A Serenade for Eb Alto Saxophone & Keyboard

By: Franz Schubert
For: Solo Alto Saxophone + piano
page one of A Serenade for Eb Alto Saxophone &  Keyboard

Buy this score and parts

A Serenade for Eb Alto Saxophone & Keyboard

$5.88

$3.00

from $1.44

(+ VAT when applicable)

Preview individual parts:

PDF icon

Instant download

You are purchasing high quality sheet music PDF files suitable for printing or viewing on digital devices.
Composer
Franz Schubert
Year of composition
1828
Arranger
Year of arrangement
2007
Difficulty
Moderate (Grades 4-6)
Duration
1 minute
Genre
Classical music
License details
For anything not permitted by the above licence then you should contact the publisher first to obtain permission.

An arrangement for Eb Alto Saxophone and Piano of Schubert’s Serenade. This arrangement would make a beautiful addition to your repertoire.

Schwanengesang ("Swan song") D 957 (Deutsch catalogue) is the title of a posthumous collection of songs by Franz Schubert.

The collection was named by its first publisher Tobias Haslinger, presumably wishing to present it as Schubert's final musical testament to the world. Unlike the earlier Die schöne Müllerin and Winterreise, it contains settings of three poets, Ludwig Rellstab (1799–1860), Heinrich Heine (1797–1856) and Johann Gabriel Seidl (1804–1875). Schwanengesang was composed 1828 and published in 1829 just a few months after the composer's death on 19 November 1828.

In the original manuscript in Schubert's hand, the first 13 songs were copied in a single sitting, on consecutive manuscript pages, and in the standard performance order. All the song titles are by Schubert, as Heine did not give names to the poems. (Reed 259) Tobias Haslinger, Schubert's publisher, collected the songs together as a cycle, most probably for financial reasons, as Die schöne Müllerin and Die Winterreise sold very well as collections. Taubenpost is considered to be Schubert's last Lied.

Franz Liszt later transcribed these songs for solo piano.

Schubert also set to music a poem named Schwanengesang D744 by Johann Senn, unrelated to this collection.

Schwanengesang ("Swan song") D 957 (Deutsch catalogue) is the title of a posthumous collection of songs by Franz Schubert.

The collection was named by its first publisher Tobias Haslinger, presumably wishing to present it as Schubert's final musical testament to the world. Unlike the earlier Die schöne Müllerin and Winterreise, it contains settings of three poets, Ludwig Rellstab (1799–1860), Heinrich Heine (1797–1856) and Johann Gabriel Seidl (1804–1875). Schwanengesang was composed 1828 and published in 1829 just a few months after the composer's death on 19 November 1828.

In the original manuscript in Schubert's hand, the first 13 songs were copied in a single sitting, on consecutive manuscript pages, and in the standard performance order. All the song titles are by Schubert, as Heine did not give names to the poems. (Reed 259) Tobias Haslinger, Schubert's publisher, collected the songs together as a cycle, most probably for financial reasons, as Die schöne Müllerin and Die Winterreise sold very well as collections. Taubenpost is considered to be Schubert's last Lied.

Franz Liszt later transcribed these songs for solo piano.

Schubert also set to music a poem named Schwanengesang D744 by Johann Senn, unrelated to this collection.

We still don’t know exactly where the idiom “Swansong” actually originated, but presently we use it to mean a last effort or final production coming from someone in a respective field before retirement, or sometimes, death. It is probably most familiar to us from the world of sports, “with Kobe Bryant scoring 60 points in his final game, or Peyton Manning winning the Super Bowl in his last season.”

The concept that swans sing a beautiful song just before death has a long pedigree in Western thought, and the Greek philosopher Socrates is credited with saying “Will you not allow that I have as much of the spirit of prophecy in me as the swans? For they, when they perceive that they must die, having sung all their life long, do then sing more than ever, rejoicing in the thought that they are about to go away to the god whose ministers they are.” The proverbial singing swan, used as a metaphor for the final great effort, becomes a much-embraced concept in the arts, literature, and music, as exemplified in the famous madrigal setting by Orlando Gibbons (1583-1625).

The silver Swan, who living had no Note, when Death approached, unlocked her silent throat. Leaning her breast against the reedy shore, thus sang her first and last, and sang no more: “Farewell, all joys! O Death, come close mine eyes! More Geese than Swans now live, more Fools than Wise.”

Franz Schubert’s final and horribly painful days in November 1828 included bouts of delirium, requests for novels by James Fennimore Cooper, ceaseless singing and moments of great lucidity when he was working on his compositions. Schubert had been seriously ill for some time, but it’s impossible to tell by the quantity and consistency of his compositions. “In just his final 14 weeks, he wrote his last three piano sonatas, and the heart-melting C-Major String Quintet.” A few short months after Schubert’s death, the Viennese publisher Tobias Haslinger published a group of fourteen Schubert songs composed to texts by three different poets. Wishing to present this publication as Schubert’s final musical testament to the world, Haslinger and Schubert’s brother Ferdinand entitled the collection Schwanengesang (Swansong). Containing some of the greatest Lieder that Schubert ever composed, there is still disagreement about whether or not Schwanengesang is actually a cycle.

