Description This delightful collection of 99 rounds, canons and partsongs makes a great introduction to part-singing for groups of all ages. The wide-ranging selections are arranged by categories including English Pre-1700 (Secular), Pre-1700 (Sacred), Post-1700, From Around The World and Wordless Rounds. Compiled by the internationally renowned King's Singers. Songlist A Round Of Three Country Dances In One Adieu, Sweet Amarillis Ah, Poor Bird Ah, Robyn, Gentil Robyn All Things Shall Perish Alleluia Alleluya Ave Maria Benedictus Blow Thou Horne, Thou Jolly Hunter Christe, Der Du Bist Tang Und Licht Christmas Is Coming Coffee Canon Come Follow Come Let Us All A-maying Go Dame, Lend Me A Loaf De Terra Christus Ascendit Dona Nobis Pacem Fie, Nay, Prithee, John Flow, O My Tears Follow Me Quickly French Cathedrals Freu Duch Des Lebens Friends, Forget The Cares Happy Be Thou, Heavenly Queen Hark! The Bonny Christchurch Bells Ring Hava Na Shira He That Will An Ale House Keep Hey Down A Down Hey Ho, Anybody Home Hey Ho, To The Greenwood Hotaru Koi I Gave Her Cakes And I Gave Her Ale I Goe Before My Darling I Will Not Plead If Turn'd Topsy Turvy Jack Boy, Ho Boy Newis Jesu, Rex Admirabilis Joan, Come Kiss Me Now Jolly Shepherd Jubilate Deo Kukurika Lady, Come Down And See Me Little Jack Horner Lo Yisa Goi Mi Gallo Musing My Dame Hath A Lame, Tame Crane New Oysters Non Nobis, Domine Now God Be With Old Simeon Now, Robin Lend To Me Thy Bow O Lord, Turne Not Away Thy Face Oaken Leaves Oh Praise The Lord Once, Twice, Thrice One, Two, Three, Our Number Is Right Perche Vezzosi Rai Round (Beethoven) Round (Demantius) Round (Haydn) Round (Perti) Round (Schubert) Round (Telemann) Round [Salieri] Round 1 (Caldara) Round 1 (Mozart) Round 2 (Caldara) Round 2 (Mozart) Round 3 (Caldara) Shalom Chaverim Since Time So Kind Sing We Now Merrily Sing With Thy Mouth Sing You Now After Me Summer Is A-coming In Swiftly Flowing Labe Tallis' Canon Tan Ta Ra Ran Tan Tant The Little Bells Of Westminster The New Day The Owl And The Cuckoo The Silver Swan There Is A Flower There Was An Old Man 'tis Thus, Thus And Thus To Portsmouth Turn Again, Whittington Under This Stone Viva La Musica Wake Up Canon Welcome, Welcome, Ev'ry Guest Well Rung, Tom Boy When Jesus Wept White Coral Bells White Sand And Grey Sand Who'll Buy My Roses
SKU: GI.G-9082
ISBN 9781622771752. English.
Contributo rs: Sandra Babb, Bronwen Fox, Talia Greenberg, Stuart Chapman Hill, Tara Sievers-Hunt, Michele Kaschub, Mary Copland, Kennedy Chi-hin Leung, Tom Lopez, Wendy Northrup, Stephen A. Paparo, Sarah Price, Carlos Xavier Rodriguez, Julia Shaw, Philip Silvey, Janice Smith, Brent C. Talbot, Raymond Wise, Paulina Wai-Ying Wong.  By seeking to open the act of composing to students of all ages, colors, classes, and backgrounds, Strand and Kerchner seek to demystify the act of composition itself. . . . The chorus is the ideal place to affect this kind of change. —Dominick DiOrio   From the Foreword Musicianship: Composing in Choir is a pioneering and practical answer to one of the great music education mysteries: how to effectively bring music composition to the choir room at all levels, in alignment with the National Core Arts Standards. Written and edited by Jody Kerchner and Katherine Strand together with a team of 18 nationally recognized teachers, researchers, and musicians, this book is truly a landmark publication. Central to this book are engaging project-based activities for individuals, small groups, and full ensembles. The authors’ goal is to provide singers with exciting new tools for exploring music. By promoting comprehensive choral musicianship, teachers will celebrate their students’ creativity, and their own. Section 1, Principles and Foundations, provides a rationale for the critical importance of including composition in the choral classroom, pedagogical principles upon which to base composition activities, and practical examples that can be taken directly from the page into the classroom. Section 2, Looking in on Composing in Choir, shares the latest the latest in practices and research related to teaching arranging and composing at a variety of levels and choral styles, with practical ideas suitable for a wide range of choral programs, student ages, ability levels, and interests. Section 3, Composition Projects for Choir, includes lesson plans with goals, outcomes, and procedures for page-to-classroom activities. Examples include composing ostinatos, rounds, partner songs, and songs over a bass line, lessons on arranging, leveraging technology, and using composition to teach sight singing. These lessons are a gold mine of ideas for choral educators and students alike. Every lesson has been “test-driven†with diverse student populations. Ultimately, Kerchner, Strand, and their team show that composing and arranging are not superhuman gifts, activities, or experiences that need to occur in solitude: Creativity and composition should be for everyone. With Musicianship: Composing in Choir, teachers and their students have access to tools and ideas that have the potential to transform their music making. Jody L. Kerchner is Professor & Director of Music Education at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music, where she is the secondary-school music and choral music education specialist. She is also founder and conductor of the Oberlin College Women’s Chorale and the Oberlin Music at Grafton Prison Choir. Her research interests include music listening, choral pedagogy, reflective praxis, empathetic leadership, and music teacher preparation. Katherine Strand is Associate Professor of Music and Chair of the Music Education Department in the Jacobs School of Music at Indiana University, where she teaches classes in participatory music practices, curriculum, and qualitative research methods. She taught K–12 choral and general music in rural and urban settings and served as choral director for the Virginia Governor’s School for the Visual and Performing Arts and Humanities. Her research interests include teaching for creativity, multicultural music pedagogy, and curriculum. Clint Randles, Series Editor, is Assistant Professor and Coordinator of Music Education at the University of South Florida School of Music in Tampa, Florida.
SKU: GI.G-9035
UPC: 785147903505. English. Text Source: Stream of Life, verse 69 from Gitanjali, 1912. Text by Rabindranath Tagore.
I have recently been incredibly inspired by the writings of the great Bengali mystic Rabindranath Tagore, whose monumental collection of poetry Gitanjali won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1913. This book introduces the reader to a new awareness of the world that surrounds us, deepening the connection between nature and the human spirit that we all yearn for. Verse 69 is particularly joyful and life-affirming: an ecstatic realization of the energies that move in ceaseless ebb and flow through us, our lives, and our natural environment. Each individual line of this verse has a unique character and color, so I have placed each in a key that I feel suits the mood of the text. The constantly flowing ostinati that weave their way throughout are collectively a musical representation of the “stream of life†to which Tagore refers. This flowing line can be found even in the subdued third line of text, which makes reference to the “ocean-cradle of birth and of death.†In similar fashion, the more complex rhythmic cells found within the stream (e.g., measures 21–40) are a product of Tagore’s ecstatic tone. Ultimately this piece is simply meant to be an expression of joy. It is dedicated with great admiration to the commissioning ensemble, the Fort Myers High School Greenwave Singers, and their conductor Matt Koller. This tremendous ensemble is a prime example of choral music education in practice in the United States, and I feel honored to have been given this opportunity to work with them. —Thomas LaVoy.