- #Do not stand at my grave and weep sheet music pdf#
- #Do not stand at my grave and weep sheet music free#
Copies £1.50, PDF £25.įor more secular choir pieces, also check out my arrangements on this page – many of the pieces there are for three-part or two-part choir.Since 1932, when florist and Baltimore-based homemaker Mary Elizabeth Frye wrote “Do Not Stand at My Grave and Weep,” quite a few musicians have felt compelled to set the poem to music. The Toads’ Chorus (4′, six-part choir, difficult).Sleep (5′, SATB, difficult) Words by William Drummond of Hawthornden (1585-1649).Under The Wide and Starry Sky – (2′, unison choir and piano, very easy – words by Robert Louis Stevenson).The Water Cycle – 6′, children’s choir (SA with some optional divisi and solos), piano, vibraphone, xylophone and marimba (percussion instruments can easily be changed), and optional rainsticks.After Culloden – 5′, SATB choir a cappella, mostly easy.
#Do not stand at my grave and weep sheet music free#
#choirsagainstracism is a project of free music to fight hatred and support refugees and related causes – most of the pieces there are secular.The Birlinn – available for SATB, SABar or TBarB choirs (with piano).The Kindness of Strangers (words by Brian Bilston) for SATB choir (divisi to SSAATBB, handy if you’re short of tenors).It’s available for any type of choir and piano (available for 2-part, SSA, TBarB, SABar, SATB and unison) – click here for scores and a recording. “We Are One Voice” is a very flexible piece for choirs (commissioned by Beaconsfield Choir Festival) – ideal if you have a number of choirs of varying abilities and numbers of parts and want them all to sing one piece together that they can also use individually.I brought your name to the river – commissioned by the Edinburgh Singers with support from Creative Scotland.Winner of the Murau International Music Festival Composition Prize 2019 and the Wicker Park Singers call for scores 2019. They are also published in England: Poems from a School (published by Picador, edited by Kate Clanchy, Mohamed’s teacher). The words are by Mohamed Assaf, a Syrian refugee who now lives in England, written when he was 12. Moderate difficulty, several rapid key changes. Where Are My Unnumbered Days? – for SATB choir with some divisi (could be done with 2 people per part, would work better with 4 or more).
Five pieces based on Scots myths and legends, with texts by poet and storyteller Bob Pegg.
Let Them Not Say – available through Choirs For Climate.For SSAATTBB choir and small speaking chorus, quite tricky. When The Snow Came – winner of Kantos Choir’s 2021 composition competition.These pieces have non-religious texts, and can be performed in any context.