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4 sheet music found Angels We Have Heard on High (Piano Trio): Violin, Cello and Piano
Angels We Have Heard on High (Piano Trio): Violin, Cello and Piano # Piano Trio: piano, violin, cello # INTERMEDIATE # Christmas # Traditional French Christmas C # John A # Angels We Have Heard on High # John A. Dempsey # SheetMusicPlus
Piano Trio,String Ensemble Cello,Piano,Violin - Level 3 - Digital Download SKU: A0.525055 Composed by Traditional French Christmas Carol. Arranged by Joh...(+)
Piano Trio,String Ensemble Cello,Piano,Violin - Level 3 - Digital Download SKU: A0.525055 Composed by Traditional French Christmas Carol. Arranged by John A. Dempsey. Christian,Christmas,Holiday,Sacred,Traditional. Score and parts. 20 pages. John A. Dempsey #6629005. Published by John A. Dempsey (A0.525055). Arranged as a lively trio for violin, cello and piano, this exultant arrangement of a traditional French Christmas carol contains variation in the violin, cello and piano parts as well as dynamic shading, embellishments and incidental music by Grieg, all adding to the joyful atmosphere of praise and thanksgiving. Gloria in excelsis Deo is Latin for Glory to God in the Highest. Recommended for Christmas plays, pageants and programs, holiday recitals and Christmas concerts as well as traditional Christmas church services and other seasonal worship events. Suggested worship uses: prelude, postlude, offertory, interlude, Christmas play overture and special music. Key: C major. 16 pages of music (that includes separate two-page parts for violin and cello). The First Noel for Piano Trio
The First Noel for Piano Trio # Piano Trio: piano, violin, cello # EASY # Christmas # Traditional # James M # The First Noel for Piano Trio # jmsgu3 # SheetMusicPlus
Piano Trio - Level 2 - Digital Download SKU: A0.549903 Composed by Traditional. Arranged by James M. Guthrie, ASCAP. Christmas,Standards. 9 pages. Jmsgu3...(+)
Piano Trio - Level 2 - Digital Download SKU: A0.549903 Composed by Traditional. Arranged by James M. Guthrie, ASCAP. Christmas,Standards. 9 pages. Jmsgu3 #3685139. Published by jmsgu3 (A0.549903). Arranged with new harmony for the final verse. Origins The First Noel is an English Christmas carol. Even more, it was probably written in the late Cornish Renaissance period. While other versions spell the title as Nowell, this is a colloquial variation. Furthermore, Noel is an older word meaning Christmas. Therefore the First Noel translates as the First Christmas. First of all, Gilbert and Sandy published the earliest version. As a result, this version appears in the Carols Ancient and Modern songbook of 1823. William Sandy edited and arranged the book. Similarly, his partner Davies Gilbert edited and added the familiar extra verses. Stainer Organist and composer Sir John Stainer published the most noteworthy customary arrangement in the 1870s.  Stainer is, above all, famous for his songbook entitled: Christmas Carols New and Old (1871). This volume served as an essential catalyst for reviving the English Christmas carol.  Other famous Stainer arrangements from this book include What Child Is This, God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen, Good King Wenceslas, and I Saw Three Ships. Diatonic Function The melodic structure in the First Noel is uncommon among English folk tunes. It simply repeats one phrase twice and then follows a variation refrain. All three phrases of the song end on the mediant scale degree. This is unusual because the diatonic function of the mediant is non-final compared to the more usual tonic or even dominant degrees. Consequently, this gives the song an open-ended feeling – like maybe it never ends. Political Context The Catholic clergy sang carols outside of the church in Latin. After the Protestant Reformation, the reformers thought it would be better for everyone to sing carols. They decided to bring music back to the common folk. So, they translated the lyrics from Latin into a common language. Moreover, the Protestants wanted more control over the music in the church than what the Vatican allowed. Protestant composers such as William Byrd composed complex polyphonic Christmas music that they called carols. Nonetheless, some famous folk carols were composed in this era. Eminent composers in the nineteenth century began to revise and adapt them. Consequently, they revived the English carol.