Format : Octavo
SKU: HL.14017965
ISBN 9780711941632. English.
The castle is beautiful but draughty. The king is visited by double glazing salesmen who are offering two free cloaks along with their special window units. The king gladly gives them the work, not realising the effect the magic cloaks would have upon him and subsequently upon his family and the rest of his subjects. This all-year-round play with seven songs, optional improvised music, percussion and dance, has a strong moral - that attractive things are not always what they seem, and it is the simple things which bring joy and peace of mind. Script available in student book. If you need to license a school/youth theatre performance of this product, please use the online application form.
SKU: HP.C6202C
UPC: 763628962029. David Schwoebel. Psalm 100.
Jubilant anthem With an exuberant text based on Psalm 100, this jubilant anthem is a call to come before the Lord with joyful singing, to serve God with gladness, and to enter his gates with thanksgiving and praise. The choral writing is filled with rich harmonies and syncopated rhythms that bring it to life, all in a festive setting that you'll find useful throughout the church year.
SKU: BA.BA10056-75
ISBN 9790006503285. 32.5 x 25.5 cm inches.
Study score = TP 1056.
About Barenreiter Urtext Orchestral Parts
Why musicians love to play from Bärenreiter Urtext Orchestral Parts
- Urtext editions as close as possible to the composer’s intentions - With alternate versions in full score and parts - Orchestral parts in an enlarged format of 25.5cm x 32.5cm - With cues, rehearsal letters, and page turns where players need them - Clearly presented divisi passages so that players know exactly what they have to play - High-quality paper with a slight yellow tinge which does not glare under lights and is thick enough that reverse pages do not shine through
SKU: BA.BA10056-79
ISBN 9790006503292. 32.5 x 25.5 cm inches.
SKU: MN.70-200
UPC: 688670702006.
This hymn festival provides a unique experience in hymn singing. The congregation and choir sing ten hymns from various Christian traditions. The accompaniments are arranged for organ or piano, and several of the hymn settings include optional handbells and timpani. The accompanying narration provides commentary on the words and deeds of Jesus and also creates a transition from one hymn to the next. This spiral-bound edition allows for reproduction of handbell and timpani parts, narrator pages, and congregation pages. Organist plays from the hymn festival score (70-200A). All instrumental parts, narrator pages, and congregation pages are included in the full score. Contents: Alleluia! Sing to JesusLord, When You Came to JordanJesus Calls Us O'er the TumultThough I May Speak with Bravest FireThis Little Light of MineThe Lord's My Shepherd, I'll Not WantBe Thou My VisionAll Who Hunger, Gather GladlyChrist Is Risen! Should Hosanna!Go, My Children with My Blessing.
SKU: GI.G-5485
ISBN 9781579991555.
Those familiar with the music of John Bell know of his insightful and thought-provoking texts. Here, John provide us with a fresh look into the very familiar seasons of Advent and Christmas, and through song tells of the Savior's coming to the poor, to the downtrodden, and to the older folk. From lift Up Your Heads, a traditional Advent hymn, to Give Us, This Year, a prayer for Christmas to be a time of depth and spiritual significance, John Bell asks us to sing a different song during this holy season. Contains one each of the following octavos: He Will Come - Two African Christmas Carols: Good News for Everyone and Poor Folk Hear Him Gladly - Sing Gloria - Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence - Folly and Love - Two Advent Hymns: Comfort, Comfort Now My People and O Come, O Come, Emmanuel - It Was to Older Folk - Lift Up Your Heads - Cloth for the Cradle - Voces angelorum - He Came Down - Fae Heichts o’ Heiven - A voice Proclaims - Why Don’t You Tear Apart the Heavens - Sing a Different Song - Give Us This Year - The Word - Advent Lullaby.
SKU: BT.EMBZ1852
Hungarian.
It s quite rare when a composer s diploma work becomes a successful, popular piece even after 70 years. Frigyes Hidas (1928 2007) Oboe Concerto, written in 1951, is a work that Péter Pongrácz, Lajos Lencsés, and many other Hungarian and foreign oboists gladly add to their concert programs. It is difficult to pinpoint exactly what stylistic conventions helped to form the musical language of the Oboe Concerto: the three-movement form is suggestive of Viennese Classicism, and Hungarian motifs of the era can also be detected here and there. However, the main influences can be felt from the Neoclassicism of the 1920s and 1930s, the Baroque era, and the French woodwind school. Aswith all of his musical creations, Hidas demonstrates here that he is a master of instrumental knowledge, consideration towards his works performers, and tasteful moderation. This publication is printed on high-quality, age-resistant, pale-yellow paper that is produced in an environmentally-friendly, climate-neutral manner using renewable raw materials.
SKU: CA.4068814
ISBN 9790007220365. Language: Latin.
With its tonal language of subjective avowal, the first of Beethoven's two masses opens up new worlds of expression for the liturgical texts of the Mass which are expressly modern and point towards the future. Not to be considered a preliminary work to the Missa solemnis, it is an entirely independent work which set standards for the further development of settings of the Mass in the 19th century. Its newness, of which the composer himself was fully aware (I do not speak gladly of my Mass, or of myself, but I do believe that I have treated the text in a manner in which only few have treated it.), paves a way to an hitherto unknown, contemporary avenue to faith which today is still current. Carus presents this important work of church music history in a new critical edition by the Beethoven expert Ernst Herttrich. Score and part available separately - see item CA.4068800.
SKU: CA.4068813
ISBN 9790007220358. Language: Latin.
SKU: CA.4068815
ISBN 9790007220372. Language: Latin.