Repertoire Type: Works by Women Composers
There is a pressing need for greater representation in the classical music canon — on the stage, in music schools, and in our practice rooms. CelloBello’s intention with all of our repertoire databases is to highlight groups whose music is often underrepresented in our field. We hope that compiling this information and making it free and accessible to the world will help us take steps towards expanding and rethinking the classical music canon. We hope this resource inspires you in the practice room, in your teaching, and in your artistic programming. Our dream would be to have such rich representation in our field that such a database would not be needed, but until that time comes we are proud to have this resource available. We hope it sparks curiosity and inspires your musical growth.
Thank you to cellist Wendy Velasco for sharing her initial work with CelloBello, and to all of her contributors that built the initial repertoire list. Another thank you to Jing Li and the rest of the CelloBello staff for the hundreds of hours they’ve poured into further research.
The information contained in the catalog is displayed using the criteria of composers’ name, country of birth, and personal website link (where available), as well as the works’ title, date of composition, duration, and instrumentation. Although this catalog does not grant specific information about purchasing scores for all of the pieces listed, it facilitates the search of scores and provides links of contact to the composers, where applicable.
Please direct any feedback, particularly information on missing works or compositional misinformation, directly to francesca@cellobello.org.
By Selma Gokcen February 11, 2013
Subjects Playing Healthy
Tags ability, Alexander Technique, attention to detail, bow arm, cellists, cello, cellobello, creating balance, cultivate awareness, energy flowing through the body, Gokcen, Habits, instrumentalists, Listening, music, musicians, opposition, Part II, powerful force of energy, proper weight transfer, quietness, relationship of the head back and spine, Selma, sharpening the senses, Six Part Series, tension in the neck, the back, Thinking in a new way, top level performing, trying, well-coordinated body, willing
By Mark Summer February 6, 2013
Subjects Artistic Vision
Tags action, adventures, aspirations, Berklee School of Music, cello, cellobello, contemplate, decisive action, Development, dreams, educator, embarrassment, gauge progress, gifts, goals, hero, improvising, jazz, Mark, meditation, mentors, mindfulness meditation, musical hero, musical journey, musicians, New Year, New Year's Goals, possibility, practicing, recording, recording artists, respect, sessions, specific dreams, string quartets, Summer, taking advantage of opportunities, The Secret, travel with instruments, trips, Turtle Island String Quartet, Utah, Zion National Park
By Selma Gokcen February 3, 2013
Subjects Playing Healthy
Tags Alexander Technique, animate, arms, attention, automatic movement, back, behave, brain, cello, cellobello, collapse, doing, exploration, feet, fingers, force, Gokcen, Habits, hands, laying on the floor, learning, legs, manifest, mental messages, music, music-making, nature, neck, Observation, overcome deeply ingrained habits, Pablo Casals, Patrick Macdonald, perceive, powerful expressiveness, pressure, primary information, process, pushing, re-education, react, rediscovering, Selma, shortcuts, shoulders, strain, stretching, the value of quietness, thinking
By Blaise Dejardin February 2, 2013
Subjects Artists
Tags arrangements, backstage, Blaise, Boston, Boston Cello Quartet, Boston Symphony Orchestra, Boston Youth Symphony Orchestra, BSO, cello, cellobello, change of concept, classical music, comedy, compositions, concert, Dejardin, fun classical music, generations, jazz, making a living, musical comedy, musical styles, new arrangements, orchestra playing, orchestral musicians, Ozawa Hall, quartets, repertoire, rotating chairs, skype, strange concepts, structure, success, Tanglewood, Tanglewood Cello Ensemble, Tanglewood on Parade, Tanglewood Shed, tango, virtuosic music, virtuoso
By Martha Baldwin January 27, 2013
Subjects Orchestra
Tags Baldwin, cello, cellobello, challenges, chamber music, choices, Cleveland Institute of Music, Cleveland Orchestra, colleagues, concert halls, concerts, direction, establish a career, family time, focus, happiness, inspiration, lifestyle, Martha, mom-friendly schedule, money, musical talents, orchestra, orchestral jobs, personal ideas, predictability, rehearsals, routine, short attention span, social outlets, soloist, stability, status, Teaching, Touring, Travel, variety, working full time
By Blogmaster January 23, 2013
Subjects Travel
Tags Airplanes, buying extra seats, carry-on baggage, checked baggage, claim forms, damage, Dave, Delta Airlines, extra seat, FAA, FAA Modernization and Reform Act of 2012, fragile instruments, Gibson, guitar, instrument repairs, nightmare, The LeeVee's, touring musicians, Travel, United Breaks Guitars, Vintage Gibson guitar
By Wayne Burak January 21, 2013
Subjects Instrument Care
Tags accessories, attention, bow, bow grip, bow rehair, Brazilwood, Burak, cello, cello bow, cello cases, cello strings, cellobello, computer back up, computers, fresh bow rehair, frog, frog position, humidity, instrument cases, latches, music, New Year's resolutions, organization, organization of sheet music, pearl eye, pernambuco, rock stops, rosin, sheet music, strings, tension, warp, Wayne
By Robert Battey January 16, 2013
Subjects Repertoire
Tags accuracy, ambiguity, Anna Magdalena, Anner Bylsma, artistic, autograph, Bach, Bach Cello Suites, Bach Suites, Bach's original intentions, Bach’s precise intentions, Barenreiter, Battey, careless, cello, cellobello, challenges, colors, complexities, conclusions, curiosity, dilemma, Editions, editors, enjoyment, experimentation, flawed, genius, historical, inconsistent copies, instrument control, Instruments, interpretive creativity, interpretive ideas, Janos Starker, judgment, liberation, lute, lute arrangement, meaningful interpretations, monochromatic, normal teaching model, Pablo Casals, painting, parameters, paris, personal research, personality, phrasing, Pierre Fournier, printing, publications, rainbows, recordings, repertoire, response, Rhythm, robert, sloppy, slurs, study, Teaching, text booklet, textual, The Fencing Master, transcribing, uncertainties, virtuosity
By Jonathan Pegis January 9, 2013
Subjects Orchestra, Repertoire
Tags audition excerpt, Auditions, Beethoven, Beethoven Symphonies, Beethoven's 5th Symphony, bow control, bowings, breathing, cello, cello excerpt, cellobello, control, effortless, experiment, experimentation, fingerings, intonation, Jonathan, Northwestern, pacing, Pegis, phrasing, slow breathing, string crossings, Symphony, tempo, variations, variations on a theme, vibrato
By Robert Battey January 7, 2013
Subjects Artistic Vision
Tags Battey, Beethoven, commitment, critic, expertise, Heifetz, patience, Philosophy, problems, robert, Strings Magazine, traveling