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Stanley Trumpet Voluntary for Solo Violin & Organ with Pedals
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Stanley Trumpet Voluntary for Solo Violin & Organ with Pedals
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You are purchasing high quality sheet music PDF files suitable for printing or viewing on digital devices.An arrangement of the Stanley Trumpet Voluntary arranged for solo Violin and Organ with Pedals
Great piece for a wedding processional, or for a concert.
This regal processional by the English composer John Stanley, a contemporary of Handel, was originally composed for Organ, on which the melody was typically played on the Trumpet or Cornet stop.
Stanley, who was blind from an early age, studied music with Maurice Greene and held a number of organist appointments in London, such as St Andrew’s, Holborn from 1726. He was a friend of George Frideric Handel, and following Handel’s death, Stanley joined first with John Christopher Smith and later with Thomas Linley to continue the series of oratorio concerts Handel had established, and succeeded him as a governor of the Foundling Hospital (continuing his tradition of performing "Messiah" for them).
In 1779, Stanley succeeded William Boyce as Master of the King’s Musick.
Stanley’s works include the opera Teraminta, the dramatic cantata The Choice of Hercules, twelve other cantatas with texts by John Hawkins, the oratorios Jephtha, The Fall of Egypt and Zimri, and instrumental music, notably three volumes of Voluntaries for organ (1748, 1752, and 1754). Nearly all of the voluntaries feature a short, slow introduction followed by either a solo-stop movement (such as the so called trumpet voluntaries) or a fugue. Some of the former have been arranged in modern times for string chamber orchestra and trumpet.