SKU: HP.2913
UPC: 763628129132.
Familiar praise song by Keith Getty & Stuart Townend This Keith Getty and Stuart Townend song is useful anytime of the year and especially for Pentecost Sunday. Lloyd Larson's masterful setting features an elegant piano accompaniment and optional cello part. Set in three verses, the first is a prayer for personal renewal, the second is a prayer for the gifts of the Spirit to show Christ in all I do, and the third is for the universal church to hunger for your ways.
SKU: HP.3017
UPC: 763628130176. Martha Lynn Thompson.
Volume 2 This collection has 30 pieces arranged separately for 2 octave and 3 octave bell or chime choirs. There are familiar and not-so-familiar pieces which include secular, sacred, patriotic, Christmas, and classics. They range in level from Level 1- to 2+. The entire collection is reproducible, making it a bargain for your choirs!.
SKU: HP.2991
UPC: 763628129910.
Classic hymn tune Mallets and other stopped techniques call for a staccato style performance of this lively Easter setting. There is a hint of Indigenous American music to the intriguing arrangement that brings out the uniqueness of what handbells can do.
SKU: HP.2959
UPC: 763628129590.
Volume 4 in the Smaller But Mighty Series These 8 arrangements for 8 bells are accessible and beautiful. The piano fills out the harmonies and give a large breadth of sound. The handbell parts contain only 8 bells and can be rung without tables. An accompaniment CD is also available.
SKU: LO.20-1394L
ISBN 9780893283391.
The melody of this moving setting is treated first in simple chorale style and again with a lovely flowing eighth-note accompaniment. Fresh, uplifting harmonies throughout create an overall contemporary feel to the work. Abundant use of LVs enhance the natural sound of the instrument. Easy and quite effective!
SKU: BP.HB6
Arranged for 3-5 octave handbell choir. Level 3. Tune from Jeremiah Ingall's Christian Harmony (1805).
SKU: HP.2928
UPC: 763628129286.
Holiday Classic A joyous bell peal leads to the first iteration of the theme before moving into a more flowing verse accompanied by delicate mallets on treble handbells. An optional dark and dissonant verse (which portrays one of the lesser-known stanzas of the Longfellow poem) gives way to a verse in minor before a triumphant return to major to depict the lyrics, Then pealed the bells more loud and deep/God is not dead, nor doth he sleep... An exciting and beautiful addition to your holiday worship or concert.
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