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  • £109.99

    A Holly Jolly Christmas Medley (Concert Band - Score and Parts) - Schwalgin, Stefan

    Christmas, the most wonderful time of the year not in the least because of all the great carols being sung everywhere you go! Here is a medley with all the songs that can't be missed: Christmas Song, Santa Baby, A Holly Jolly Christmas, Frosty the Snowman and Rudolf the Red-Nosed Reindeer.Duration: 6:50

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

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  • £75.00

    New Year (Concert Band with Optional Choir - Score and Parts) - Rutter, John - Noble, Paul

    The text of New Year is as poignant as the music itself, and gives a depth of meaning to the piece: Turn your eyes to the light, cast away the works of darkness, let them go; Turn your face to the sun, feel the warmth, the hope of new beginnings with each new year. The beauty and simplicity of this piece will bring significance and warmth to a seasonal concert.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

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  • £46.95

    Code of Hammurabi (King of Babylon) (Concert Band - Score and Parts) - Lopez, Victor

    Inspired by the former King Hammurabi of Babylon, this work uses only the first 6 or 7 notes of most beginning band method books---without a key signature and with very few accidentals Go ahead and break the code with your students and discover the basic elements that will make your band sound amazing. Guaranteed to impress the audience!Duration: 1:45

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

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  • £76.99

    Frozen, Symphonic Highlights from (Concert Band - Score and Parts) - Anderson-Lopez & Lopez - Bulla, Stephen

    Using segments from the soundtrack in addition to the familiar hit songs, Stephen Bulla has created a dramatic and exciting medley showcasing the best musical moments from this hit movie.Includes:Frozen HeartDo You Want to Build a Snowman?For the First Time in ForeverEpilogueLet It Go

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £75.00

    We Wish You a Merry Christmas (Concert Band with Optional Choir - Score and Parts) - Noble & Rutter

    This piece was written as a final encore at Christmas concerts when the audience simply refused to go home! This arrangement is offered with the choral part shown in the score, but not as part of the set. The arrangement is compatible with the published vocal score.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

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  • £59.95

    Blue Jeans (Trombone Solo with Concert Band - Score and Parts) - Wiffin, Rob

    In 2008 the trombonist, Chris Jeans, was invited to be a featured soloist at a British Trombone Society event. He contacted Stan Kitchen at Studio Music Company to see if he had any new material for trombone. Stan then got in touch with me, as I had already written a piece for another trombone player, Brett Baker. This piece, 'Shout' was programmed for the same event so we needed to find something new for Chris.The title 'Blue Jeans' came to my mind, thus linking a blues-style piece with the obvious reference to Chris's surname. I spoke to Chris and he liked the sound of it so then I had to go away and write a solo to match the title!I managed to get a version with piano accompaniment done in time for Chris to perform at the trombone event and have now had a chance to complete the band version. Chris is a great chap, a good friend and a wonderful trombone player so I hope people enjoy listening to this solo that bears his name.- Rob WiffinDuration: 3.30

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

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  • £225.00

    Amsterdam Suite (Concert Band - Score and Parts) - Curtis, Matthew - Noble, Paul

    The Amsterdam Suite, written in 1995 and first performed by the Slaithwaite Philharmonic Orchestra the following year, seeks to convey some impressions of a city I have visited several times. It opens with the waltz sequence, Barrel Organs, recalling the hurdy-gurdies positioned at strategic points in the city with the aim of parting tourists with their loose change. The tunes, however, are mine rather than an attempt to reproduce the real thing. Amsterdam takes its Saturday nights seriously, with the result that those who get up (or are still up) early on Sunday morning will find themselves in eerily deserted streets, whose atmosphere to me suggests one instrument above all, the saxophone, which plays a prominent part in Lonely City. The Saturday nights themselves are depicted in Trams and Crowds. I have taken liberties with the chronology for the obvious musical reason of wanting to go out with a bang rather than a whimper. The basic structure is very much that used by Eric Coates for similar piece, a bustling outer section with a quick march trio, presented in a fuller and more embellished orchestration on each of its three appearances. - Matthew Curtis.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

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  • £85.00

    Amsterdam Suite, 1st Movement (Concert Band - Score and Parts) - Curtis, Matthew - Noble, Paul

    The Amsterdam Suite, written in 1995 and first performed by the Slaithwaite Philharmonic Orchestra the following year, seeks to convey some impressions of a city I have visited several times. It opens with the waltz sequence, Barrel Organs, recalling the hurdy-gurdies positioned at strategic points in the city with the aim of parting tourists with their loose change. The tunes, however, are mine rather than an attempt to reproduce the real thing. Amsterdam takes its Saturday nights seriously, with the result that those who get up (or are still up) early on Sunday morning will find themselves in eerily deserted streets, whose atmosphere to me suggests one instrument above all, the saxophone, which plays a prominent part in Lonely City. The Saturday nights themselves are depicted in Trams and Crowds. I have taken liberties with the chronology for the obvious musical reason of wanting to go out with a bang rather than a whimper. The basic structure is very much that used by Eric Coates for similar piece, a bustling outer section with a quick march trio, presented in a fuller and more embellished orchestration on each of its three appearances. - Matthew Curtis.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

     PDF View Music

  • £85.00

    Amsterdam Suite, 2nd Movement (Concert Band - Score and Parts) - Curtis, Matthew - Noble, Paul

    The Amsterdam Suite, written in 1995 and first performed by the Slaithwaite Philharmonic Orchestra the following year, seeks to convey some impressions of a city I have visited several times. It opens with the waltz sequence, Barrel Organs, recalling the hurdy-gurdies positioned at strategic points in the city with the aim of parting tourists with their loose change. The tunes, however, are mine rather than an attempt to reproduce the real thing. Amsterdam takes its Saturday nights seriously, with the result that those who get up (or are still up) early on Sunday morning will find themselves in eerily deserted streets, whose atmosphere to me suggests one instrument above all, the saxophone, which plays a prominent part in Lonely City. The Saturday nights themselves are depicted in Trams and Crowds. I have taken liberties with the chronology for the obvious musical reason of wanting to go out with a bang rather than a whimper. The basic structure is very much that used by Eric Coates for similar piece, a bustling outer section with a quick march trio, presented in a fuller and more embellished orchestration on each of its three appearances. - Matthew Curtis.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

     PDF View Music

  • £85.00

    Amsterdam Suite, 3rd Movement (Concert Band - Score and Parts) - Curtis, Matthew - Noble, Paul

    The Amsterdam Suite, written in 1995 and first performed by the Slaithwaite Philharmonic Orchestra the following year, seeks to convey some impressions of a city I have visited several times. It opens with the waltz sequence, Barrel Organs, recalling the hurdy-gurdies positioned at strategic points in the city with the aim of parting tourists with their loose change. The tunes, however, are mine rather than an attempt to reproduce the real thing. Amsterdam takes its Saturday nights seriously, with the result that those who get up (or are still up) early on Sunday morning will find themselves in eerily deserted streets, whose atmosphere to me suggests one instrument above all, the saxophone, which plays a prominent part in Lonely City. The Saturday nights themselves are depicted in Trams and Crowds. I have taken liberties with the chronology for the obvious musical reason of wanting to go out with a bang rather than a whimper. The basic structure is very much that used by Eric Coates for similar piece, a bustling outer section with a quick march trio, presented in a fuller and more embellished orchestration on each of its three appearances. - Matthew Curtis.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

     PDF View Music