The Greatest Love Of All Composed by Michael Masser, Linda Creed Homecoming Com...(+)
The Greatest Love Of All
Composed by Michael
Masser, Linda Creed
Homecoming Composed by
Hagood Hardy
Weve Got Tonight Composed
by Bob Seger
Song From M*a*s*h
(Suicide Is Painless)
Composed by Johnny
Mandel, Mike Altman
Misty Composed by Erroll
Garner, Johnny Burke
Other Side Of Midnight
Composed by Michel
Legrand
The Rose Composed by
Amanda Mc Broom
Tears In Heaven Composed
by Eric Clapton, Will
Jennings
Theme From New York, New
York Composed by Fred
Ebb, John Kander
Heart Composed by Richard
Adler, Jerry Ross
Hey There Composed by
Richard Adler, Jerry Ross
Colors Of My Life
Composed by Cy Coleman,
Michael Stewart
Over The Rainbow Composed
by Harold Arlen, E.y.
Harburg
Separate Lives Love Theme
From "white Nights"
Theme From Ice Castles
Composed by Marvin
Hamlisch, Carole Bayer
Sager
Tonight I Celebrate My
Love Composed by Michael
Masser, Gerry Goffin
In This Life Composed by
Mike Reid, Allen Shamblin
Up Where We Belong
Composed by W Jennings, B
Sainte, Marie, J Nitzsche
From A Distance Composed
by Julie Gold
I Will Always Love You
Composed by Dolly Parton
Oh! What It Seemed To Be
Composed by Bennie
Benjamin, George David
Weiss, Frankie
I Believe I Can Fly
Composed by R. Kelly
Valentine Composed by Jim
Brickman, Jack Kugell
How Do I Live Composed by
Diane Warren
Colors Of The Wind
Composed by Stephen
Schwartz, Alan Menken
A Dream Is A Wish Your
Heart Makes Composed by
Mack David, Al Hoffman,
Jerry Livingston
see less... Tell Him
Composed by Linda
Thompson, David Foster
Con Te Patiro / Time To
Say Goodbye Composed by
Lucio Quarantotto,
Francesco Sartori
Karen's Theme Composed by
Richard Carpenter
The Prayer Composed by
Carole Bayer Sager, David
"babyface" Foster
My One True Friend
Composed by Carole Bayer
Sager, Carole King
Love Solo Composed by Dan
Coates
I Don't Want To Miss A
Thing Composed by Diane
Warren
As Time Goes By Composed
by Herman Hupfeld
La Vie En Rose Composed
by Louiguy, Piaf
(French), David (Eng.)
What's New? Composed by
Bob Haggart, Johnny Burke
Summer Me, Winter Me
Composed by Michel
Legrand, Alan, Marilyn
Bergman
Evergreen Composed by
Barbra Streisand, Paul
Williams
Arthur's Theme (Best That
You Can Do) Composed by
Burt Bacharach, Carole
Bayer Sager
Can You Read My Mind
Composed by John
Williams, Leslie Bricusse
Love And Marriage
Composed by Jimmy Van
Heusen, Sammy Cahn
Desperado Composed by Don
Henley, Glenn Frey
The Wind Beneath My Wings
Composed by Jeff Silbar,
Larry Henley
How Do You Keep The Music
Playing? Composed by
Michel Legrand, Alan
Bergman
Anywhere The Heart Goes
Composed by Henry
Mancini, Will Jennings
Once Before I Go Composed
by Dean Pitchford, Peter
Allen
Star Wars - Main Theme
Composed by John Williams
Open Arms Composed by
Steve Perry, Jonathan
Cain
Canon In D Composed by
Johann Pachelbel
That's What Friends Are
For Composed by Burt
Bacharach, Carole Bayer
Sager
Friends Or Lovers Both To
Each Composed by Paul
Gordon, Jay Gruska
Forever Composed by Kenny
Loggins, Eva Loggins,
David Foster
Saving All My Love For
You Composed by Gerry
Goffin, Michael Masser
Miss Celie's Blues
Composed by Quincy Jones,
Rod Temperton, And
Anne's Theme Composed by
Hagood Hardy
One Moment In Time
Composed by Albert
Hammond, John Bettis
Kei's Song Composed by
David Benoit
I Say A Little Prayer
Composed by Burt
Bacharach, Hal David
Happy Birthday To You
Composed by Mildred J.
Hill, Patty S. Hill
May You Always Composed
by Larry Marks, Dick
Charles
If My Friends Could See
Me Now Composed by Cy
Coleman, Dorothy Fields
You Can Always Count On
Me Composed by Cy
Coleman, David Zippel
Ashokan Farewell Composed
by Jay Ungar
Everything I Do I Do It
For You Composed by Bryan
Adams, Robert Lange,
Michael Kamen
Send In The Clowns
Composed by Stephen
Sondheim
She Loves Me Composed by
Sheldon Harnick, Jerry
Bock
How Could I Ever Know?
Composed by Marsha
Norman, Lucy Simon
My Unknown Someone
Composed by Cy Coleman,
Adolph Green, Betty
Comden
Favorite Son Composed by
Cy Coleman, Adolph Green,
Betty Comden
I Swear Composed by Gary
Baker, Frank Myers
I Can Love You Like That
Composed by S Diamond, M
Derry, J Kimball
Beauty And The Beast
Composed by Howard
Ashman, Alan Menken
Angel Eyes Composed by
Jim Brickman
If You Believe Composed
by Jim Brickman
Because You Loved Me
Composed by Diane Warren
Un-break My Heart
Composed by Diane Warren
Ragtime Composed by
Stephen Flaherty, Lynn
Ahrens
Complete Advanced Piano
Solos (Music for All
Occasions). Arranged by
Dan Coates. For solo
piano. Piano -
Intermediate / Advanced
Collection; Piano
Supplemental. The
Professional Touch
Series. Contemporary
Instrumental and Pop. SMP
Level 9 (Advanced).
Collection. Standard
notation (does not
include words to the
songs). 304 pages.
Published by Alfred Music
Publishing
My Dearest Ruth Voix Mezzo-Soprano, Piano Theodore Presser Co.
For Mezzo-soprano and Piano. Composed by Stacy Garrop. Sws. Duration 6 minutes...(+)
For Mezzo-soprano and
Piano.
Composed by Stacy Garrop.
Sws. Duration 6 minutes,
40
seconds. Theodore Presser
Company #111-40297.
Published
by Theodore Presser
Company
(100 Songs Excerpted for Successful Auditions). Edited by Michael Dansicker. For...(+)
(100 Songs Excerpted for
Successful Auditions).
Edited by Michael
Dansicker. For baritone
voice solo, bass voice
solo and piano
accompaniment. Vocal
Collection. Broadway,
Movies and Pop.
Difficulty: medium.
Songbook. Vocal melody,
lyrics, piano
accompaniment, chord
names and introductory
text. 172 pages.
Published by Hal Leonard
For voice and guitar. Format: fakebook. With vocal melody, lyrics and chord name...(+)
For voice and guitar.
Format: fakebook. With
vocal melody, lyrics and
chord names. Gospel.
Series: Hal Leonard
Paperback Songs. 256
pages. 4.2x6.7 inches.
Published by Hal Leonard.
Broadway Songs Ligne De Mélodie, Paroles et Accords [Fake Book] Hal Leonard
Fakebook for voice and C instrument. With vocal melody, lyrics, chord names and ...(+)
Fakebook for voice and C
instrument. With vocal
melody, lyrics, chord
names and . Series: Hal
Leonard Paperback Songs.
255 pages. Published by
Hal Leonard.
(Piano/Vocal/Guitar). For Guitar; Keyboard; Piano; Voice. This edition: Piano/Vo...(+)
(Piano/Vocal/Guitar). For
Guitar; Keyboard; Piano;
Voice. This edition:
Piano/Vocal/Guitar. Book;
P/V/C Mixed Folio;
Piano/Vocal/Chords.
