SKU: OU.9780193561946
ISBN 9780193561946. 10 x 7 inches.
For CCBar and piano This is a beautiful reworking of a popular traditional folk hymn. The parts are arranged sensitively for changing male voices and there are optional solos at the beginning and end.
SKU: HL.35011988
UPC: 747510063865. 7x10.5 inches.
Changing Voice Series This is the third offering in The Changing Voice Series, chorals designed for the male changing, unchanged and changed voice to sing together successfully. This traditional Old English song, The Keeper, is masculine and spirited. The text is humorous and with the use of solos, the choral takes on many colors as it develops. Simply, this choral is perfect for your young male voices. Full piano accompaniment tracks available separately on Piano Trax 2004 (CD0218).
About Together We Sing
Shawn ee Press: Together We Sing series
SKU: ST.CN23P
ISBN 9790220225147.
Comm issioned by the BBC as part of the celebrations for International Women's Day, and reflecting its theme of hope, Like a Singing Bird was premiered live on Radio 3 on 8 March 2015 by Sarah Connolly and the St Catharine's Girls' Choir, conducted by Edward Wickham. The distinctive vocal scoring features a small solo group of sopranos or mezzo-sopranos drawn from the upper-voice ensemble. The anthem is the first of three which are collectively entitled Echoes from Willow Wood, the second also being available in Choral Now. The text, Christina Rossetti's poem 'A Birthday', features in Virginia Woolf's classic essay A Room of One's Own, based on lectures delivered at Newnham College and at Randle's own Cambridge alma mater, Girton, an institution at the forefront of women's education for two centuries. Inspired by the clock in Girton's Stanley Library, the 'chiming rhythms' which are a driving force within the piece offer a further level of connection. The music moves from quiet anticipation to bright affirmation, the sense of something life-changing heralded by an Advent plainchant quoted in the second half. The final couplet is set apart in a hushed recitative, reflecting, in the composer's words, 'the hope I and other young female composers can have as we try to make our mark in what has traditionally been a male domain.'.