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1 16 31 ....76

Piano,Soprano Flute - Level 2 - Digital Download

SKU: A0.1444574

By Taylor Swift. By Taylor Swift. Arranged by Louis Drummond. Pop,Rock. Score and part. 14 pages. Louis Drummond Van Rensburg #1024472. Published by Louis Drummond Van Rensburg (A0.1444574).

Taylor Swift's Lover is a timeless love song that could be played at a wedding reception. The lyrics are about a intimate and committed relationship, and the bridge draws on the bridal rhyme something old.
In my arrangement for piano and flute, the piano provides an easy accompaniment for the flute player with a bass line in the LH and chords in the RH. My other arrangements for piano and flute of Taylors' songs include: Love Story, Me! and Sparks Fly.

Lover
Flûte traversière et Piano
Taylor Swift
$6.99 6.65 € Flûte traversière et Piano PDF SheetMusicPlus

Full Orchestra - Level 5 - Digital Download

SKU: A0.533845

Composed by Therese Brenet. Contemporary. Score and parts. 12 pages. Musik Fabrik Music Publishing #3053315. Published by Musik Fabrik Music Publishing (A0.533845).

A setting of a poem in French by Tristan Corbières (1845-1875) for SATB chorus, and orchestra. The instrumentation is: 2220/2000/timp/3perc/hp/organ/strings. The work may be performed alone or together with the composer's two other owrks for chorus and orchestra (Ciels and Le Bois Amical). This is the chorus part, which contains a piano reduction, only. The orchestral parts are on rental from the publisher. The score, is available for sale.

Ronel

Il fait noir, enfant, voleur d'étincelles !
Il n'est plus de nuits, il n'est plus de jours ;
Dors... en attendant venir toutes celles
Qui disaient : Jamais ! Qui disaient : Toujours !

Entends-tu leurs pas ?...
Ils ne sont pas lourds :
Oh ! les pieds légers ! – l'Amour a des ailes...

 Il fait noir, enfant, voleur d'étincelles !
Entends-tu leurs voix ?...
Les caveaux sont sourds.
Dors : Il pèse peu, ton faix d'immortelles :
Ils ne viendront pas, tes amis les ours,
Jeter leur pavé sur tes demoiselles... I
l fait noir, enfant, voleur d'étincelles !

English translation
 It is Dark, child, thief of sparks!
There are no longer nights, There are no longer days
Sleep..waiting for those who say never, who say always, to arrive

Do you hear their footsteps?
They are not heavy.
Oh, the light steps! Love has wings...

It is Dark, child, thief of sparks!
Do you hear their voices? T
he tombs are silent. Sleep,
it weighs little, your weight of dried flowers
They will not come, your friends the bears, t
o throw their cobblestone on your fireflies
It is Dark, child, thief of sparks!
Translation © 2008 by Paul Wehage

Thérèse Brenet: Rondel for SATB chorus, orchestra and organ,chorus part
Orchestre

$2.50 2.38 € Orchestre PDF SheetMusicPlus

Full Orchestra - Level 5 - Digital Download

SKU: A0.533844

Composed by Therese Brenet. Contemporary. Score and parts. 13 pages. Musik Fabrik Music Publishing #3053313. Published by Musik Fabrik Music Publishing (A0.533844).

A setting of a poem in French by Tristan Corbières (1845-1875) for SATB chorus, and orchestra. The instrumentation is: 2220/2000/timp/3perc/hp/organ/strings. The work may be performed alone or together with the composer's two other owrks for chorus and orchestra (Ciels and Le Bois Amical). This is the score only. The orchestral parts are on rental from the publisher. The chorus part, which contains a piano reduction, is available for sale.

Ronel

Il fait noir, enfant, voleur d'étincelles !
Il n'est plus de nuits, il n'est plus de jours ;
Dors... en attendant venir toutes celles
Qui disaient : Jamais ! Qui disaient : Toujours !

Entends-tu leurs pas ?... Ils ne sont pas lourds :
Oh ! les pieds légers ! – l'Amour a des ailes...
Il fait noir, enfant, voleur d'étincelles !

Entends-tu leurs voix ?... Les caveaux sont sourds.
Dors : Il pèse peu, ton faix d'immortelles :
Ils ne viendront pas, tes amis les ours,
Jeter leur pavé sur tes demoiselles...
Il fait noir, enfant, voleur d'étincelles !

