Getting To Be A Habit With Me ; You're Gonna Hear From Me; You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin' ; Zing! Went The Strings Of My Heart
Following many of the titles in our Wind Ensemble catalog, you will see a set of numbers enclosed in square brackets, as in this example:
Description | Price |
---|---|
Rimsky-Korsakov Quintet in Bb [1011-1 w/piano] Item: 26746 |
$28.75 |
The bracketed numbers tell you the precise instrumentation of the ensemble. The first number stands for Flute, the second for Oboe, the third for Clarinet, the fourth for Bassoon, and the fifth (separated from the woodwinds by a dash) is for Horn. Any additional instruments (Piano in this example) are indicated by "w/" (meaning "with") or by using a plus sign.
This woodwind quartet is for 1 Flute, no Oboe, 1 Clarinet, 1 Bassoon, 1 Horn and Piano.
Sometimes there are instruments in the ensemble other than those shown above. These are linked to their respective principal instruments with either a "d" if the same player doubles the instrument, or a "+" if an extra player is required. Whenever this occurs, we will separate the first four digits with commas for clarity. Thus a double reed quartet of 2 oboes, english horn and bassoon will look like this:
Note the "2+1" portion means "2 oboes plus english horn"
Titles with no bracketed numbers are assumed to use "Standard Instrumentation." The following is considered to be Standard Instrumentation:
Following many of the titles in our Brass Ensemble catalog, you will see a set of five numbers enclosed in square brackets, as in this example:
Description | Price |
---|---|
Copland Fanfare for the Common Man [343.01 w/tympani] Item: 02158 |
$14.95 |
The bracketed numbers tell you how many of each instrument are in the ensemble. The first number stands for Trumpet, the second for Horn, the third for Trombone, the fourth (separated from the first three by a dot) for Euphonium and the fifth for Tuba. Any additional instruments (Tympani in this example) are indicated by a "w/" (meaning "with") or by using a plus sign.
Thus, the Copland Fanfare shown above is for 3 Trumpets, 4 Horns, 3 Trombones, no Euphonium, 1 Tuba and Tympani. There is no separate number for Bass Trombone, but it can generally be assumed that if there are multiple Trombone parts, the lowest part can/should be performed on Bass Trombone.
Titles listed in our catalog without bracketed numbers are assumed to use "Standard Instrumentation." The following is considered to be Standard Instrumentation:
Following many of the titles in our String Ensemble catalog, you will see a set of four numbers enclosed in square brackets, as in this example:
Description | Price |
---|---|
Atwell Vance's Dance [0220] Item: 32599 |
$8.95 |
These numbers tell you how many of each instrument are in the ensemble. The first number stands for Violin, the second for Viola, the third for Cello, and the fourth for Double Bass. Thus, this string quartet is for 2 Violas and 2 Cellos, rather than the usual 2110. Titles with no bracketed numbers are assumed to use "Standard Instrumentation." The following is considered to be Standard Instrumentation:
Following some titles in our Orchestra & Band catalogs, you will see a numeric code enclosed in square brackets, as in these examples:
Order Qty | Description | Price | |
---|---|---|---|
Beethoven Symphony No 1 in C, op 21 [2,2,2,2-2,2,0,0, tymp, 44322] |
$150.00 | ||
Jones Wind Band Overture [2+1,1,3+ac+bc,2,SATB-2+2,4,3+1,1, tymp, percussion, double bass] |
$85.00 | ||
MacKenzie Hines Pond Fantasy (DePaolo) [2d1+1,1,2+1,1-2,2(+2),3,0, perc, tymp, 44322, Eb clarinet, SAATB saxes, trombone solo] |
$75.00 |
The bracketed numbers tell you the precise instrumentation of the ensemble. The system used above is standard in the orchestra music field. The first set of numbers (before the dash) represent the Woodwinds. The set of numbers after the dash represent the Brass. Percussion is abbreviated following the brass. Strings are represented with a series of five digits representing the quantity of each part (first violin, second violin, viola, cello, bass). Other Required and Solo parts follow the strings:
Principal auxilary instruments (piccolo, english horn, bass clarinet, contrabassoon, wagner tuba, cornet & euphonium) are linked to their respective instruments with either a "d" if the same player doubles the auxiliary instrument, or a "+" if an extra player is required. Instruments shown in parenthesis are optional and may be omitted.
Example 1 - Beethoven:
The Beethoven example is typical of much Classical and early Romantic fare. In this case, the winds are all doubled (2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets and 2 bassoons), and there are two each horns and trumpets. There is no low brass. There is tympani. Strings are a standard 44322 configuration (4 first violin, 4 second violin, 3 viola, 2 cello, 2 bass). Sometimes strings are simply listed as "str," which means 44322 strings.
Example 2 - Jones: (concert band/wind ensemble example)
The second example is common for a concert band or wind ensemble piece. This ficticious work is for 2 flutes (plus piccolo), 1 oboe, 3 clarinets plus alto and bass clarinets, 2 bassoons, 5 saxes (soprano, 2 altos, tenor & bari), 2 trumpets (plus 2 cornets), 3 trombones, euphonium, tuba, tympani, percussion and double bass. Note the inclusion of the saxes after bassoon for this band work. Note also that the separate euphonium part is attached to trombone with a plus sign. For orchestral music, saxes are at the end (see Saxophones below. It is highly typical of band sets to have multiple copies of parts, especially flute, clarinet, sax, trumpet, trombone & percussion. Multiples, if any, are not shown in this system. The numbers represent only distinct parts, not the number of copies of a part.
Example 3 - MacKenzie: (a fictional work, by the way).
In the third example, we have a rather extreme use of the system. It is an orchestral work for piccolo, 2 flutes (1 of whom doubles on piccolo), 1 oboe, 2 clarinets plus an additional bass clarinet, 1 bassoon, 2 horns, 2 trumpets (plus an optional 2 cornets), 3 trombones, no tuba, percussion, tympani, 6 first violins, 6 second violins, 4 violas, 3 cellos, 2 double basses, Eb clarinet (as an additional chair, not doubled), 5 saxes (soprano, 2 alto, tenor & baritone) & a trombone soloist.
Note: This system lists Horn before Trumpet. This is standard orchestral nomenclature. Unless otherwise noted, we will use this system for both orchestra and band works (in most band scores, Trumpet precedes Horn, and sometimes Oboe & Bassoon follow Clarinet). Also, it should be noted that Euphonium can be doubled by either Trombone or Tuba. Typically, orchestra scores have the tuba linked to euphonium, but it does happen where Trombone is the principal instead.
Saxophones, when included in orchestral music (they rarely are) will be shown in the "other instrument" location after strings and before the soloist, if any. However for band music, they are commonly present and therefore will be indicated after bassoon as something similar to "SAATB" where S=soprano, A=alto, T=tenor and B=baritone. Letters that are duplicated (as in A in this example) indicate multiple parts.
And finally, here is one more way to visualize the above code sequence: