(Words and Chords to Nearly 1200 Songs 9x12 Spiral Bound). Edited by Annie Patte...(+)
(Words and Chords to
Nearly 1200 Songs 9x12
Spiral Bound). Edited by
Annie Patterson and Peter
Blood. For Vocal. Vocal.
Softcover. 304 pages.
Published by Hal Leonard
(Words and Chords to Nearly 1200 Songs Spiral-Bound). Edited by Annie Patterson ...(+)
(Words and Chords to
Nearly 1200 Songs
Spiral-Bound). Edited by
Annie Patterson and Peter
Blood. For Vocal. Vocal.
Softcover. 304 pages.
Published by Hal Leonard
For voice and C instrument. Format: fakebook. With vocal melody, lyrics and chor...(+)
For voice and C
instrument. Format:
fakebook. With vocal
melody, lyrics and chord
names. Folk. Series: Hal
Leonard Fake Books. 536
pages. 9.6x12 inches.
Published by Hal Leonard.
(C Edition) For voice and C instrument. Format: fakebook. With vocal melody, lyr...(+)
(C Edition) For voice and
C instrument. Format:
fakebook. With vocal
melody, lyrics and chord
names. Series: Hal
Leonard Fake Books. 856
pages. 9x12 inches.
Published by Hal Leonard.
Complete Lyrics for Over 1000 Songs from Broadway to Rock. By Various. Lyric Lib...(+)
Complete Lyrics for Over
1000 Songs from Broadway
to Rock. By Various.
Lyric Library. Softcover.
Size 8.5x11 inches. 373
pages. Published by Hal
Leonard.
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.
For voice and C instrument. Format: fakebook. With vocal melody, lyrics and chor...(+)
For voice and C
instrument. Format:
fakebook. With vocal
melody, lyrics and chord
names. Traditional pop
and vocal standards.
Series: Hal Leonard Fake
Books. 424 pages. 9x12
inches. Published by Hal
Leonard.
(Over 850 Classical Themes and Melodies in the Original Keys) For C instrument. ...(+)
(Over 850 Classical
Themes and Melodies in
the Original Keys) For C
instrument. Format:
fakebook (spiral bound).
With vocal melody
(excerpts) and chord
names. Lassical. Series:
Hal Leonard Fake Books.
646 pages. 9x12 inches.
Published by Hal Leonard.
Saint Benedict
Cantata. Composed by
Jacob De Haan. Musica
Sacra. Concert Piece. Set
(Score & Parts). Composed
2008. De Haske
Publications #DHP
1074334-010. Published by
De Haske Publications
(BT.DHP-1074334-010).
9x12 inches.
English-German-French-Dut
ch.
Cantica de
Sancto Benedicto is a
three-movement work for
mixed choir, soprano
solo, concert band and
organ ad libitum - on
Latin lyrics that relate
to the life of Saint
Benedict. It was
commissioned by the city
of Norcia in Italy,
whereBenedict was born.
The holy Benedict
(480-547) is considered
the founder of monastic
life within the Roman
Catholic Church. His
enormous influence is
especially owing to his
monastic rule, the Regula
Benedicti.Jacob de Haan
has named the movements
ofCantica de Sancto
Benedicto after the
Holy Trinity: the Father
(Gloria Patri),
the Son (Gloria
Filio) and the Holy
Spirit (Gloria
Spiritui Sancto). The
lyrics of thehymn
Gemma Caelestis,
(which, like the
othertexts, were
originally used in
Gregorian chant) are
voiced by the choir. To
this purpose, Jacob de
Haan composed new,
choral-like, homophone
music. The sequence
Laeta Quies is
rendered by the soprano;
the verses (divided over
the threemovements) are
alternated with those of
Gemma Caelestis.
The work closes with an
impressive grand finale,
in which texts are used
from the proprium of the
mass in honor of the
saint’s day of the
holy Benedict (11 July).