There are contradictory accounts concerning the origin of Schubert’s thirteen songs with lyrics by Ludwig Rellstab and Heinrich Heine, published together with “Die Taubenpost,” with lyrics by Johann Gabriel Seidl. In the original manuscript in Schubert’s hand, the first 13 songs were copied in a single setting, on consecutive manuscript pages, and in the standard performance order. There is some suggestion that Schubert had intended to publish the settings of Rellstab and Heine separately, as he offered the Heine set of poems to the Leipzig publisher Probst. “Die Taubenpost,” meanwhile, has no connection to any of the first 13 songs and was appended by Haslinger to round out Schubert’s Schwanengesang. Rellstab’s poems passed to Schubert via Anton Schindler, Beethoven’s assistant. It has been suggested “almost every song in Schwanengesang deals with love or it’s absence, linking it to Beethoven’s “An die ferne Geliebte.” The Rellstab set ranges from the singer inviting a stream to convey a message to his beloved in the opening “Liebesbotschaft” (Message of love), to the concluding “Abschied” (Farewell) when the singer bids a cheery but determined farewell to a town he must now leave forever.

To purchase this score, please add it to your cart above. To purchase music not currently available on Score Exchange or for extended license requests, please contact the publisher directly.
Ave Maria for Eb Alto Saxophone & Piano, Una Furtiva Lagrima for Bb Soprano Saxophone & Piano, Tico-Tico no fubá for Bb Soprano, Tenor Saxophones & Piano, Little Brown Jug for Saxophone Quintet ''Jazz for 5 Wind Series;;, Sāre Jahāṉ se Acchā - سارے جہاں سے اچھا (Indian Patriotic song) for Bb Soprano, Eb Baritone Saxophone & Piano (Pro version), Lullaby for a Soprano Saxophonist, Piano & Double Bass, Havana Rhubarb Rumba for two Bb Tenor Saxophone s & Piano, 7 julsangs (Xmas carols) for Saxophone Quartet - popular in Norway, Jazz it up:When the Saint’s Go Marching In for Bb Soprano Saxophone & Piano, Golliwog's Cake-Walk for Clarinet Sextet, Be Thou My Vision (Hymn Tune:Slane) for Saxophone Quintet, Jasmine Flower (The) for Eb Alto Saxophone & Piano, Mattinata for Bb Soprano Saxophone & Piano, Arioso (Sinfonia to Cantata Ich steh mit einem Fuß im Grabe) for Bb Tenor Saxophone & Keyboard, Allegro from the Trumpet Concerto for Bb Tenor Saxophone & KB, Come Back To Sorrento for Bb Soprano Saxophone & Piano, March from ’Judas Maccabaeus’ for Saxophone Quartet, Vesti La Giubba for Bb Tenor Saxophone & Piano, Bollywood Tango for Bb Soprano/Soprillo & Eb Baritone Saxophone with Piano, Jasmine Flower (The) for Bb Soprano/Soprillo & Piano, Frankie & Johnny for Bb Tenor Saxophone, 8 Swinging Xmas Carols for Eb Alto Saxophone & Piano, Pachelbel's Kanon for Saxophone Octet, Lustpiel Overture for Saxophone Quintet, Fugue on B-a-c-h for Saxophone Quintet, Overture from the Suite in D from the ’Water Music’ for two Bb Soprano Saxophones & Keyboard, O Mio Babbino Caro for Eb Alto Saxophone & Piano, Amazing Grace for Eb Alto Saxophone & Piano, Czardas for Bb Soprano Saxophone & Piano, What Shall We Do With The Drunken Saxophone Quintet?, Largo (from Lute Concerto in D Major RV 96) for Saxophone Quintet, Morning has Broken (Bunessan) for Young Concert Band, Berceuse (Opus 16) for Bb Clarinet & Harp (Piano), More Palatino (Four Variations) for Saxophone Sextet, Swing Low, Sweet Chariot for Eb Alto Saxophone & Piano, 7 Popular carols in Norway for two Eb Alto Saxophones, Arrival of the Queen of Sheba for two Soprano Saxophones & String Orchestra, English National Anthem (Did Those Feet in Ancient Times) for Saxophone Quintet, Trumpet Tune from the Island Princess for Saxophone Quintet, Prelude from Te Deum (Eurovision Song Contest Theme) for Eb Alto Saxophone & Organ w pedals (Student version), Fallen Heroes for Saxophone Choir, The Saint’s Visit Havana with a Touch of W.A.Mozart for Bb Tenor Saxophone & Piano, Mattinata for Eb Alto Saxophone & Piano, Franzosisches Lied: Est-ce Mars? for Saxophone Quintet, Quando Me’n Vo for Bb Soprano Saxophone & Piano, The Gypsy Soprano Saxophonist in New Orleans for Bb Soprano Saxophone & Piano and Von fremden Landern und Menschen for Saxophone Quintet

Reviews of A Serenade for Eb Alto Saxophone & Keyboard

Sorry, there's no reviews of this score yet. Please .