Horn SKU: HL.119098 For Horn. By Various. Instrumental Solo. Rock....(+)
Horn
SKU:
HL.119098
For
Horn. By Various.
Instrumental Solo. Rock.
Softcover. 114 pages.
Published by Hal Leonard
(HL.119098).
ISBN
9781480341364. UPC:
884088905262. 9x12
inches.
An amazing
selection of songs from
VH-1's special arranged
for instrumentalists.
Includes: All Along the
Watchtower • All
Shook Up • American
Pie • Beat It •
Blowin' in the Wind
• Blue Suede Shoes
• Bohemian Rhapsody
• Born to Be Wild
• Born to Run •
Bridge over Troubled
Water • California
Dreamin' • Dream On
• Every Breath You
Take • Fire and Rain
• Free Bird •
Gloria • Good
Vibrations • Great
Balls of Fire • A
Hard Day's Night •
Hey Jude • Hotel
California • (I
Can't Get No)
Satisfaction • I
Heard It Through the
Grapevine • Imagine
• Jump • Layla
• Let It Be •
London Calling •
Louie, Louie •
Maggie May • My
Generation • Piano
Man • Proud Mary
• Respect •
Rock Around the Clock
• Roxanne •
Smells like Teen Spirit
• Stairway to Heaven
• Stand by Me •
Sunshine of Your Love
• Superstition
• We Are the
Champions • When
Doves Cry •
Yesterday • You
Shook Me All Night Long
• and more.
Ligne De Mélodie, Paroles et Accords [Fake Book] - Facile Hal Leonard
For voice and C instrument. Format: fakebook (spiral bound). With vocal melody, ...(+)
For voice and C
instrument. Format:
fakebook (spiral bound).
With vocal melody,
lyrics, piano
accompaniment, chord
names and leadsheet
notation. Hymn. Series:
Hal Leonard Fake Books.
494 pages. 9x12 inches.
Published by Hal Leonard.
Urtext. Composed
by Domenico Cimarosa.
Edited by Reinmar Emans.
Choir; Softbound.
Partitur-Bibliothek
(Score Library).
At
long last: complete with
the Libera me Domenico
Cimarosa's Requiem,
composed in 1787,
achieved widespread
dissemination through
copies shortly after its
premiere, and has
remained a repertoire
work of classical church
music to this day.
Requiem; Classical. Study
Score. 140 pages.
Duration 61'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #PB 5570-07.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.PB-5570-07).
ISBN
9790004213803. 6.5 x 9
inches.
At long
last: complete with the
Libera me Domenico
Cimarosa's Requiem,
composed in 1787,
achieved widespread
dissemination through
copies shortly after its
premiere, and has
remained a repertoire
work of classical church
music to this day. All
the more amazing is the
discovery of an
authentic, subsequently
added Libera me movement
that is found in the main
sources (autograph score,
original parts), but had
not been published up to
now. The complete
liturgical form of the
Requiem requires a Libera
me and with this new
edition, Cimarosa's
Requiem can now finally
be performed again its
entirety, more than 200
years after it was
written. Reinmar Emans'
new Urtext edition thus
contains much more than
just the previously known
music text. Valuable aid
was provided here by a
number of contemporary
copies which yielded
further important
details.
For Those
Who Continue to Rise.
Composed by Travis
Weller. Set of Score and
Parts.
30+2+12+12+4+12+12+12+4+4
+4+4+4+4+6+6+6+8+9+9+6+9+
6+6+4+2+2+9+4+12+4 pages.
Duration 6 minutes, 10
seconds. Carl Fischer
Music #SPS93. Published
by Carl Fischer Music
(CF.SPS93).
ISBN
9781491159774. UPC:
680160918362.
Adver
sity, in any form at any
point of our lives, can
be absolutely
debilitating mentally,
physically, emotionally
and spiritually. In the
midst of hard times, it
is difficult to imagine
what our lives will look
like on the other side of
the adversity we are
facing. Yet so many of us
carry on, move forward,
and rise above determined
to never be defined by
our circumstances. For
some their personal
faith, support from
family, or relationship
to friends provides the
necessary fuel for the
resilience they need to
rise above adversity. It
is amazing when a group
of people are able to
come together to overcome
a common obstacle. With
this in mind, I put to
music that spirit of
rising above for the
Liberty High School Band
and their director
Michael Summers.
Northeast Ohio has seen
its share of prosperity
and significant times of
hardship along many
different fronts. I still
see resilient leaders,
community members, and
educators like Mike who
continue to fight for
what is best and what is
right. The debut of this
work, like so many other
things, was interrupted
in the spring of 2020.
Now on the precipice of a
new beginning for many
band programs across the
country, all of us in
instrumental music
education must summon
resilience to ensure our
groups recover, grow and
flourish. The rising
major second represents
us all taking the first
step forward in good and
difficult times. The
adversity (tension)
arrives in various ways
harmonically throughout
the work. Tension can
make us lose sense of
where we are on our
journey and rob us of our
ability to imagine
getting through our
current situation. But I
am reminded that not all
tension is bad. Given
enough time and enough
resolution, we can often
make sense of the
adversity. We can
recognize that the
adversity taught us
something about ourselves
we didn't know, or
perhaps challenged us to
grow in a way we didn't
think possible. Either
way, it does not happen
unless we possess
resilience. I thank you
in advance for your
support of this music and
wish you and your group
the very best moving
forward with
Resilience. Adversity,
in any form at any point
of our lives, can be
absolutely debilitating
mentally, physically,
emotionally and
spiritually. In the midst
of hard times, it is
difficult to imagine what
our lives will look like
on the other side of the
adversity we are facing.
Yet so many of us carry
on, move forward, and
rise above determined to
never be defined by our
circumstances.For some
their personal faith,
support from family, or
relationship to friends
provides the necessary
fuel for the resilience
they need to rise above
adversity. It is amazing
when a group of people
are able to come together
to overcome a common
obstacle. With this in
mind, I put to music that
spirit of rising above
for the Liberty High
School Band and their
director Michael Summers.
Northeast Ohio has seen
its share of prosperity
and significant times of
hardship along many
different fronts. I still
see resilient leaders,
community members, and
educators like Mike who
continue to fight for
what is best and what is
right. The debut of this
work, like so many other
things, was interrupted
in the spring of 2020.
Now on the precipice of a
new beginning for many
band programs across the
country, all of us in
instrumental music
education must summon
resilience to ensure our
groups recover, grow and
flourish. The rising
major second represents
us all taking the first
step forward in good and
difficult times. The
adversity (tension)
arrives in various ways
harmonically throughout
the work. Tension can
make us lose sense of
where we are on our
journey and rob us of our
ability to imagine
getting through our
current situation. But I
am reminded that not all
tension is bad. Given
enough time and enough
resolution, we can often
make sense of the
adversity. We can
recognize that the
adversity taught us
something about ourselves
we didn’t know, or
perhaps challenged us to
grow in a way we
didn’t think
possible. Either way, it
does not happen unless we
possess resilience.I
thank you in advance for
your support of this
music and wish you and
your group the very best
moving forward with
Resilience.