Choral Arrangements
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Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing |
SSATB |
After being dropped from the LDS hymnbook in 1985, this beloved hymn was forgotten for years. Fortunately, it has made a comeback, primarily due to a masterful arrangement by Mack Wilberg. If you like the hymn but his arrangement is too high/difficult for your choir, try this one. |
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How Many Drops for Me? |
SATB |
Original composition. The title refers to the drops of the Savior's blood that came "from every pore" during the Atonement. Finalist in the Church Music Competition, 2000. Simplified arrangement for most Ward Choirs. |
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How Many Drops for Me? |
SSAATTBB |
Same as above; more difficult, 8-part arrangement for larger choirs. |
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Press Forward, Saints |
SATB |
Powerful version of this wonderful hymn. Not too difficult for choir, but accompanyment has octave chords that may be challenging for small-handed accompanyists. |
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Silent Night |
SATB with soprano or child solo |
Slow, melodic version of this timeless Christmas hymn with rich vocal harmonies. |
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Silent Night Bonus: Listen to recording by Utah State University Chamber Singers, under the direction of Dr. Cory Evans, conducted by Irvin T. Nelson, solo by Tamsyn Anderson, 21 November 2006. |
Silent Night Bonus: Download easy-to-read rehearsal score (choir parts for piano) |
Silent Night Bonus: Download Large-Print Piano Score for Performance |
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(I Wonder) When He Comes Again |
SATB and Congregation |
Simple but beautiful arrangement of this touching Primary hymn. Congregation joins choir on last verse with soprano descant. (Nice way to end an Easter program.) |
PRINTING TIP: I suggest you print with Adobe, not Explorer. After you download, the music will appear in a window with two toolbars. The top bar is Explorer. It has a printer symbol on it towards the right side. Don't use it. There will be another toolbar below the "Address" line. This is the Adobe toolbar. The leftmost symbol is a "save" icon (you may want use this to save a copy of the music onto your hard drive.) The second icon from the left is a printer symbol. Use this one to print; you'll get a higher quality printout.
PHOTOCOPYING TIP:
Save money in the
long run. Rather than making copies onto standard 20# photocopy
paper, spend just a little more and use 24# extra-white paper. You
can get a ream of this paper at any office supply store, such as
Staples. This paper is much brighter, stronger, and opaque than
standard paper, which makes it much more suitable for storage in your
music library for later re-use. It also makes far better 2-sided
copies that don't bleed through, which are actually less expensive
than single sided copies onto standard paper.
TROUBLE?
Download the latest
version of Adobe Reader:
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