Notes to the
conductor:For this
cantata, there are
various possibilities for
the performance. The
first involves a
performance in which the
choir and soprano parts
are only accompanied by
organ. Such a performance
has several advantages:
since the band never
soundstogether with the
choir and the soprano, no
balance problems occur,
and even a performance
with a large concert band
and a small cantata choir
is conceivable. A special
layout is also possible -
with which you can set up
a
three-dimensionalperforma
nce in a church. For
example, the choir can
sing in the chancel,
accompanied by the choir
organ; the soprano can
stand on the gallery,
accompanied by the main
organ; and the band can
be seated in another part
of the church. The choir
couldalso sing from a
gallery. With layouts
like this, working with
two conductors is
advisable. Choral parts
available
separately.
Koor
partijen apart
verkrijgbaar.
Cantica de Sancto
Benedicto ist ein
dreisätziges Werk
für gemischten Chor,
Sopran-Solist,
sinfonisches
Blasorchester und Orgel
ad lib. - zu lateinischen
Texten über das Leben
des Heiligen Benedikt. Es
entstand im Auftrag der
italienschen StadtNursia,
dem Geburtsort von
Benedikt. Jacob de Haan
benannte die Sätze von
Cantica de Sancto
Benedicto nach der
Heiligen Dreifaltigkeit:
der Vater (Gloria
Patri), der Sohn
(Gloria Filio) und
der Heilige Geist
(Gloria
SpirituiSancto). Der
Text zur Hymne Gemma
Caelestis (der wie
die übrigen Texte
ursprünglich aus dem
Gregorianischen Choral
stammt) wird vom Chor
gesungen. Zu diesem Zweck
komponierte Jacob de Haan
neue choralartige,
homophone Musik. Der
AbschnittLaeta
Quies wird vom Sopran
vorgetragen; die Strophen
(die sich über alle
drei Sätze verteilen)
wechseln sich mit denen
von Gemma
Caelestis ab. Das
Werk endet mit einem
eindrucksvollen
großartigen Finale, in
dem Texte aus dem
Propriumaus der Messe zu
Ehren des Feiertags des
Heiligen Benedikt (11.
Juli) verwendet
werden.Chorstimmen sind
unter folgendem Link
separat erhältlich:DHP
1074334-050Anmerkungen
für den
Dirigenten:Für
dieseKantate gibt es
mehrere
Aufführungsmöglichk
eiten. Die erste ist eine
Version, in der die Chor-
und Sopranstimmen nur von
der Orgel begleitet
werden. Solch eine
Aufführung bietet
mehrere Vorteile: Da das
Blasorchester nie
zusammen mit Chor und
Sopranerklingt, gibt es
keine Probleme mit der
klanglichen
Ausgewogenheit und sogar
eine Aufführung mit
einem großen
Blasorchester und einem
kleinen Kantatenchor ist
denkbar. Eine besondere
Aufstellung für eine
dreidimensionale
Aufführung in einer
Kircheist ebenso
möglich. Der Chor
singt zum Beispiel von
der Kanzel aus, begleitet
von der Chororgel; der
Sopran steht auf der
Galerie, begleitet von
der Hauptorgel,
während das
Blasorchester in einem
anderen Teil der Kirche
aufgestellt ist. Der Chor
kannauch von Galerie aus
singen. Bei solchen
Aufstellungen ist es
ratsam, mit zwei
Dirigenten zu arbeiten.
Die Begleitung der
Singstimmen ist in
Stichnoten für das
Blasorchester notiert.
Wenn das Werk ohne Orgel
aufgeführt wird,
beispielsweise in
einemKonzertsaal, spielt
das Blasorchester die
Begleitung. Die
Begleitstimmen sind
transparent orchestriert,
zugunsten der klanglichen
Ausgewogenheit von
Blasorchester, Chor und
Sopran. Im dritten Satz
(Takte 144-151) gibt es
eine optionale Passage
fürden Chor. Diese ist
nur für eine
Aufführung mit einem
sehr großen Chor
gedacht. Eine weitere
Variante beinhaltet, den
musikalischen
Höhepunkt im dritten
Satz zu überspringen
und direkt von Takt 156
zu Takt 213
weiterzugehen. Gründe
hierfür könnensein:
der etwas höhere
Schwierigkeitsgrad, eine
begrenzte
Aufführungsdauer
und/oder der Wunsch, den
Kantatentext auf Gemma
Caelestis und
Laeta Quies zu
beschränken.
Während einer Messe
oder eines Gottesdienstes
können auch
verschiedeneStrophen
verwendet werden.
