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Guitar,Piano,Vocal,Voice - Level 3 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1293603 By Air Supply. By Clive Davis and Graham Russell. Arranged by Academia Unimusica. Contemporary,Pop,Rock,Singer/Songwriter. Score. 5 pages. Unimusic Academy (Academia Unimusica) #884073. Published by Unimusic Academy (Academia Unimusica) (A0.1293603). All Out of Love is a song by Australian soft rock duo Air Supply, released as a single in 1980 from their fifth studio album Lost in Love. The song was written by Graham Russell and Clive Davis. The song's lyrics describe the emotional state of a man desperately trying to win back the love of his life after the couple's separation caused by a wrong done by the man against the woman he's in love with. In the United States, it reached number two on the Billboard Hot 100 (blocked from the top spot by both Upside Down by Diana Ross and Another One Bites the Dust by Queen) and number 5 on the Adult Contemporary chart. In the UK, the song reached number 11 on the UK Singles Chart and is their only top 40 hit in that country. It placed 92nd in VH1's list of the 100 Greatest Love Songs in 2003.[2].
All Out Of Love
Piano Facile
Air Supply
$8.00 6.84 € Piano Facile PDF SheetMusicPlus

Piano,Vocal,Voice - Digital Download SKU: A0.1017875 Composed by Hilary Brooks, Lyrics by Clive King. 20th Century,Broadway,Film/TV,Musical/Show,Pop. Score. 8 pages. Hilary Brooks #6343503. Published by Hilary Brooks (A0.1017875). Musical theatre song from the musical MELANIA. Solo female. Satire. Featuring Jackie Kennedy. It's a long way from the Eastern Bloc to the East Wing - and for one former glamour model turned FLOTUS it hasn't been a happy journey. Can the ghosts of Eleanor Roosevelt and Jackie Kennedy lift our heroine's spirits? Hilary Brooks and Clive King have written a highly entertaining musical with songs full of humour and irony (Mumble Musicals) â˜…★★★★@brooksandking. Brooks & King are represented by Micheline Steinberg Associates: micheline@steinplays.com. Requests for script copies and permissions for productions should be sought through MSA.A chamber musical for three female actors.Original production length: 58 minutes. Suitable for MT students, colleges, MT societies.
HAPPY AT THE END (of the world)
Piano, Voix

$4.37 3.74 € Piano, Voix PDF SheetMusicPlus

Piano Solo - Level 3 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1302417 By Martycli Piano Guy. By Martyn Clive Johnson. Arranged by Martyn Clive Johnson. 20th Century,Chamber,Classical,Jazz,Pop. Score. 7 pages. Martyn Johnson #892034. Published by Martyn Johnson (A0.1302417). I originally wrote this as a song with lyrics. Most of my songs have become piano instrumentals over the years and this is one of those. It's really a ballad but has a little interlude of stride piano in the middle. I haven't included fingering, pedalling or dynamics leaving these to the individual player as no two piano teachers ever agree on these. I have included chord symbols which I always find useful when learning a piece.Please note this is a piano solo and I haven't notated the other instruments that are on my YouTube video but it works really well as a piano instrumental.It's sort of a pop song/ballad but has some classical-style fills and some slightly jazzy chords.As one of my earliest compositions I am rather proud of it. I have elaborated on it in my YouTube video but it is not too difficult to play and I hope you have fun playing it.
Christabel
Piano seul
Martycli Piano Guy
$3.50 2.99 € Piano seul PDF SheetMusicPlus

Alto Saxophone,Piano - Level 3 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1041586 Composed by Edward Elgar. Arranged by Diego Marani. Classical,Instructional,Patriotic,Romantic Period,Standards. Score and part. 15 pages. Diego Marani #646345. Published by Diego Marani (A0.1041586). The best known March of the set, it had its premiere in Liverpool on 19 October 1901, with Elgar conducting the Liverpool Orchestral Society. The Trio contains the tune known as Land of Hope and Glory. In 1902 the tune was re-used, in modified form, for the Land of hope and glory section of his Coronation Ode for King Edward VII. The words were further modified to fit the original tune, and the result has since become a fixture at the Last Night of the Proms, and an English sporting anthem. In the United States, the Trio section Land of Hope and Glory of March No. 1 is often known simply as Pomp and Circumstance or as The Graduation March and is played as the processional tune at virtually all high school and some college graduation ceremonies. It was first played at such a ceremony on 28 June 1905, at Yale University, where the Professor of Music Samuel Sanford had invited his friend Elgar to attend commencement and receive an honorary doctorate of music. Elgar accepted, and Sanford made certain he was the star of the proceedings, engaging the New Haven Symphony Orchestra, the College Choir, the Glee Club, the music faculty members, and New York musicians to perform two parts from Elgar's oratorio The Light of Life and, as the graduates and officials marched out, Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1. Elgar repaid the compliment by dedicating his Introduction and Allegro to Sanford later that year. The tune soon became de rigueur at American graduations, used primarily as a processional at the opening of the ceremony. This arrangement for alto sax with piano is suitable for classroom, repertoire and recital.
Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1 for Alto Saxophone and Piano
Saxophone Alto et Piano