Standard. 564 pages.
Published by Alfred Music
Publishing
Orchestra Orchestra SKU: PR.11641373S Composed by Peter Schickele. Full s...(+)
Orchestra Orchestra
SKU: PR.11641373S
Composed by Peter
Schickele. Full score.
Duration 24 minutes.
Theodore Presser Company
#116-41373S. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.11641373S).
UPC:
680160680344.
The
concerto has always
seemed an especially
attractive medium to me,
not necessarily because
of its expectations of
virtuosity (although
flaunting it when you've
got it certainly has its
place), and emphatically
not because of the
perception of a concerto
as a contest, but because
so much of what I write
feels song-like; I'm very
much at home with the
age-old texture of melody
and accompaniment. I
hope, before I move on,
to have the opportunity
to write concertos for
all the major
instruments, and perhaps
some of the rarer ones as
well. The oboe is not
only one of the major
instruments, it is one of
my favorite instruments.
I've always loved its
sound, but since moving
to New York I have gotten
to hear and, in some
cases, know some
extremely fine oboists
who broadened my
appreciation of the
instrument's
possibilities. I
especially remember a
concert, probably in the
late 1960's, in which
Humbert Lucarelli played
a Handel concerto,
filling out large melodic
leaps with cascading
scale passages in a way
that raised the hair on
the back of your neck,
somewhat in the way that
John Coltrane's sheets of
sound did. The sweeping
scales in the second
movement of my concerto
were definitely inspired
by Bert Lucarelli's
performance. The first,
third and fifth movements
of the Concerto for Oboe
and Orchestra are
song-like, whereas the
second and fourth have
strong scherzo and dance
qualities, including a
couple of sections that
sound like out-and-out
pirate dances to me. The
hymn-like tune at the
beginning of the middle
movement was originally
begun as a vocal piece to
be sung by my wife, son
and daughter at my
brother's wedding, but I
couldn't come up with
good works for it, so it
ended up as an
instrumental chant. The
opening and closing of
the concerto make use of
the oboe's uniquely
soulful singing. I had
not heard Pamela Woods
Pecha's solo playing in
person when she
approached me about
writing a concerto, but I
had heard her fine
recording of chamber
music for oboe and
strings by the three B's
(English, that is: Bliss,
Bax and Britten) with the
Audubon Quartet. I
actually already had some
oboe concerto ideas in my
sketchbooks; although I
didn't end up using any
of those earlier ideas,
it's interesting that
most of them tended to
share the general feeling
and tonality of the
eventual opening of the
concerto. The work was
completed on October 13,
1994. I hate the
compromises involved in
making piano reductions
-- perhaps I would feel
differently if I were a
more accomplished pianist
-- so I often decide to
make piano reductions for
four hands rather than
two. My good friend Jon
Kimura Parker is a
terrific sight-reader,
and I roped him into
coming over to my place
on February 17, 1995, to
help me accompany Pamela
on the first read-through
of the piece. The first
performance of the work
took place on July 21,
1995, at the American
Music Festival in Duncan,
Oklahoma, with Mark
Parker conducting the
Festival Orchestra.
Orchestra Orchestra SKU: PR.11641373L Composed by Peter Schickele. Large ...(+)
Orchestra Orchestra
SKU: PR.11641373L
Composed by Peter
Schickele. Large Score.
Duration 24 minutes.
Theodore Presser Company
#116-41373L. Published by
Theodore Presser Company
(PR.11641373L).
UPC:
680160680337.
The
concerto has always
seemed an especially
attractive medium to me,
not necessarily because
of its expectations of
virtuosity (although
flaunting it when you've
got it certainly has its
place), and emphatically
not because of the
perception of a concerto
as a contest, but because
so much of what I write
feels song-like; I'm very
much at home with the
age-old texture of melody
and accompaniment. I
hope, before I move on,
to have the opportunity
to write concertos for
all the major
instruments, and perhaps
some of the rarer ones as
well. The oboe is not
only one of the major
instruments, it is one of
my favorite instruments.
