If you are looking for a dramatic concert/festival work, be sure to look at this one! The glory of music is treated with great depth and musical-textual imagery in this deeply moving selection, which offers
What fun it is to sing! With lyrics consisting of "dot dot dot, dum dum dum" and "zoom zoom zoom" syllables, the work's famous instrumental lines really come to life for choirs. Performed with piano, with
Commissioned for a premiere performance at the Texas Music Educators Association 2000 convention, Joseph Martin's Come to the Music is alive and electric with driving rhythm, memorable melodies,
Only Mark Hayes could write such an enthralling arrangement of this timeless Irish air. Scored for voices, piano, flute, and optional percussion, it features a shimmering accompaniment and a flute obbligato
Ed Lojeski's arrangement of Java Jive still grooves with an infectious style that will inject a light moment into any concert.
This magnificent arrangement sets a new standard for high school and community choirs wishing to perform the timeless ballad from "The Wizard of Oz." It includes the opening verse, "When all the world is a
This soft samba setting of the famous love theme from The Godfather offers plenty of options to showcase your choir's singing skills: blend, style, rhythm, and an ensemble scat interlude. A great
Part of Donald Patriquin's World Music Suite. The suite has six different octavos published for children's voices: Cabbage-Tree Hat; Taivas on Sininen; The Stuttering Lovers; Ach! Synku Synku;
Here's a superb choral arrangement of this classic spiritual! It opens with a choral fanfare-like section and progresses through several swinging sections to a climactic finish. This is Mark Hayes at his
The consummate concert closer! "A sound of hope, a sound of peace, a sound that celebrates and speaks what we believe. A sound of love, a sound so strong. It's amazing what is given when we share a song.