Wahlweise kann das
Sopransolo auch vom
Chorsopran gesungen
werden. Alternativ hierzu
können Sie die
Sopranstimmen (komplett
oder teilweise) von einem
Tenor singen lassen.
Für Chöre, die
Cantica de Sancto
Benedictoaufführen
wollen, bietet der
Komponist einen
Extra-Service auf seiner
Website
https://www.jacobdehaan.c
om, wo Audiodateien der
einzelnen Chorstimmen
für das Einstudieren
zu Hause zugänglich
sind. Informationen zu
anderen Werken für
Chor undBlasorchester
(Missa Brevis und
Missa Katharina)
sind ebenfalls dort zu
finden.Chorstimmen
separat
erhältlich.
For
Ukulele, Baritone
Ukulele, Guitar,
Mandolin, Banjo. By
The Beatles. Arranged by
Mark Phillips. Strum
Together. Pop. Softcover.
146 pages. Published by
Hal Leonard (HL.295362).
ISBN 9781540055798.
UPC: 888680946548.
9.0x12.0x0.366
inches.
70 songs
with lyrics, melody
lines, and chord frames
for standard ukulele,
baritone ukulele, guitar,
mandolin, and banjo.
Enjoy strumming and
singing these Beatles
classics with all your
buddies! A great resource
for beginning stringed
instrument players who
are ready to experience
the fun of making music
together! Songs include:
All You Need Is Love
• Back in the
U.S.S.R. • Birthday
• Can't Buy Me Love
• Come Together
• Day Tripper
• Drive My Car
• Eight Days a Week
• Eleanor Rigby
• Get Back •
Good Day Sunshine •
Got to Get You into My
Life • A Hard Day's
Night • Help!
• Here Comes the
Sun • Hey Jude
• I Saw Her
Standing There • I
Want to Hold Your Hand
• In My Life
• Let It Be •
The Long and Winding Road
• Norwegian Wood
(This Bird Has Flown)
• Paperback Writer
• Revolution
• Sgt. Pepper's
Lonely Hearts Club Band
• She Loves You
• Ticket to Ride
• Twist and Shout
• Yellow Submarine
• Yesterday •
and more!
Choral SSA Choir, piano, flute SKU: CF.CM9583 Composed by Christopher Gab...(+)
Choral SSA Choir, piano,
flute
SKU:
CF.CM9583
Composed by
Christopher Gabel. Sws.
Performance Score. 20
pages. Duration 4
minutes, 9 seconds. Carl
Fischer Music #CM9583.
Published by Carl Fischer
Music (CF.CM9583).
ISBN 9781491154052.
UPC: 680160912551. 6.875
x 10.5 inches. Key: Eb
major. English. Thomas
Moore
(1779-1852).
Thomas
Moore (17791852) was an
Irish poet, singer,
songwriter and
entertainer. In his poem,
On Music, Moore
emphasizes the power that
music has in our lives
and the ability it has to
evoke memories and
feelings from the past.
Music transcends that
which can be spoken or
felt. The beauty of
making music together is
to establish meaningful
connections with others
and to share a common
language through song. We
are reminded, however,
that relationships with
each other can be fluid
or unstable, but as the
words of the poem remind
us, music will not
betray. No matter the
experiences that we face,
the relationships that we
foster, or the memories
that we create, music
will always be there for
us in times of need and
in times of celebration.
What does music mean to
you? How does it enrich
your life? On Music
Thomas Moore When through
life unblest we rove,
Losing all that made life
dear, Should some notes
we used to love, In days
of boyhood, meet our ear,
Oh! how welcome breathes
the strain! Wakening
thoughts that long have
slept, Kindling former
smiles again In faded
eyes that long have wept.
Like the gale, that sighs
along Beds of oriental
flowers, Is the grateful
breath of song, That once
was heard in happier
hours. Filld with balm
the gale sighs on, Though
the flowers have sunk in
death; So, when pleasures
dream is gone, Its memory
lives in Musics breath.
Music, oh, how faint, how
weak, Language fades
before thy spell! Why
should Feeling ever
speak, When thou canst
breathe her soul so well?
