Gazebo Dances
(1972)
Arranged for band by the composer (1974)
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see also:
the original Gazebo Dances for piano four-hands,
Overture to the Imaginary Invalid (from Gazebo Dances, 1972) ,
arranged for orchestra,
and the Adagio arranged for piano solo
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Listen to a sound clip
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First performed June 5, 1973, by the University of Evansville Wind Ensemble, Robert Bailey, conductor;
Evansville, IN
rent score and parts from
G. Schirmer IncÂ
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Scored for
piccolo,
2 flutes,
2 oboes,
3 Bb clarinets,
Eb clarinet,
alto clarinet,
bass clarinet,
2 alto saxophones,
tenor saxophone,
baritone saxophone,
3 horns,
3 trumpets,
3 trombones,
baritone,
2 tubas,
timpani,
percussion (4 players)
DurationÂ
16 minutes
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Recordings
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Program note
Gazebo Dances was originally written as a set of four-hand piano pieces dedicated to certain of my pianist friends. I later arranged the suite for orchestra and for concert band, and it is from the latter version that the title is drawn. The title, Gazebo Dances, was suggested by the pavilions often seen on village greens in towns throughout the countryside, where public band concerts are given on summer evenings. The delights of that sort of entertainment are portrayed in this set of dances, which begins with a Rossini-like Overture, followed by a rather peg-legged Waltz, a long-lined Adagio and a bouncy Tarantella.
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— John Corigliano