Hallelujah! Joy to the World by Emily Lund 4-Part - Sheet Music

By Emily Lund

Popular hymn Handel's "Hallelujah Chorus" and "Joy to the World!" are paired here in a setting that maintains the integrity and musicality of each piece while adding emphasis and strength in the interplay between the two. For SATB choir, organ or piano, with options for congregational singing, this anthem soars to the closing bars proclaiming Christ's eternal reign and our eternal joy.

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Details

Instrument:
Choir Piano Accompaniment
Ensembles:
4-Part SATB Mixed Choir
Genres:
Christian Christmas
Publishers:
Hope Publishing Company
Series:
Women Composers and Arrangers
UPC:
763628155261
Format:
Octavo
Item types:
Physical
Musical forms:
Anthem
Artist:
Emily Lund
Arrangers:
Emily Lund
Usages:
Christmas Hymn Anthems
Number of Pages:
16
Shipping Weight:
0.72 pounds

Choral SATB choir (SATB choir)

SKU: HP.C5526

Arranged by Emily Lund. Piano Accompaniment. Classics, Hymntune, Christmas, Sacred. Octavo. 16 pages. Hope Publishing Company #C5526. Published by Hope Publishing Company (HP.C5526).

UPC: 763628155261. Luke 2:10 -- Revelation 19:1-6.

Popular hymn Handel's "Hallelujah Chorus" and "Joy to the World!" are paired here in a setting that maintains the integrity and musicality of each piece while adding emphasis and strength in the interplay between the two. For SATB choir, organ or piano, with options for congregational singing, this anthem soars to the closing bars proclaiming Christ's eternal reign and our eternal joy.

Ratings + Reviews

3 Rating

1 review

Anonymous

Nov 7, 2013

Beautiful, but a LOT of work

I have a very small choir that I lead and everyone was very enthusiastic about this song from the description, but it has some extremely challenging sections. Since I have only one alto and one tenor, some parts were too hard for them to learn and sing on their own, so we ended up cutting out about 24 measures of the song. After taking out the parts that were extra tricky, it has come together nicely and has a lot of energy to it. I recommend this song for bigger choirs or, if you're in my situation, just cut out the tough spots if it's not coming together and a performance is approaching. The song doesn't change keys at all, so the accompaniment part is not affected too much in doing this.If you are more familiar with Handel's Messiah, I'm sure the spots that I had trouble with wouldn't be so tricky.