English translation

It is Dark, child, thief of sparks!
There are no longer nights, There are no longer days
Sleep..waiting for those who say never, who say always, to arrive

Do you hear their footsteps? They are not heavy.
Oh, the light steps! Love has wings...
It is Dark, child, thief of sparks!

Do you hear their voices? The tombs are silent.
Sleep, it weighs little, your weight of dried flowers
They will not come, your friends the bears,
to throw their cobblestone on your fireflies
It is Dark, child, thief of sparks!

Translation © 2008 by Paul Wehage



Thérèse Brenet: Rondel for SATB chorus, orchestra and organ, score
Orchestre

$16.95 16.12 € Orchestre PDF SheetMusicPlus

Concert Band - Level 4 - Digital Download

SKU: A0.1008264

Composed by William Brenner. Contemporary. Score and parts. 80 pages. William Brenner #5370501. Published by William Brenner (A0.1008264).

Halifax was devastated on 6 December 1917 when two ships collided in the city's harbour, one of them a munitions ship loaded with explosives bound for the battlefields of the First World War. What followed was one of the largest human-made explosions prior to the detonation of the first atomic bombs in 1945.(...)In early December, one of the merchant ships in port was the large, Norwegian vessel Imo, en route from Halifax to New York to pick up relief supplies (...) Another was the French munitions ship Mont-Blanc - filled with tons of benzol, the high explosive picric acid, TNT and gun cotton - arriving in Halifax to join a convoy across the ocean.(...)The Imo was departing the harbour on the morning of 6 December 1917 (...) Imo had an experienced, local harbour pilot on board, William Hayes, who knew the navigation rules of the harbour. However, earlier encounters that morning with two inbound vessels moving towards Bedford Basin - both of which Imo had passed starboard-to-starboard - resulted in the unusual position that Imo now occupied, too far to the east (...) The Mont-Blanc had arrived outside Halifax the previous day and anchored overnight at the mouth of the harbour. On the morning of 6 December, the ship was cleared by harbour authorities to proceed toward Bedford Basin. Despite the Mont-Blanc's dangerous cargo, there was no special protocol for the passage of munitions ships in the harbour. Other ships such as the Imo were not ordered to hold their positions that morning until the Mont-Blanc had made safe passage through the port. Francis Mackey, Mont-Blanc's pilot, was guiding the ship inbound on the Dartmouth-side of the Narrows, when he encountered the Imo heading straight towards him in what he believed was Mont-Blanc's lane. Mackey would later maintain that the Imo was moving at an unsafe speed for such a large, unwieldly ship in the harbour, and also that incoming ships (in this case Mont-Blanc) had the right-of-way over outgoing vessels. Regardless of the accuracy of those claims, what is certain is that the Imo was sailing too far to the east, in what should have been Mont-Blanc's path.

After a series of whistles and miscommunications between the officers and pilots on the two ships, and failed manoeuvres to avoid a collision, the Imo struck the starboard bow of the Mont-Blanc. After a few moments the two ships parted, leaving a gash in Mont-Blanc's hull and generating sparks that ignited volatile grains of dry picric acid, stored below its decks. (...) The Mont-Blanc exploded at 9:04:35 a.m., sending out a shock wave in all directions, followed by a tsunami that washed violently over the Halifax and Dartmouth shores. More than 2.5 square km of Richmond were totally levelled, either by the blast, the tsunami, or the structure fires caused when buildings collapsed inward on lanterns, stoves and furnaces.

Homes, offices, churches, factories, vessels (including the Mont-Blanc), the railway station and freight yards - and hundreds of people in the immediate area - were obliterated. (...) Across Halifax, there were miraculous stories of survival. And equally, stories of tragedy. Many children were killed on their walk to school that morning, or blinded by flying glass. Those that survived the blast stumbled home, only to find their houses shattered, or their parents dead or wounded, among the wreckage. (...) Every year on 6 December, people gather above the Narrows to hear the ringing of the memorial's carillon bells, and to remember the victims of the disaster. www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/halifax-explosion

1917: The Halifax Disaster
Orchestre d'harmonie

$22.99 21.87 € Orchestre d'harmonie PDF SheetMusicPlus


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