Composed by Bradley
Knight. Choral, cantatas.
Eastertide. Book. Word
Music #080689638176.
Published by Word Music
(WD.080689638176).
UPC:
080689638176.
From
Word Music & Church
Resources ~ featuring
the dynamic creative team
of Bradley Knight and
Johnathan Crumpton ~
comes Our Living
Hope, new for Easter!
Filled with the
joy and promise of a
world redeemed by the
love and victorious
resurrection of our great
Savior, Our Living
Hope is the perfect
foundation for what
just might be your most
powerful and compelling
Easter service
ever!
Featuring powerfully
explosive songs of
worship and praise and
filled with testimony of
the impact of
God’s love and
mercy on our lives,
Our Living Hope
sets a new standard of
excellence for
contemporary, evangelical
worship choirs
everywhere! Your choir
will love singing these
masterful Bradley Knight
arrangements, such as the
opening refrain of
Were You There? in
a medley with Kari
Jobe’s Forever
(We Sing Hallelujah),
breathtaking new songs
like Mercy Has Changed
Me (a new “instant
classic†first
introduced by TaRanda
Greene), a soulful
Nothing but the Blood
Medley, the new
worship anthem, Living
Hope, and much
more!
Overture to the Opera
- Dresden Version.
Composed by Richard
Wagner. Folder.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library).
Overture; Romantic. Set
of parts. 76 pages.
Duration 15'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #OB 4497-30.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel
(BR.OB-4497-30).
ISBN
9790004312247. 10 x 12.5
inches.
Now they
began to play. To my
greatest surprise, it was
a strong, full orchestra,
outstandingly rehearsed,
the tempi nearly all
perfect, everything neat
and well executed. My
God, how I was moved to
hear basically for the
first time something of
mine being played without
me, and without anyone
really paying much
attention to me. And now
this very piece, the
Tannhauser Overture! I
sat there plagued by an
indescribable inner
agitation - :
unfortunately, I was
being sharply observed by
the public, which had
taken note of this; yet I
noticed nothing of all
this, and burst into a
river of beneficial
tears. (...) At the
close, the wild applause
of the public that had no
idea about what they had
just witnessed The
conductor and the entire
orchestra turned towards
me and cheered and
applauded so much that I
had to stand and thank
them...(Richard Wagner
from Strasbourg to his
wife Minna on 15 January
1858).
Overture to the Opera
- Dresden Version.
Composed by Richard
Wagner. Stapled.
Orchester-Bibliothek
(Orchestral Library).
Overture; Romantic. Part.
4 pages. Duration 15'.
Breitkopf and Haertel #OB
4497-27. Published by
Breitkopf and Haertel
(BR.OB-4497-27).
ISBN
9790004312230. 10 x 12.5
inches.
Now they
began to play. To my
greatest surprise, it was
a strong, full orchestra,
outstandingly rehearsed,
the tempi nearly all
perfect, everything neat
and well executed. My
God, how I was moved to
hear basically for the
first time something of
mine being played without
me, and without anyone
really paying much
attention to me. And now
this very piece, the
Tannhauser Overture! I
sat there plagued by an
indescribable inner
agitation - :
unfortunately, I was
being sharply observed by
the public, which had
taken note of this; yet I
noticed nothing of all
this, and burst into a
river of beneficial
tears. (...) At the
close, the wild applause
of the public that had no
idea about what they had
just witnessed The
conductor and the entire
orchestra turned towards
me and cheered and
applauded so much that I
had to stand and thank
them...(Richard Wagner
from Strasbourg to his
wife Minna on 15 January
1858).
Olympia Orchestre d'harmonie [Conducteur et Parties séparées] - Facile FJH
By Brian Balmages. Arranged by Brian Balmages. FJH Beginning Band. This fanfare ...(+)
By Brian Balmages.
Arranged by Brian
Balmages. FJH Beginning
Band. This fanfare
captures the spirit of
Olympia, the birthplace
of the Olympic Games. The
Games began in 776 B.C.
In honor of Zeus. Since
then, they have become
the central location for
heroes and champions to
compete for the highest
honors in the world. This
work also serves as a
reminder that heroes are
all around us - in
teachers who stay after
school to help students,
in parents who strive to
give their children the
best possible lives, and
most of all in students
themselves, the young
champions of our world
who see nothing between
them and their dreams.
The mallet part calls for
multiple sets of bells
(or other metallic
instruments such as the
vibraphone). Certainly,
two to three players can
really make this an
effective part. There are
two Percussion 1 parts
include