$9.99 8.54 € Saxophone Alto et Piano PDF SheetMusicPlus

Piano,Viola - Level 3 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1036227 Composed by Edward Elgar. Arranged by Diego Marani. Classical,Instructional,Patriotic,Romantic Period,Standards. Score and part. 15 pages. Diego Marani #641333. Published by Diego Marani (A0.1036227). The best known March of the set, it had its premiere in Liverpool on 19 October 1901, with Elgar conducting the Liverpool Orchestral Society. The Trio contains the tune known as Land of Hope and Glory. In 1902 the tune was re-used, in modified form, for the Land of hope and glory section of his Coronation Ode for King Edward VII. The words were further modified to fit the original tune, and the result has since become a fixture at the Last Night of the Proms, and an English sporting anthem. In the United States, the Trio section Land of Hope and Glory of March No. 1 is often known simply as Pomp and Circumstance or as The Graduation March and is played as the processional tune at virtually all high school and some college graduation ceremonies. It was first played at such a ceremony on 28 June 1905, at Yale University, where the Professor of Music Samuel Sanford had invited his friend Elgar to attend commencement and receive an honorary doctorate of music. Elgar accepted, and Sanford made certain he was the star of the proceedings, engaging the New Haven Symphony Orchestra, the College Choir, the Glee Club, the music faculty members, and New York musicians to perform two parts from Elgar's oratorio The Light of Life and, as the graduates and officials marched out, Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1. Elgar repaid the compliment by dedicating his Introduction and Allegro to Sanford later that year. The tune soon became de rigueur at American graduations, used primarily as a processional at the opening of the ceremony. This arrangement for viola with piano is suitable for classroom, repertoire and recital.
Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1 for Viola and Piano
Alto, Piano

$9.99 8.54 € Alto, Piano PDF SheetMusicPlus

Choral Choir,Choral,SSAA Chorus - Level 3 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1411444 Composed by Willy Russell. Arranged by Robert Hales. 20th Century,Broadway,Musical/Show. 18 pages. Robert Hales #993709. Published by Robert Hales (A0.1411444). This is an accompanied SSAA arrangement of the up-beat Act 1 finale Bright New Day from the 1983 musical Blood Brothers.This arrangement has a short intro based on the transition in the original musical and then contains all 6 versus of the original song. The melody alternates between the sopranos and altos and there is some call and response in the later versus. The highest note in the soprano 1 part is top Ab5 and lowest note in alto 2 part is F3.Blood Brothers tells the nature versus nurture story of twin brothers separated at birth in 1960's Liverpool and, with the brothers growing up at opposite ends of the social spectrum. Bright New Day is about one of the brothers and his mother moving from the condemned inner-city slums of Liverpool to a new council house in the nearby town of Skelmersdale during the early 1970's, before he meets his brother by chance again.
Bright New Day
Chorale SSAA

$2.99 2.56 € Chorale SSAA PDF SheetMusicPlus

Level 2 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1407989 Composed by Robert A. Howard. 21st Century,Chamber,Classical,Contemporary,Thriller. 5 pages. Robert A. Howard #990552. Published by Robert A. Howard (A0.1407989). Ghost takes its title from the art work by Ron Mueck (1998), which is in the collection of the Tate Gallery, Liverpool. Mueck's Ghost is an extraordinarily realistic, larger-than-life-sized mannequin. This model is of a young lady in a swimsuit, with exceptionally long legs and an embarrassed glance about her face. This musical work attempts to capture the ghostly, solitary and threatening qualities of the work. It is flexibly scored, in four instrumental parts, and there are opportunities for 'solo' and 'tutti' playing. Character is depicted in a four note motif (heard at the beginning), which is transformed across five highly contrasting sections. There is a significant cadenza-like solo passage, for a treble clef instrument. Ghost was commissioned by COMA for the Autumn Residency at Tate Liverpool in October 2002. Note: this document is the score only. The full set of parts (with score) are available via a search of the COMA Music Library.Duration: 6 minutes.Registered with PRS (Performing Rights Society, UK).Composer's website: www.roberthowardmusic.co.uk
Ghost - Score Only

