Format : Octavo
SKU: JK.01885
UPC: 093285018853. Ecclesiastes 3:1-2, Matthew 5:4, 1 Peter 5:7.
Thirty-one favorite funeral hymns arranged in a continuous medley for organ prelude/postlude. You can start anywhere in the book and end anywhere! Pedals are included within the staff. Songs included in this book: Comfort and Hope Be Still, My Soul The Lord is My Shepherd Nearer, My God, To Thee Where Can I Turn For Peace? Come unto Jesus Lead, Kindly Light Jesus Christ I Know That My Redeemer Lives Beautiful Savior I Believe in Christ I Stand All Amazed He Sent His Son How Great Thou Art The Love of God Our Savior's Love Love One Another My Heavenly Father Loves Me I Feel My Savior's Love Where Love Is Faith and Devotion Come, Follow Me I Need Thee Every Hour Because I Have Been Given Much Amazing Grace In the Garden Softly and Tenderly Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing Each Life That Touches Ours For Good Eternal Families Families Can Be Together Forever Love at Home Oh, What Songs of the Heart I Am a Child of God O My Father Closing God Be With You Till We Meet Again Abide with Me! Abide with Me, 'Tis Eventide Anthems Goin' home Consider the Lilies Holy Art Thou Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring Composer: Various Arranger: Brent Jorgensen Difficulty: Medium Reference: Ecclesiastes 3:1-2, Matthew 5:4, 1 Peter 5:7.
SKU: JK.09177
Psalm 119:165, Psalm 119:97-104.
Violin obbligatos to accompany Hymnplicity Ward Choir Book 10 (#01769). Created to add color and warmth to the arrangements.Arrangements in this packet:Come, O Thou King of KingsCount Your BlessingsEach Life that Touches Ours for GoodIsrael, Israel God Is CallingNow Let Us RejoiceSweet Is the Peace the Gospel BringsArranger: Brent Jorgensen Difficulty: Medium/EasyReference: Psalm 119:165, Psalm 119:97-104.
SKU: GI.G-10368
ISBN 9781622776276.
This is a fascinating and important book for everybody even remotely interested in the history of American bands. Bryan Proksch has done some painstakingly thorough research in putting together an amazing assemblage of documents… This is a must-have book! —Jon Ceander Mitchell   The Wind Music Research Quarterly: Mitteilungsblatt der IGEB   (March 2022), 14–15 For the scholar, each entry presents an opportunity for expansion. For the teacher, this work provides source readings for courses on wind band history or for complementing Strunk or Weiss-Taruskin in university music history courses. That said, these documents stand as an enriching and entertaining read in their own right for anyone interested in the subject. —Michael O’Connor   Historic Brass Today 1/2 (Spring 2022), 32 The Golden Age of American Bands is ideally suited for courses on the history and literature of bands in America. Indeed, this volume could suffice as a textbook for adventuresome teachers in that it touches on the major musicians, instruments, ensembles, and functions expected of such a course. . . . Both private and classroom band instructors will find compelling glimpses into the history of their craft. [It is] bursting with opportunities to inspire curiosity in their students while effectively supporting their own curricular goals. —Benjamin D. Lawson and James A. Davis   The Journal of Music History Pedagogy Proksch’s new collection of documents is a most welcome step in the direction of getting [the story of bands] under control. The juxtaposition of documents from so many levels and types of ensembles proves to have a cumulative effect: one begins to see the subtle and long-lasting connections among them despite the big differences. It is easy to envision it as a supplemental text in a course on band history and literature, but the book is also just an absorbing read. There is much to learn here, and much to enjoy. —Ken Kreitner   Notes 79/2 (December 2022): 217-218 This is the story of the American wind band, told chronologically by those who experienced it in real time from 1835 to 1935. How did bands become bands? How did they rise in popularity? Which figures had insights and specific impacts on the development of the genre? Through source documents and articles, Bryan Proksch takes us on an extraordinary journey from the time of the first brass bands in the 1830s, through the Civil War and the golden ages of Gilmore and Sousa, to the cusp of the wind ensemble just before World War II. Hear from a young Frederick Fennell about his efforts to create the first band at Eastman. Read the outline of Allessandro Liberati’s unpublished trumpet method book. Eavesdrop on Karl L. King as he muses on the fate of bands after the death of Sousa. See Patrick Conway’s first undergraduate music education curriculum. Gawk as trombonist Fredrick Neil Innes embarrasses “world’s greatest cornetist†Jules Levy at Coney Island. Explore as Alan Dodworth revolutionizes bands. Retreat with a military band in the middle of a Civil War battle. Find out what it felt like to sit in a Sousa Band rehearsal. Ask Herbert L. Clarke why he thinks you should be playing a cornet instead of a trumpet. Find out how P. S. Gilmore managed to pull off the biggest concert events in American history. The book includes numerous rare and unknown illustrations to show you the places where band history happened. The documents include rare periodical excerpts, handwritten letters, and other writings taken from archives throughout the United States. These first-person accounts are certain to further refine and deepen our understanding and appreciation of American band history on a grand scale. Contents: Beginnings (1835–1859) The Civil War (1860–1865) The Jubilees (1866–1879) The Gilded Age (1880–1896) The Band Age (1897–1914) World War I (1915–1919) Transition and Decline (1920–1935)  Click here to download a FREE addenda. Bryan Proksch is a distinguished faculty lecturer and associate professor of music history and literature at Lamar University in Beaumont, Texas. This is his third book. His A Sousa Reader: Essays, Interviews, and Clippings (GIA Publications, 2016) explores the documents relating to the life and career of John Philip Sousa.