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  • £62.95

    Sleep in Heavenly Peace - Franz Xaver Gruber

    Estimated delivery 7-14 working days

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  • £57.50

    Let There Be Peace - Douglas E. Wagner

    Estimated delivery 7-14 working days
  • £76.80

    Under the Banner of Peace - Sam Rydberg

    Estimated delivery 7-14 working days

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  • £117.10

    Venus, the Bringer of Peace - Gustav Holst

    Estimated delivery 7-14 working days

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  • £50.80

    Let There Be Peace On Earth - Jackson

    A beautiful arrangement of one of the most memorable melodies of all time that makes a wonderful concert piece for any middle school band. Starts out quietly featuring the woodwind section (and optional choir or audience sing-a-long) and then the brass takes over and builds to a big full sound. Great piece to combine choir and band as the finale of your concert. A great message in a great song! Inspiring and impressive!

    Estimated delivery 7-14 working days

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  • £50.80

    I've Got Peace Like A River

    A very inspiring and lush favorite of young bands all around the globe. This Euguene Mitchell original has been a top seller in the Barhouse Catalog for many years.

    Estimated delivery 7-14 working days

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  • £79.99

    Resting In The Peace Of His Hands - John Gibson

    Estimated delivery 7-14 working days
  • £50.50

    Ballad for Peace - Frank Erickson

    Estimated delivery 7-14 working days

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  • £119.00

    Three Revelations from Lotus Sutra: Movement I - Awakening - By Alfred Reed

    Three Revelations from the Lotus Sutra is an attempt to realize in music three different states of man's soul in his quest for ultimate perfection. The Lotus Sutra is the teaching of human respect, self-perfection and world peace - in a word, humanism, leading mankind from division to unity, from discord to harmony, from conflict to peace.I. The first movement, Awakening, (To Awaken to the Light of the Universe) portrays the vastness and richness of the experience of the human mind on expanding its field of view from the narrow confines of daily life to the contemplation of, and merging with, the entire universe.II. Contemplation (To Contemplate the Depths of the Soul) represents a turning-away of the mind from the "outer" to the "inner" universe -- the attempt to fathom the limitless possibilities of the human consciousness in its quest for identity, to answer the eternal questions beginning with the word "Why?"III. Rejoicing (To Rejoice in the Beauty of Peace) depicts the realization that, while on earth, peace is not merely the absence of war, destruction, pain and suffering, but a thing of beauty in and of itself, and an occasion for heartfelt rejoicing on the part of all men everywhere, who share the same eternal quest as true brothers.This suite was commissioned by, and is reverently dedicated to, Rissho Kosei-kai, on the occasion of the 77th birthday of its founder and president, the Reverent Nikkyo Niwano.Program notes extracted from the Wind Repertory Project.

    Estimated delivery 3-5 days
  • £174.99

    Et in terra Pax (Concert Band - Score and Parts) - Van der Roost, Jan

    This piece was commissioned by the Concert Band Vlamertinge and is a plea for peace: the title translates as Peace on Earth. This is expressed by means of the vocal contribution expected from the performers. In various places of the piece you can recognize, the words Et In Terra Pax, an appeal for peace, at first jumbled together but later more rhythmically structured, developing into synchronized massed voices. The work starts with a pentatonic theme based on the notes D, E, G, A and C (taken from 'ConCErtbAnD VlAmErtinGE' and the name of the conductor, NiCk VAnDEnDriessChe). A somewhat sad melody is developed during an orchestral climax which leads to the first explosion of sound (measure 62 onwards). Suddenly the opening measures are recaptured, albeit with a differently coloured sound: the words Et in Terra Pax bring the first movement to a close. A restless Allegro follows which abruptly stops and is replaced by a calming chorale-like passage. A narrator reads aloud the poem 'Sonnet' by the young poet Charles Hamilton Sorley, who was killed during World War I. This poem fittingly puts into words the cruelty and senselessness of war. After the expanded recapitulation of the allegro, the broad, almost infinite atmosphere of the beginning returns. Clarinet and English horn play the pentatonic opening theme once more, this time broadly, while the words Et in Terra Pax are repeated again and again by the rest of the ensemble. The composer has purposely avoided all forms of aggression and bombastic sounds regularly used in works about war. Fear of violence and destruction can be heard and felt during the allegro passages. The charged opening makes way in the end for hope: May peacefulness replace cruelty in everyday life, too.Duration: 13:45

    Estimated delivery 7-14 working days

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