$3.99 3.41 € PDF SheetMusicPlus

Cello,Piano - Level 3 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1037970 Composed by Edward Elgar. Arranged by Diego Marani. Classical,Instructional,Patriotic,Romantic Period,Standards. Score and part. 15 pages. Diego Marani #642890. Published by Diego Marani (A0.1037970). The best known March of the set, it had its premiere in Liverpool on 19 October 1901, with Elgar conducting the Liverpool Orchestral Society. The Trio contains the tune known as Land of Hope and Glory. In 1902 the tune was re-used, in modified form, for the Land of hope and glory section of his Coronation Ode for King Edward VII. The words were further modified to fit the original tune, and the result has since become a fixture at the Last Night of the Proms, and an English sporting anthem. In the United States, the Trio section Land of Hope and Glory of March No. 1 is often known simply as Pomp and Circumstance or as The Graduation March and is played as the processional tune at virtually all high school and some college graduation ceremonies. It was first played at such a ceremony on 28 June 1905, at Yale University, where the Professor of Music Samuel Sanford had invited his friend Elgar to attend commencement and receive an honorary doctorate of music. Elgar accepted, and Sanford made certain he was the star of the proceedings, engaging the New Haven Symphony Orchestra, the College Choir, the Glee Club, the music faculty members, and New York musicians to perform two parts from Elgar's oratorio The Light of Life and, as the graduates and officials marched out, Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1. Elgar repaid the compliment by dedicating his Introduction and Allegro to Sanford later that year. The tune soon became de rigueur at American graduations, used primarily as a processional at the opening of the ceremony. This arrangement for cello with piano is suitable for classroom, repertoire and recital.
Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1 for Cello and Piano
Violoncelle, Piano

$9.99 8.54 € Violoncelle, Piano PDF SheetMusicPlus

Oboe,Piano - Level 3 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1038610 Composed by Edward Elgar. Arranged by Diego Marani. Classical,Instructional,Patriotic,Romantic Period,Standards. Score and part. 15 pages. Diego Marani #643589. Published by Diego Marani (A0.1038610). The best known March of the set, it had its premiere in Liverpool on 19 October 1901, with Elgar conducting the Liverpool Orchestral Society. The Trio contains the tune known as Land of Hope and Glory. In 1902 the tune was re-used, in modified form, for the Land of hope and glory section of his Coronation Ode for King Edward VII. The words were further modified to fit the original tune, and the result has since become a fixture at the Last Night of the Proms, and an English sporting anthem. In the United States, the Trio section Land of Hope and Glory of March No. 1 is often known simply as Pomp and Circumstance or as The Graduation March and is played as the processional tune at virtually all high school and some college graduation ceremonies. It was first played at such a ceremony on 28 June 1905, at Yale University, where the Professor of Music Samuel Sanford had invited his friend Elgar to attend commencement and receive an honorary doctorate of music. Elgar accepted, and Sanford made certain he was the star of the proceedings, engaging the New Haven Symphony Orchestra, the College Choir, the Glee Club, the music faculty members, and New York musicians to perform two parts from Elgar's oratorio The Light of Life and, as the graduates and officials marched out, Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1. Elgar repaid the compliment by dedicating his Introduction and Allegro to Sanford later that year. The tune soon became de rigueur at American graduations, used primarily as a processional at the opening of the ceremony. This arrangement for oboe with piano is suitable for classroom, repertoire and recital.
Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1 for Oboe and Piano
Hautbois, Piano (duo)

$9.99 8.54 € Hautbois, Piano (duo) PDF SheetMusicPlus

Easy Piano - Level 2 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1087944 Composed by Oscar Hammerstein and Richard Rodgers. Arranged by Janet and Alan Bullard. 20th Century,Broadway,Musical/Show,Standards. Score. 2 pages. Colne Edition / BullardMusic #692179. Published by Colne Edition / BullardMusic (A0.1087944). From the 1945 musical ‘Carousel’ by Rodgers and Hammerstein, You’ll never walk alone was an instant hit at the end of World War 2 with its inspiring words and shapely melody. It is also well known today in its role as a football anthem, originally adopted by Liverpool FC following its recording by the Liverpool band Gerry and the Pacemakers, and, more recently, as an anthem of support for medical staff and carers during the Covid-19 pandemic. Shape the performance to make a gradual crescendo towards the uplifting final bars. The Janet and Alan Bullard Piano Series contains a range of arrangements for easy piano, old and new. Janet Bullard has a busy and thriving piano teaching practice and many years’ experience of teaching adults and children. Alan Bullard is a pianist, composer and arranger whose music is performed widely. Together they are the authors of the successful Pianoworks series of tutor and repertoire books for beginner pianists, published by OUP. www.bullardmusic.co.uk
You'll Never Walk Alone
Piano Facile