I've always loved its
sound, but since moving
to New York I have gotten
to hear and, in some
cases, know some
extremely fine oboists
who broadened my
appreciation of the
instrument's
possibilities. I
especially remember a
concert, probably in the
late 1960's, in which
Humbert Lucarelli played
a Handel concerto,
filling out large melodic
leaps with cascading
scale passages in a way
that raised the hair on
the back of your neck,
somewhat in the way that
John Coltrane's sheets of
sound did. The sweeping
scales in the second
movement of my concerto
were definitely inspired
by Bert Lucarelli's
performance. The first,
third and fifth movements
of the Concerto for Oboe
and Orchestra are
song-like, whereas the
second and fourth have
strong scherzo and dance
qualities, including a
couple of sections that
sound like out-and-out
pirate dances to me. The
hymn-like tune at the
beginning of the middle
movement was originally
begun as a vocal piece to
be sung by my wife, son
and daughter at my
brother's wedding, but I
couldn't come up with
good works for it, so it
ended up as an
instrumental chant. The
opening and closing of
the concerto make use of
the oboe's uniquely
soulful singing. I had
not heard Pamela Woods
Pecha's solo playing in
person when she
approached me about
writing a concerto, but I
had heard her fine
recording of chamber
music for oboe and
strings by the three B's
(English, that is: Bliss,
Bax and Britten) with the
Audubon Quartet. I
actually already had some
oboe concerto ideas in my
sketchbooks; although I
didn't end up using any
of those earlier ideas,
it's interesting that
most of them tended to
share the general feeling
and tonality of the
eventual opening of the
concerto. The work was
completed on October 13,
1994. I hate the
compromises involved in
making piano reductions
-- perhaps I would feel
differently if I were a
more accomplished pianist
-- so I often decide to
make piano reductions for
four hands rather than
two. My good friend Jon
Kimura Parker is a
terrific sight-reader,
and I roped him into
coming over to my place
on February 17, 1995, to
help me accompany Pamela
on the first read-through
of the piece. The first
performance of the work
took place on July 21,
1995, at the American
Music Festival in Duncan,
Oklahoma, with Mark
Parker conducting the
Festival Orchestra.
Piano, Voix et Guitare [Partition] - Intermédiaire Hal Leonard
For voice, piano and guitar chords. Format: piano/vocal/chords songbook. With vo...(+)
For voice, piano and
guitar chords. Format:
piano/vocal/chords
songbook. With vocal
melody, piano
accompaniment, lyrics,
chord names and guitar
chord diagrams. Gospel.
216 pages. 9x12 inches.
Published by Hal Leonard.
Piano, Voix et Guitare [Partition] - Intermédiaire Hal Leonard
For voice, piano and guitar chords. Format: piano/vocal/chords songbook. With vo...(+)
For voice, piano and
guitar chords. Format:
piano/vocal/chords
songbook. With vocal
melody, piano
accompaniment, lyrics,
chord names and guitar
chord diagrams. Gospel.
272 pages. 9x12 inches.
Published by Hal Leonard.
Composed by Sammy Cahn. For Piano/Vocal/Guitar. P/V/G Composer Collection. Softc...(+)
Composed by Sammy Cahn.
For Piano/Vocal/Guitar.
P/V/G Composer
Collection. Softcover.
320 pages. Cherry Lane
Music #VF1567. Published
by Cherry Lane Music
For Baritone and Piano. Composed by Stacy Garrop. Sws. Duration 6 minutes, 40 ...(+)
For Baritone and Piano.
Composed by Stacy Garrop.
Sws. Duration 6 minutes,
40
seconds. Theodore Presser
Company #111-40298.
Published
by Theodore Presser
Company