Friendships balmy words
may feign, Loves are even
more false than they; Oh!
tis only musics strain
Can sweetly soothe, and
not betray. Note to the
performer: Liberty can be
taken with the tempo
markings and rubato
should be used throughout
in order to further
stress the beauty and
significance of the text.
With its vocal-like
descant, the flute should
be treated as an
additional voice rather
than mere accompaniment
to enhance the texture of
the piece. Thomas
Moore (1779a1852) was an
Irish poet, singer,
songwriter and
entertainer. In his poem,
On Music, Moore
emphasizes the power that
music has in our lives
and the ability it has to
evoke memories and
feelings from the past.
Music transcends that
which can be spoken or
felt. The beauty of
making music together is
to establish meaningful
connections with others
and to share a common
language through song. We
are reminded, however,
that relationships with
each other can be fluid
or unstable, but as the
words of the poem remind
us, music will not
betray. No matter the
experiences that we face,
the relationships that we
foster, or the memories
that we create, music
will always be there for
us in times of need and
in times of celebration.
What does music mean to
you? How does it enrich
your life? On Music a
Thomas Moore When through
life unblest we rove,
Losing all that made life
dear, Should some notes
we used to love, In days
of boyhood, meet our ear,
Oh! how welcome breathes
the strain! Wakening
thoughts that long have
slept, Kindling former
smiles again In faded
eyes that long have wept.
Like the gale, that sighs
along Beds of oriental
flowers, Is the grateful
breath of song, That once
was heard in happier
hours. Fillad with balm
the gale sighs on, Though
the flowers have sunk in
death; So, when
pleasureas dream is gone,
Its memory lives in
Musicas breath. Music,
oh, how faint, how weak,
Language fades before thy
spell! Why should Feeling
ever speak, When thou
canst breathe her soul so
well? Friendshipas balmy
words may feign, Loveas
are even more false than
they; Oh! atis only
musicas strain Can
sweetly soothe, and not
betray. Note to the
performer: Liberty can be
taken with the tempo
markings and rubato
should be used throughout
in order to further
stress the beauty and
significance of the text.
With its vocal-like
descant, the flute should
be treated as an
additional voice rather
than mere accompaniment
to enhance the texture of
the piece. Thomas
Moore (1779-1852) was an
Irish poet, singer,
songwriter and
entertainer. In his poem,
On Music, Moore
emphasizes the power that
music has in our lives
and the ability it has to
evoke memories and
feelings from the past.
Music transcends that
which can be spoken or
felt. The beauty of
making music together is
to establish meaningful
connections with others
and to share a common
language through song. We
are reminded, however,
that relationships with
each other can be fluid
or unstable, but as the
words of the poem remind
us, music will not
betray. No matter the
experiences that we face,
the relationships that we
foster, or the memories
that we create, music
will always be there for
us in times of need and
in times of celebration.
What does music mean to
you? How does it enrich
your life? On Music -
Thomas Moore When through
life unblest we rove,
Losing all that made life
dear, Should some notes
we used to love, In days
of boyhood, meet our ear,
Oh! how welcome breathes
the strain! Wakening
thoughts that long have
slept, Kindling former
smiles again In faded
eyes that long have wept.
Like the gale, that sighs
along Beds of oriental
flowers, Is the grateful
breath of song, That once
was heard in happier
hours. Fill'd with balm
the gale sighs on, Though
the flowers have sunk in
death; So, when
pleasure's dream is gone,
Its memory lives in
Music's breath. Music,
oh, how faint, how weak,
Language fades before thy
spell! Why should Feeling
ever speak, When thou
canst breathe her soul so
well? Friendship's balmy
words may feign, Love's
are even more false than
they; Oh! 'tis only
music's strain Can
sweetly soothe, and not
betray. Note to the
performer: Liberty can be
taken with the tempo
markings and rubato
should be used throughout
in order to further
stress the beauty and
significance of the text.
With its vocal-like
descant, the flute should
be treated as an
additional voice rather
than mere accompaniment
to enhance the texture of
the piece. Thomas
Moore (1779-1852) was an
Irish poet, singer,
songwriter and
entertainer. In his poem,
On Music, Moore
emphasizes the power that
music has in our lives
and the ability it has to
evoke memories and
feelings from the past.
