EUROPE
572 articles
USA
3 articles
DIGITAL
53 articles (à imprimer)
Partitions Digitales
Partitions à imprimer
53 partitions trouvées


Harp - Level 3 - Digital Download SKU: A0.797301 Composed by Joyce Rice. Contemporary. Score. 25 pages. Afghan Press Music for the Harp #4802088. Published by Afghan Press Music for the Harp (A0.797301). Teachers learn to be creative, especially with adult students. These are relevant pieces for the adult advanced beginner. Written for lever or pedal harp with well-marked fingerings. Lyrics are included for some songs. Some pieces are challenging because there are quite a few lever changes. Those who play pedal harp may need to write in pedal changes.Table of Contents:Dust Rag, Rush Hour Radio Rondo, Um, I Need A Costume For Tomorrow (with words that a harried seamstress can relate to), Get Them To The Bus On Time: Six Canonettes (also with cute lyrics), Internet Handshake: Theme and Variations, Please, Baby, Sleep, Dirty Dishes Blues 
So How Was Your Day
Harpe

$10.00 8.68 € Harpe PDF SheetMusicPlus

Harp - Level 3 - Digital Download SKU: A0.797493 Composed by Carol Wood. Celtic,Halloween,Holiday,New Age,Spiritual. Score. 22 pages. Afghan Press Music for the Harp #4886961. Published by Afghan Press Music for the Harp (A0.797493).  While all eight of these Celtic holidays may not be truly ancient, several of them certainly are; some, like Samhain, have had Christianizing veils cast over them but have kept many of the pre-Christian customs associated with their celebration. Interested harpists will find a wealth of available information about these holidays, their names, and their customs. Imbolc, February 1st or 2nd, is also the Feast of St. Bridget or Brigid and is associated with the ancient goddess of that name in Celtic mythology.Ostara is the name sometimes given to the neo-Celtic celebration of the Spring Equinox. This piece depicts the dawn of the day and of the year. Beltaine, the joyous celebration of spring’s warmth and wealth of flowers and new greenery, occurs on the first day of May. The longest day of the year and the shortest night mark the Summer Solstice-Midsummer. Since long before Shakespeare’s funny and lyrical play A Midsummer Night’s Dream, the Summer Solstice has been associated with magic.Lughnasadh, on August 1st, is the festival of the first harvest. A version of the name of this festival survives in Manx and Scots Gaelic as well as in Irish Gaelic, and the name itself derives from Lugh, one of the most important Celtic godsMabon marks the Autumn Equinox and the end of summer; for me, it is a wistful moment of the year-extremely beautiful yet transitory. Samhain is one of the most significant celebrations in the Celtic year- the word itself means the end of summer, the beginning of the dark part of the year. It survives even in non-Celtic countries as Halloween, thanks to its adoption into the Christian calendar as All Hallows’ Eve. It is said to be the  time when the veils between this world and the next are at their most thin.The Winter Solstice is marked in many European cultures as a time for celebrating the birth of the new light and a time for decorating with evergreens like holly. For The Holly King, modal and traditional versions of the carol The Holly and the Ivy, were used because of the lyrics’ references to the rising of the sun, and the running of the deer.
Wheel of the Year
Harpe

$12.00 10.41 € Harpe PDF SheetMusicPlus






Partitions Gratuites
Acheter des Partitions Musicales
Acheter des Partitions Digitales à Imprimer
Acheter des Instruments de Musique

© 2000 - 2025

Accueil - Version intégrale