Percy Grainger (1882-1961) was an Australian-born composer, conductor and concert pianist, who spent his life trying to re-invent the way music was written, viewed and performed. Browse our sheet music and scores, and explore for yourself all his wonderful works today!
Grainger was born in Brighton, near Melbourne, and was home-schooled by his mother for most of his childhood. He began studying the piano at the age of 10, and immediately showed remarkable talent. At the age of 13, he and his mother moved to Frankfurt, so he could study at the Hoch Conservatoire.
After maturing as a musician and a performer, Grainger moved to London, and became more and more sought after as a pianist. He had a fascination for Scandinavian music, and was greatly influenced by Edvard Grieg, who was a lifelong friend and mentor. Grainger dedicated himself to collecting folk music, firstly in the UK, and then Norway and eventually from all around the world.
Due to his overwhelming desire to be the first Australian composer of great worth, when the first world war hit, Grainger moved to the USA. He joined the U.S Army in 1917, and served as a bandsman, playing the saxophone. He became an American citizen in 1918, and the USA was his home for the rest of his life. He toured Europe and Australasia as a concert pianist and accompanist many, many times, he recorded with many record labels (most consistently with Colombia Records), and he never lost sight of his goal to champion Australian Music.
After a lifelong struggle to compose new and innovative works, alongside his folk music arrangements, and a critically acclaimed career as a concert pianist, when the second world war began, Grainger left his New York home, and moved to Springfield, Missouri. He feared that the fighting might hit the East Coast, and he hadn’t achieved his goal of becoming the world’s first internationally renowned, and unequivocally great Australian composer. During the war, he played many charity concerts, to help boost moral.
Grainger’s wish to create new musical forms, and to stretch the boundaries of classical composition, led him to write in many styles, using many techniques. He never conformed to classical structures, and rarely used traditional instrumentation. He was the first aleatoric composer, leaving elements of choice in his scores for the performers, and he tried to create a type of “free music” which did not have regular time signatures, or traditional structures.
As he became more and more frustrated with the lack of progress in his exploration of new musical forms, and his growing feeling that he would never reach his goals as a composer, he began to focus more and more on his work with a young physics teacher, Burnett Cross, to try to invent instruments first mechanically, and later electronically, which could play his “free music”. These “free music machines” were only ever rather limited, and Grainger became more and more depressed, not only by the lack of success in these endeavours, but also in the decline of his piano playing.
One source of joy for Grainger, was his work on military music. His experiences in the USA during both world wars led him to be a great advocate for Wind Ensemble and Brass music, and he wrote a great wealth of repertoire for Concert Band, Brass Band and Marching Band. These range from folk-song arrangements, to original compositions.
As a highly intelligent and eccentric man, Grainger spent many trips to Australia building the Grainger Museum, in the grounds of the University of Melbourne, which he hoped would be an honest and thorough account of his life and work. Despite the museum never being open to the public in his lifetime (only private viewings), it has been restored and is open to the public today.
His life-long search for folk-music is undoubtedly his greatest legacy, and towards the end of his life, he was awarded the St. Olav Medal of Norway for his service to the works of Grieg, and Norwegian Music.
Grainger died in White Plains, New York in 1961, and despite a long and turbulent career as a concert pianist, recording artist, composer, and innovator, he is remembered fondly for his eccentricity and for his wonderful folk music arrangements.
Edition Schott
for: Male choir
Choir score
Item no.: 782185
for: Concert band
Einzelstimme Horn III und IV
Item no.: 783481
for: 2 violins, viola, cello (string quartet)
Score, Parts
Item no.: 641269
for: Concert band
Conductor score
Item no.: 894559
for: Violin, piano
Item no.: 1544861
for: Piano 4 hands
Item no.: 355022
for: Piano
Item no.: 355005
for: Mixed choir a cappella
Choir score
Item no.: 1545400
for: 2 pianos 8 hands
Item no.: 355619
for: 2 pianos
Item no.: 1546194
on Tchaikovsky's Flower-Waltz
for: Piano
Music score
Item no.: 101697
for: 2 Klaviere 6-händig
Item no.: 1545001
for: Concert band
Score, Parts
Item no.: 1560456
for: Piano
Item no.: 241154
for: Piano
Item no.: 355009
for: Concert band
Einzelstimme
Item no.: 1077859
Soprano Saxophone Pt
for: Concert band
Einzelstimme
Item no.: 1078270
for: Concert band
Einzelstimme
Item no.: 1076925
for: Concert band
Einzelstimme
Item no.: 1078068
for: Concert band
Einzelstimme
Item no.: 1077715
for: Concert band
Einzelstimme
Item no.: 1076917
for: Concert band
Score, Parts
Item no.: 745105
for: Concert band
CD
Item no.: 1021472
for: Concert band
Score, Parts
Item no.: 692869
for: Concert band
Score
Item no.: 1009765
for: Concert band
Score
Item no.: 1020878
for: Concert band
Score
Item no.: 948111
for: Concert band
Score
Item no.: 947805
for: Concert band
Score
Item no.: 686592
for: Concert band
Set of parts
Item no.: 928784
for: Concert band
Score
Item no.: 926296
for: Symphonic orchestra
Score
Item no.: 926246
Bridal Song
for: Piano
Music score
Item no.: 750277
for piano trio
for: Violin, cello, piano (piano trio)
Score, Parts
Item no.: 782327
for: Concert band
Einzelstimme Trompete III in B
Item no.: 783480
for: Concert band
Score, Parts
Item no.: 1558767
for: Violin, piano
Item no.: 201460
for: Piano
Music score
Item no.: 381597
for: Piano
Music score
Item no.: 462263
for: Concert band
Einzelstimme
Item no.: 1546239
for: Piano Duets & Four Hands
Item no.: 1523569
for: Concert band
Conductors part (C)
Item no.: 1690792
for: Concert band
Einzelstimme
Item no.: 1076700
for: Klarinettenensemble
Score, Parts
Item no.: 994869
C. Hylton Stewart gewidmet
for: Mixed choir (SATB), organ
Choir score
Item no.: 381567
for: Concert band
Score, Parts
Item no.: 1069914
for: Youth concert band
Score, Parts
Item no.: 677869
for: Concert band
Score
Item no.: 926766