$4.99 4.27 € Piano Facile PDF SheetMusicPlus

Piano,Soprano Saxophone - Level 3 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1041524 Composed by Edward Elgar. Arranged by Diego Marani. Classical,Instructional,Patriotic,Romantic Period,Standards. Score and part. 15 pages. Diego Marani #646278. Published by Diego Marani (A0.1041524). The best known March of the set, it had its premiere in Liverpool on 19 October 1901, with Elgar conducting the Liverpool Orchestral Society. The Trio contains the tune known as Land of Hope and Glory. In 1902 the tune was re-used, in modified form, for the Land of hope and glory section of his Coronation Ode for King Edward VII. The words were further modified to fit the original tune, and the result has since become a fixture at the Last Night of the Proms, and an English sporting anthem. In the United States, the Trio section Land of Hope and Glory of March No. 1 is often known simply as Pomp and Circumstance or as The Graduation March and is played as the processional tune at virtually all high school and some college graduation ceremonies. It was first played at such a ceremony on 28 June 1905, at Yale University, where the Professor of Music Samuel Sanford had invited his friend Elgar to attend commencement and receive an honorary doctorate of music. Elgar accepted, and Sanford made certain he was the star of the proceedings, engaging the New Haven Symphony Orchestra, the College Choir, the Glee Club, the music faculty members, and New York musicians to perform two parts from Elgar's oratorio The Light of Life and, as the graduates and officials marched out, Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1. Elgar repaid the compliment by dedicating his Introduction and Allegro to Sanford later that year. The tune soon became de rigueur at American graduations, used primarily as a processional at the opening of the ceremony. This arrangement for soprano sax with piano is suitable for classroom, repertoire and recital.
Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1 for Soprano Saxophone and Piano
Saxophone Soprano et Piano

$9.99 8.54 € Saxophone Soprano et Piano PDF SheetMusicPlus

French Horn,Piano - Level 3 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1043236 Composed by Edward Elgar. Arranged by Diego Marani. Classical,Instructional,Patriotic,Romantic Period,Standards. Score and part. 15 pages. Diego Marani #647924. Published by Diego Marani (A0.1043236). The best known March of the set, it had its premiere in Liverpool on 19 October 1901, with Elgar conducting the Liverpool Orchestral Society. The Trio contains the tune known as Land of Hope and Glory. In 1902 the tune was re-used, in modified form, for the Land of hope and glory section of his Coronation Ode for King Edward VII. The words were further modified to fit the original tune, and the result has since become a fixture at the Last Night of the Proms, and an English sporting anthem. In the United States, the Trio section Land of Hope and Glory of March No. 1 is often known simply as Pomp and Circumstance or as The Graduation March and is played as the processional tune at virtually all high school and some college graduation ceremonies. It was first played at such a ceremony on 28 June 1905, at Yale University, where the Professor of Music Samuel Sanford had invited his friend Elgar to attend commencement and receive an honorary doctorate of music. Elgar accepted, and Sanford made certain he was the star of the proceedings, engaging the New Haven Symphony Orchestra, the College Choir, the Glee Club, the music faculty members, and New York musicians to perform two parts from Elgar's oratorio The Light of Life and, as the graduates and officials marched out, Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1. Elgar repaid the compliment by dedicating his Introduction and Allegro to Sanford later that year. The tune soon became de rigueur at American graduations, used primarily as a processional at the opening of the ceremony. This arrangement for F horn with piano is suitable for classroom, repertoire and recital.
Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1 for Horn and Piano
Cor et Piano

