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Product Details
Description
The Death of Oscar (2012) is a miniature tone poem drawing upon the legend of the bardic poet Ossian and the death of his son Oscar. In the legends of Ossian, Oscar challenged the High King Cairbre to single combat and, though victorious, died of his wounds and was mourned by his father and lover.
These tales collected by James MacPherson in the 18th century have long been debated as regards their authenticity, but what is not in doubt is the massive influence they had on perceptions of Scottish and Celtic culture, particularly overseas – admired by political figures such as Napoleon and Thomas Jefferson and inspiring Romantic artists from Mendelssohn in Fingal’s Cave to Goethe in Die Leiden des jungen Werther.
These tales collected by James MacPherson in the 18th century have long been debated as regards their authenticity, but what is not in doubt is the massive influence they had on perceptions of Scottish and Celtic culture, particularly overseas – admired by political figures such as Napoleon and Thomas Jefferson and inspiring Romantic artists from Mendelssohn in Fingal’s Cave to Goethe in Die Leiden des jungen Werther.
More Information
Title:
The Death of Oscar
Edition:
Study score
Publisher/Label:
Boosey & Hawkes
Year of composition:
2012
Duration:
10 ′0 ′′
World Premiere:
July 11, 2013 · Stuttgart (D)
Liederhalle, Beethovensaal
Conductor: Stéphane Denève
Liederhalle, Beethovensaal
Conductor: Stéphane Denève
Commissioned work :
Co-commissioned by Stéphane Denève and the Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra of SWR, the Royal Scottish National Orchestra and Seattle Symphony Orchestra
Series:
Technical Details
Media Type:
Sheet music
Product number:
BH 13490
ISMN13:
979-0-060-13490-6
ISBN13:
978-1-78454-407-2
UPC:
888680925680
Weight:
0,1 kg
Pages:
36
Format:
18.5cm x 26cm
Binding:
Saddle-wire stitching
Manufacturer:
More from this series
Hawkes Pocket Scores
Performances
The Death of Oscar
Conductor: Stéphane Denève
July 11, 2013 |
Stuttgart (Germany) , Kultur- und Kongresszentrum Liederhalle, Beethoven-Saal — World Premiere
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