Music transcends that
which can be spoken or
felt. The beauty of
making music together is
to establish meaningful
connections with others
and to share a common
language through song. We
are reminded, however,
that relationships with
each other can be fluid
or unstable, but as the
words of the poem remind
us, music will not
betray. No matter the
experiences that we face,
the relationships that we
foster, or the memories
that we create, music
will always be there for
us in times of need and
in times of celebration.
What does music mean to
you? How does it enrich
your life? On Music -
Thomas Moore When through
life unblest we rove,
Losing all that made life
dear, Should some notes
we used to love, In days
of boyhood, meet our ear,
Oh! how welcome breathes
the strain! Wakening
thoughts that long have
slept, Kindling former
smiles again In faded
eyes that long have wept.
Like the gale, that sighs
along Beds of oriental
flowers, Is the grateful
breath of song, That once
was heard in happier
hours. Fill'd with balm
the gale sighs on, Though
the flowers have sunk in
death; So, when
pleasure's dream is gone,
Its memory lives in
Music's breath. Music,
oh, how faint, how weak,
Language fades before thy
spell! Why should Feeling
ever speak, When thou
canst breathe her soul so
well? Friendship's balmy
words may feign, Love's
are even more false than
they; Oh! 'tis only
music's strain Can
sweetly soothe, and not
betray. Note to the
performer: Liberty can be
taken with the tempo
markings and rubato
should be used throughout
in order to further
stress the beauty and
significance of the text.
With its vocal-like
descant, the flute should
be treated as an
additional voice rather
than mere accompaniment
to enhance the texture of
the piece. Thomas
Moore (1779–1852)
was an Irish poet,
singer, songwriter and
entertainer. In his poem,
On Music, Moore
emphasizes the power that
music has in our lives
and the ability it has to
evoke memories and
feelings from the past.
Music transcends that
which can be spoken or
felt. The beauty of
making music together is
to establish meaningful
connections with others
and to share a common
language through song.We
are reminded, however,
that relationships with
each other can be fluid
or unstable, but as the
words of the poem remind
us, music will not
betray. No matter the
experiences that we face,
the relationships that we
foster, or the memories
that we create, music
will always be there for
us in times of need and
in times of celebration.
What does music mean to
you? How does it enrich
your life?On Music
– Thomas MooreWhen
through life unblest we
rove,Losing all that made
life dear,Should some
notes we used to love,In
days of boyhood, meet our
ear,Oh! how welcome
breathes the
strain!Wakening thoughts
that long have
slept,Kindling former
smiles againIn faded eyes
that long have wept.Like
the gale, that sighs
alongBeds of oriental
flowers,Is the grateful
breath of song,That once
was heard in happier
hours.Fill’d with
balm the gale sighs
on,Though the flowers
have sunk in death;So,
when pleasure’s
dream is gone,Its memory
lives in Music’s
breath.Music, oh, how
faint, how weak,Language
fades before thy
spell!Why should Feeling
ever speak,When thou
canst breathe her soul so
well?Friendship’s
balmy words may
feign,Love’s are
even more false than
they;Oh! ’tis only
music’s strainCan
sweetly soothe, and not
betray.Note to the
performer: Liberty can be
taken with the tempo
markings and rubato
should be used throughout
in order to further
stress the beauty and
significance of the text.
With its vocal-like
descant, the flute should
be treated as an
additional voice rather
than mere accompaniment
to enhance the texture of
the piece.
For C instrument and voice. Format: fakebook (spiral bound). With chord names, v...(+)
For C instrument and
voice. Format: fakebook
(spiral bound). With
chord names, vocal melody
and lyrics. Jazz. Series:
Hal Leonard Fake Books.
448 pages. 9x12 inches.
Published by Hal Leonard.
Fakebook for Eb instrument and voice. With vocal melody, lyrics and leadsheet no...(+)
Fakebook for Eb
instrument and voice.
With vocal melody, lyrics
and leadsheet notation.
Series: Hal Leonard Fake
Books. 448 pages.
Published by Hal Leonard.
(4th Edition ) For voice and C instrument. Format: fakebook. With vocal melody, ...(+)
(4th Edition ) For voice
and C instrument. Format:
fakebook. With vocal
melody, lyrics and chord
names. Pop rock, rock and
pop. Series: Hal Leonard
Fake Books. 584 pages.
