Choral, Instrumental and Chamber Music Compositions and Arrangements

Welcome to this portfolio of musical compositions and arrangements, and thank you for your interest!
In the right-hand column beneath here you should see an alphabetical list of works. You can also choose a list of works with a particular label. Alternatively, you can search for a keyword. (Transcriptions and unpublishable works are listed in a page linked at the bottom, if you are interested.) The files here are all freely available. They do carry copyright, but feel free to adapt and/or perform them as you wish, as long as you print/acknowledge the originator (me!) It is always nice to hear from you if you use any of these compositions and arrangements (my email: philiplebas@gmail.com), but this is not a requirement. My main hope, as for many composers, is simply that the works are performed and appreciated. Happy music-making!
Philip

Key to linked files:
pdf = printed score or parts
mp3 = sound file
midi = midi sound file
mxl = compressed MusicXML source file
sib = Sibelius source file, mostly in Sibelius 8 or Sibelius Ultimate format
sib 6 = Sibelius version 6 source file

For access to many of these works via a commercial publisher, go to SheetMusicPlus/published-by-Philip-Le Bas.

Yuki-Onna, a melodrama for piano (2 versions)

Version 1 scoring: piano solo (incidental music to a melodrama)
Date: 2019
Incidental music scored for solo piano or piano duet to accompany the Japanese folk tale (ghost story) Yuki-Onna ("Snow Woman"). Part of a melodrama project initiated at Morley College, London, 2019.
Links: pdf - mp3 midi mxl sib


Version 2 scoring: piano duet (4-hands)
Date: 2019


For the orchestral version see 

Synopsis:

Two wood-cutters, Mosaku and his apprentice Minokichi, encounter a terrible snowstorm and take shelter in an empty hut by a river. The storm gets worse and worse, but they both finally fall asleep. When Minokichi wakes, he sees a woman in white bending over Mosaku breathing bright white mist onto his face. She then approaches Minokichi. She is very beautiful, but her eyes make him afraid. Eventually she says, “I intended to do the same to you as I did to the old man, but I feel pity for you because you are a handsome young man. If you ever tell anybody what you have seen, however, I will kill you too.” And she vanishes into the snowstorm. It is then that Minokichi discovers his master dead on the floor of the hut. 

Years later Minokichi meets a beautiful girl, who calls herself O-Yuki. He falls in love with her and they live together in his house along with his mother, who fortunately takes a liking to her new “honourable daughter-in-law.” Over the years O-Yuki gives birth to ten children and the villagers all agree that she is a wonderful person. But she is somehow different from them, as she continues to look young and fresh, despite the passing years. Minokichi often thinks of telling O-Yuki about the events of years ago, and eventually, as he is gazing at her beauty one night, he can resist it no more. He begins to tell her about the snowstorm and the terrifying snow-woman. To his horror O-Yuki becomes more and more angry, and she finally screams: “It was me, it was me… and I said I would kill you if you ever told anyone! But for these children asleep here, I would do so this very moment! You had better take very good care of them; if ever they have reason to complain of you, I will treat you as you deserve!” While she screams at him her voice becomes thin, like the crying of the wind, and she melts into a bright white mist spiralling into the roof-beams. At that moment it starts to snow, but O-Yuki is never seen again.

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