Instruments
Ensembles
Opera
Composers
Performers

Sheet music $35.00

Original

Christmas Treasures. Bruce Pearson. Beginning.

Translation

Christmas Treasures. Bruce Pearson. Beginning.

Original

Christmas Treasures composed by Bruce Pearson. Edited by Chuck Elledge. For concert band. Christmas. Grade 1.5. Score and set of parts. Published by Neil A. Kjos Music Company. KJ.GB886. Christmas Treasures is a medley of three Yuletide gems. Kling Gluckchen. Ring Little Bells. is a traditional German carol, with text by Karl Enslin. 1814-1875. Its text and melody recall the ringing of bells in honor of Christ's arrival. Joseph, Dearest Joseph Mine is a fourteenth-century German carol which was popularized in a fifteenth century church drama. also known as a mystery play. Sung around the Christ child's crib, it contains a sweet lullaby to the newborn King. Sing We All At Christmastide, by Walter Rodby and Joseph Roff, was adapted from an eighteenth-century Moravian tune. Like the more famous carol Joy to the World, this relatively recent addition to the Yuletide repertoire is a call to "praise the newborn King" through exuberant song and "full Hosannas. " In this arrangement, melodic material from King Gluckchen is combined with Sing We All At Christmastide to create a joyous finale.

Translation

Christmas Treasures composed by Bruce Pearson. Edited by Chuck Elledge. For concert band. Christmas. Grade 1.5. Score and set of parts. Published by Neil A. Kjos Music Company. KJ.GB886. Christmas Treasures is a medley of three Yuletide gems. Kling Gluckchen. Ring Little Bells. is a traditional German carol, with text by Karl Enslin. 1814-1875. Its text and melody recall the ringing of bells in honor of Christ's arrival. Joseph, Dearest Joseph Mine is a fourteenth-century German carol which was popularized in a fifteenth century church drama. also known as a mystery play. Sung around the Christ child's crib, it contains a sweet lullaby to the newborn King. Sing We All At Christmastide, by Walter Rodby and Joseph Roff, was adapted from an eighteenth-century Moravian tune. Like the more famous carol Joy to the World, this relatively recent addition to the Yuletide repertoire is a call to "praise the newborn King" through exuberant song and "full Hosannas. " In this arrangement, melodic material from King Gluckchen is combined with Sing We All At Christmastide to create a joyous finale.