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Re: Progressive Art Series Publications

Posted: Thu Nov 22, 2012 6:54 pm
by Jim Faston
Another one surfaced...
Mozart_Adagio.pdf

Re: Progressive Art Series Publications

Posted: Fri Nov 23, 2012 10:14 pm
by alfor
Jim Faston wrote:Another one surfaced...
Mozart_Adagio.pdf
Thank you!
The classics - and some (outdated?) "Salonmusik" - "for Dummies" :mrgreen: !!
Nevertheless with a wealth of really useful hints!

Re: Progressive Art Series Publications

Posted: Mon Jun 02, 2014 5:41 pm
by musiclife217
I came across this one at the library today.... Apparently, the previous owner had some difficulties reading bass clef notes (!). Nonetheless, I thought it would be a welcome filler in our review of this series.

Rummel, Joseph - WoO - Tyrolienne.
Rummel, Joseph-WoO-Tyrolienne.pdf

Re: Progressive Art Series Publications

Posted: Thu Jun 05, 2014 11:55 am
by musiclife217
Google has also digitized Schumann's Op. 23 No. 04 - "Night Visions" (as they title it)... This is Volume 613 of the series and is also edited by Mr. Godowsky.

I'm not sure how to pull it off of Google...

http://books.google.com/books?id=Vwg4AQAAIAAJ

Re: Progressive Art Series Publications

Posted: Thu Jun 05, 2014 12:35 pm
by Scriabinoff
musiclife217 wrote:Google has also digitized Schumann's Op. 23 No. 04 - "Night Visions" (as they title it)... This is Volume 613 of the series and is also edited by Mr. Godowsky.

I'm not sure how to pull it off of Google...

http://books.google.com/books?id=Vwg4AQAAIAAJ
8-)
Nachtstucke_op_23 (1).pdf

Re: Progressive Art Series Publications

Posted: Wed Jun 11, 2014 6:32 pm
by musiclife217
Thank you very much! In seeking other works by Joseph Rummel, I came across the "Eilende Wolken, Segler der Lüfte" from his set of three Songs without words, played by own our Phillip Sear. A very nice work - Is there a scan of this available that I am missing or that anyone can share? Thanks!

Re: Progressive Art Series Publications

Posted: Thu Oct 02, 2014 7:11 pm
by musiclife217
all of this work on the PWM mini's has got me thinking again about the Progressive Series - I do have a number of exercises/teaching editions from this series if anyone is interested and I'm also going to try to track down the "rare-er" pieces from the editions. Anyone still interested?

Re: Progressive Art Series Publications

Posted: Tue Nov 22, 2016 1:07 pm
by Scriabinoff
I sorry if already represented and I missed it. Previously was not going to share but i want to do my part to keep contributing to our archive and support the site.
Sharing is caring. 8-)

Here is a set of variations by Wagner, no not that one. The little nursery and childrens song aka twinkle twinkle, abc, or also the french one made even more popular by Mozart's variations...

Please no re uploads, if we can keep this available only here, would greatly appriciate it (moot point if scan is already available elsewhere....)

JOSEF WAGNER [born 1909] " TWINKLE TWINKLE VARIATIONS "
Josef Wagner Variations on a French Nursery song Op 13a.pdf
*i really probably should learn and record these. Dont think ive come across any performances...


more on composer, hard to find info given another composer by same name Josef Wagner, Austrian with military ties, and also a modern American Composer Joseph Wagner.

http://findingaids.cjh.org/index2.php?f ... er&pnm=LBI

Re: Progressive Art Series Publications

Posted: Thu Dec 08, 2016 2:52 pm
by Jean-Séb
It is nice to have another, quite rare, set of variations on that tune that inspired already so many. Thank you.
(Unfortunatly, your wish to keep the score just here might not be granted. We all experimented, with some bitterness at the beginning but fatalist acceptance in the end, the fact that our scores we thought shared only in this limited club, were lurked on and copied, for the best on free sites as IMSLP, or for the worst on some pirate pating sites.

Re: Progressive Art Series Publications

Posted: Thu Jun 08, 2017 6:08 pm
by besmart
Hi,

Does anyone have the entire Progressive Exercises Series? Also published by Art Publication Society. There are some random examples on the web but the entire series seems to be elusive.