This four-voice canon on the tune Lo, How a Rose is a great piece for opening a concert, or appropriate for putting together a quick piece for Church services.
This four-voice canon on the tune Lo, How a Rose is a great concert opener or appropriate for putting together a quick piece for church services. An optional horn in F part is included in
In 1609, Michael Praetorius harmonized the version of Lo, How a Rose E'er Blooming with which most of us are familiar. His contemporary, Melchior Vulpius, created a four-voice canon on the same
Three familiar carols: O Little Town of Bethlehem (two versions, notated back-to-back); Personent Hodie (On This Day, Earth Shall Ring); and Sing We Now of Christmas (Noel
Four familiar carols and hymns: Good King Wenceslas; Il Est Ne (He is Born); Angels We Have Heard on High and Hark! The Herald Angels Sing for two trumpets, horn in F, trombone,
Arranged for large brass ensemble (three B-flat trumpets, two F Horns, three trombones, and tuba), this work has been converted from primarily duple to a mixture of triple and quadruple meters to eliminate
A wonderful work to open any concert or service, this arrangement for brass sextet is based on Georges Bizet's harmonization of an ancient epiphany carol. It largely follows Bizet's orchestral score,
A late medieval Christmas carol first published in 1582 as a single-line melody with Latin text. This arrangement for brass sextet and organ is animated and exciting, suggestive of the tintinnabulation of
A Time of Waiting is a collection of four Advent hymns arranged for brass and organ, consisting of "Angelus Emittitur," "Lift Up Your Heads, Ye Mighty Gates" (Truro), "O Come, O Come, Emmanuel"