9x12 inches. Published by
Hal Leonard.
Opera Piano, solo Voices SKU: PR.411411630 Opera in Two Acts. Comp...(+)
Opera Piano, solo Voices
SKU: PR.411411630
Opera in Two Acts.
Composed by Ricky Ian
Gordon. Piano Reduction
Score. 438 pages.
Duration 2 minutes, 30
seconds. Theodore Presser
Company #411-41163.
Published by Theodore
Presser Company
(PR.411411630).
ISBN
9781491137635. UPC:
680160691081. English.
Intimate Apparel by Lynn
Nottage.
Originally
an award-winning play,
Lynn Nottage’s INTIMATE
APPAREL was inspired by
her great-grandmother’s
life in New York in the
early 20th century. The
Pulitzer-laureate also
created the libretto for
Ricky Ian Gordon’s
grand-yet-intimate opera
whose complete
instrumentation is two
pianos. The story follows
the life of a young,
single seamstress who has
recently emigrated from
Barbados, the fascinating
cast of characters in her
life, and her
socially-unacceptable
feelings of affection for
a Jewish fabric salesman.
The premiere production
of this 2½-hour drama
was televised nationally
from Lincoln Center on
PBS’s “Great
Performances.”. Inti
mate Apparel began with
an old photograph that I
found haphazardly wedged
between the pages of a
Family Circle magazine. I
was helping my
grandmother, who’d
developed debilitating
senile dementia, move
from her longtime home in
Crown Heights, Brooklyn.
In the midst of a pile of
weathered magazines I
discovered a black and
white passport photograph
of my grandmother Waple
and her younger sister
Eurita sitting on their
mother’s lap. It was
the first time I’d ever
seen an image of my
great-grandmother Ethel,
a striking woman with
high West African
cheekbones and a gentle
intensity. She had been a
seamstress from Barbados,
who at the age of 18
arrived alone in New York
City at the dawn of the
Twentieth Century. The
image invited a thousand
questions, none that
could be answered by the
living, and it led me on
a journey to piece
together the history of
my great-grandmother
Ethel, a woman who was
basically a stranger to
me. The only clue that I
had about Ethel, was a
story that my grandmother
had once told me about
her mother corresponding
with a man laboring on
the Panama Canal, who
would eventually become
her husband. I was
fascinated by this story,
which served as the
inspiration for INTIMATE
APPAREL.As I began my
research for INTIMATE
APPAREL at the New York
Public Library, I
discovered that lives of
Black working women in
the early 1900s were
woefully absent from the
archive. So, I found
myself perusing help
wanted listings, boarding
house and clothing
advertisements, looking
for any sign of women
like my great-grandmother
on the printed page. As I
was doing so, I began to
find the characters that
would populate the world
of INTIMATE APPAREL;
Esther the lonely
seamstress, Mrs. Dickson
the proprietress of the
boardinghouse for Black
women, Mr. Marks the
Jewish fabric salesman on
the Lower Eastside, Mrs.
Van Buren the wealthy
white socialite on the
Upper Eastside, Mayme the
sex worker in the
tenderloin, and George
the laborer toiling on
the Panama Canal. As I
was conjuring the
characters, I realized
that I was interested in
the unexpected
intersections between
class, race, and gender
at the turn of the
Twentieth Century, and
what happens when people
across cultural and
economic divides are
thrust into spaces of
intimacy.INTIMATE APPAREL
began its life as a
popular play, but it was
the brilliant composer
Ricky Ian Gordon who
invited me to consider
adapting it into an
opera. He saw something
epic and expansive in the
life of Esther that he
felt demanded to be sung,
and with his loving
guidance I was able to
write my first libretto.
It took me several tries
to figure out how to
wrestle my play into a
form that was new to me.
As a playwright, I kept
wanting to maintain
absolute control of the
narrative. But, it was
Ricky’s words that
freed me creatively to
find my way into the
libretto. He said,
“You’re not trusting
my music as a narrative
tool; I can say “I love
you” without any words,
with just music. So,
allow me to be your
collaborator on the
storytelling.” And once
he said that, we found
INTIMATE APPAREL the
opera together.