$9.99 8.54 € Cor et Piano PDF SheetMusicPlus

Piano,Trombone - Level 3 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1043239 Composed by Edward Elgar. Arranged by Diego Marani. Classical,Instructional,Patriotic,Romantic Period,Standards. Score and part. 18 pages. Diego Marani #647927. Published by Diego Marani (A0.1043239). The best known March of the set, it had its premiere in Liverpool on 19 October 1901, with Elgar conducting the Liverpool Orchestral Society. The Trio contains the tune known as Land of Hope and Glory. In 1902 the tune was re-used, in modified form, for the Land of hope and glory section of his Coronation Ode for King Edward VII. The words were further modified to fit the original tune, and the result has since become a fixture at the Last Night of the Proms, and an English sporting anthem. In the United States, the Trio section Land of Hope and Glory of March No. 1 is often known simply as Pomp and Circumstance or as The Graduation March and is played as the processional tune at virtually all high school and some college graduation ceremonies. It was first played at such a ceremony on 28 June 1905, at Yale University, where the Professor of Music Samuel Sanford had invited his friend Elgar to attend commencement and receive an honorary doctorate of music. Elgar accepted, and Sanford made certain he was the star of the proceedings, engaging the New Haven Symphony Orchestra, the College Choir, the Glee Club, the music faculty members, and New York musicians to perform two parts from Elgar's oratorio The Light of Life and, as the graduates and officials marched out, Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1. Elgar repaid the compliment by dedicating his Introduction and Allegro to Sanford later that year. The tune soon became de rigueur at American graduations, used primarily as a processional at the opening of the ceremony. This arrangement for trombone or euphonium (C and Bb) with piano is suitable for classroom, repertoire and recital.
Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1 for Trombone (Euphonium) and Piano
Trombone et Piano

$9.99 8.54 € Trombone et Piano PDF SheetMusicPlus

Flute,Piano - Level 3 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1038234 Composed by Edward Elgar. Arranged by Diego Marani. Classical,Instructional,Patriotic,Romantic Period,Standards. Score and part. 15 pages. Diego Marani #643165. Published by Diego Marani (A0.1038234). The best known March of the set, it had its premiere in Liverpool on 19 October 1901, with Elgar conducting the Liverpool Orchestral Society. The Trio contains the tune known as Land of Hope and Glory. In 1902 the tune was re-used, in modified form, for the Land of hope and glory section of his Coronation Ode for King Edward VII. The words were further modified to fit the original tune, and the result has since become a fixture at the Last Night of the Proms, and an English sporting anthem. In the United States, the Trio section Land of Hope and Glory of March No. 1 is often known simply as Pomp and Circumstance or as The Graduation March and is played as the processional tune at virtually all high school and some college graduation ceremonies. It was first played at such a ceremony on 28 June 1905, at Yale University, where the Professor of Music Samuel Sanford had invited his friend Elgar to attend commencement and receive an honorary doctorate of music. Elgar accepted, and Sanford made certain he was the star of the proceedings, engaging the New Haven Symphony Orchestra, the College Choir, the Glee Club, the music faculty members, and New York musicians to perform two parts from Elgar's oratorio The Light of Life and, as the graduates and officials marched out, Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1. Elgar repaid the compliment by dedicating his Introduction and Allegro to Sanford later that year. The tune soon became de rigueur at American graduations, used primarily as a processional at the opening of the ceremony. This arrangement for flute with piano is suitable for classroom, repertoire and recital.
Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1 for Flute and Piano
Flûte traversière et Piano

$9.99 8.54 € Flûte traversière et Piano PDF SheetMusicPlus

Bassoon,Piano - Level 3 - Digital Download SKU: A0.1039918 Composed by Edward Elgar. Arranged by Diego Marani. Classical,Instructional,Patriotic,Romantic Period,Standards. Score and part. 15 pages. Diego Marani #644792. Published by Diego Marani (A0.1039918). The best known March of the set, it had its premiere in Liverpool on 19 October 1901, with Elgar conducting the Liverpool Orchestral Society. The Trio contains the tune known as Land of Hope and Glory. In 1902 the tune was re-used, in modified form, for the Land of hope and glory section of his Coronation Ode for King Edward VII. The words were further modified to fit the original tune, and the result has since become a fixture at the Last Night of the Proms, and an English sporting anthem. In the United States, the Trio section Land of Hope and Glory of March No. 1 is often known simply as Pomp and Circumstance or as The Graduation March and is played as the processional tune at virtually all high school and some college graduation ceremonies. It was first played at such a ceremony on 28 June 1905, at Yale University, where the Professor of Music Samuel Sanford had invited his friend Elgar to attend commencement and receive an honorary doctorate of music. Elgar accepted, and Sanford made certain he was the star of the proceedings, engaging the New Haven Symphony Orchestra, the College Choir, the Glee Club, the music faculty members, and New York musicians to perform two parts from Elgar's oratorio The Light of Life and, as the graduates and officials marched out, Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1. Elgar repaid the compliment by dedicating his Introduction and Allegro to Sanford later that year. The tune soon became de rigueur at American graduations, used primarily as a processional at the opening of the ceremony. This arrangement for bassoon with piano is suitable for classroom, repertoire and recital.
Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1 for Bassoon and Piano
Basson, Piano (duo)

$9.99 8.54 € Basson, Piano (duo) PDF SheetMusicPlus






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